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Lonely Woman
Barnes and Noble
Lonely Woman
Current price: $13.49


Barnes and Noble
Lonely Woman
Current price: $13.49
Size: OS
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Having sponsored
Ornette Coleman
at the School of Jazz near Lennox, MA, pianist and composer
John Lewis
helped launch the controversial career of one of the last great innovators in jazz.
Lewis
' support of the ragtag Texas native was somewhat unique in jazz circles at the time and even surprising, especially considering the gulf between the classical jazz formality of his group
the Modern Jazz Quartet
and
Coleman
's radical notions of free improvisation. Nevertheless,
not only saw in
the first jazz genius since bebop's
Parker
,
Gillespie
, and
Monk
, but put pay to the praise with
the MJQ
's 1962 rendition of one of
's most famous numbers,
"Lonely Woman."
(Along with
Art Pepper
's 1960 version of
"Tears Inside,"
this was one of the earliest of
covers done.) The 1962
Atlantic
album of the same name turns out to be one of the band's best efforts.
and fellow
MJQ
members
Milt Jackson
Percy Heath
Connie Kaye
capitalize on the dramatic theme of
"Lonely Woman"
while adding a bit of chamber music complexity to the mix. The quartet doesn't take
's free form harmolodic theory to heart with a round of quixotic solos, but the group does spotlight the often overlooked strength of his compositional ideas. And while
further plies its knack for involved pieces on
originals like
"Fugato"
"Trieste,"
the group also balances out the set with looser material more in tune with
Jackson
's blues and swing sensibilities. A great disc that's perfect for the curious jazz lover. ~ Stephen Cook
Ornette Coleman
at the School of Jazz near Lennox, MA, pianist and composer
John Lewis
helped launch the controversial career of one of the last great innovators in jazz.
Lewis
' support of the ragtag Texas native was somewhat unique in jazz circles at the time and even surprising, especially considering the gulf between the classical jazz formality of his group
the Modern Jazz Quartet
and
Coleman
's radical notions of free improvisation. Nevertheless,
not only saw in
the first jazz genius since bebop's
Parker
,
Gillespie
, and
Monk
, but put pay to the praise with
the MJQ
's 1962 rendition of one of
's most famous numbers,
"Lonely Woman."
(Along with
Art Pepper
's 1960 version of
"Tears Inside,"
this was one of the earliest of
covers done.) The 1962
Atlantic
album of the same name turns out to be one of the band's best efforts.
and fellow
MJQ
members
Milt Jackson
Percy Heath
Connie Kaye
capitalize on the dramatic theme of
"Lonely Woman"
while adding a bit of chamber music complexity to the mix. The quartet doesn't take
's free form harmolodic theory to heart with a round of quixotic solos, but the group does spotlight the often overlooked strength of his compositional ideas. And while
further plies its knack for involved pieces on
originals like
"Fugato"
"Trieste,"
the group also balances out the set with looser material more in tune with
Jackson
's blues and swing sensibilities. A great disc that's perfect for the curious jazz lover. ~ Stephen Cook