Mccoy Tyner Blues For Coltrane Rar Files

Track Selection 1: Search for Peace (Tyner) Beautiful tune, tranquil and perfectly paced, Tyner does what he does best – an exploration of the strong melody for its rhythmic and harmonic potential, punctuated with cascading rippling arpeggios; on cue, Henderson floats in, flying, darting, only to subside as peace is restored. A simple but satisfying musical narrative: ultimately, we all need Peace. Track Selection 2: Blues on the Corner (Tyner) A strutting bluesy swinger from Tyner, Elvin Jones punishing those cymbals, they must have been very very naughty.

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McCoy Tyner discography. Blues for Coltrane: 1987 Impulse! Live at the Musicians Exchange Cafe (also released as What's New?, The Real McCoy, and Hip Toe). Free

A good track for when you have just about had it with all that limp-wristed Peace stuff, and need something a little more aggressive. Artists: Joe Henderson (ts) McCoy Tyner (p) Ron Carter (b) Elvin Jones (d) recorded Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, April 21, 1967 Tyner first appeared on the scene in 1960 with the Golson/ Farmer Jazztet, moving to the John Coltrane Quartet for most of the early sixties up to 1965, when Coltrane was becoming more atonal and free. Tyner is said to have been unhappy about that change in direction: “ I didn’t see myself making any contribution to that music All I could hear was a lot of noise. I didn’t have any feeling for the music, and when I don’t have feelings, I don’t play.” (So, I guess that is him and me both) Tyner released six of his own titles whilst under contract to Impulse up to 1964, and after leaving Coltrane, recorded for Blue Note with many bop greats in their second wind, Hank Mobley, Lee Morgan, Donald Byrd, Stanley Turrentine, Lou Donaldson and Bobby Hutcherson.

In 1967, he recorded this, his first title for Liberty/ Blue Note, The Real McCoy, followed by a string of albums: Tender Moments, Time for Tyner, Expansions, Extensions, and Cosmos, you can tell by the meditative album titles where this was heading: Enlightenment. Full Circle: Fast forward to the summer of 2005, when a press release announces Tyner joins forces with the Blue Note Jazz Club in New York and becomes the first client of Blue Note Management, forming his own record label McCoy Tyner Music. The label is a subsidiary of the Blue Note’s In-House record label, Half Note Records. With concert dates booked through to Spring 2013, Tyner stands out as the only surviving member of the John Coltrane Quartet still standing and still playing. Music: Arguably Tyner’s best recording, The Real McCoy stands out as a blue-blooded Blue Note with three veritable legends on side, Joe Henderson, Ron Carter and Elvin Jones, caught merely by an accident of history on the wrong side of the line after the sale of Blue Note to Liberty Records. This is a Blue Note in everything but the Liberty label, but less savvy dealers label it as a Liberty second citizen, priced accordingly.

For the pianist According to his Wiki: Tyner’s playing can be distinguished by a low bass left hand, in which he tends to raise his arm relatively high above the keyboard for an emphatic attack; the fact that Tyner is left-handed may contribute to this distinctively powerful style. Tyner’s unique right-hand soloing is recognizable for a detached, or staccato, quality. His melodic vocabulary is rich, ranging from raw blues to complexly superimposed pentatonic scales; his unique approach to chord voicing, most characteristically by fourths, has influenced a wide array of contemporary jazz pianists. In a word from my more limited descriptive vocabulary, Great! Vinyl: BST 84264 First released by Liberty on Division of Liberty labels, VAN GELDER stamp, Stereo label printing characteristic of Keystone, pressing however looks like it bears the central Capitol “sixpence” indentation. Cover photo Francis Wolff, design Reid Miles, recording Van Gelder, cover address still showing 43 West 61st NY, it’s the original firm in action. Collectors Corner Source: A couple of years back, turned up out of the blue in a second-hand record store, very modestly price accorded by its Liberty status.