Liebman, David Trio / Lieb Plays The Blues A La Trane
Album: | Lieb Plays The Blues A La Trane | Collection: | Jazz | |
Artist: | Liebman, David Trio | Added: | Dec 2010 | |
Label: | Challenge Records |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2011-01-02 | Pull Date: | 2011-03-06 | Charts: | Jazz |
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Week Ending: | Mar 6 | Feb 20 | Feb 13 | Feb 6 | Jan 30 | Jan 23 | Jan 16 |
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Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 3 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Mar 04, 2011: | No Cover, No Minimum
Mr. P.C. |
4. | Feb 01, 2011: | Rebop
Up Against The Wall |
|
2. | Feb 15, 2011: | Rebop
All Blues |
5. | Jan 29, 2011: | Music Casserole
All Blues |
|
3. | Feb 08, 2011: | Rebop
Take The Coltrane |
6. | Jan 21, 2011: | No Cover, No Minimum
Take The Coltrane |
Album Review
Fo
Reviewed 2010-12-31
Reviewed 2010-12-31
DAVID LIEBMAN TRIO: Lieb Plays The Blues à la Trane
Daybreak, 2010
POSTBOP – On tour in Belgium, saxophonist Dave Liebman decided one night to drop his planned repertoire and just play blues-based tunes associated with John Coltrane. No planning, no arrangements, no rehearsals; just play. Thank heavens someone recorded it! This is a true blowing session in the old-fashioned sense, recorded live, and the trio just tears it up. It’s vigorous and burning, straight up and REAL.
All good, try any track.
1. 9:20 – Miles classic at brisk tempo: soprano sax wails over rolling groove. Chills out in the last few minutes.
2. 8:11 – twisty tenor sax in a midtempo walking-bass groove with prodding drums; mic pics up lots of groans and grunts from the bandstand.
3. 11:08 – drops right into bass solo, then drums kick it into gear. It’s well in the groove by the halfway mark, with some really knotty tenor sax
4. 15:33 – lazy blues stroll: soprano sax bobs and weaves in a sleazy groove, slowly adding heat… cools for bass solo, drums give it a late surge
5. 8:58 – quick-paced swing: early bass solo, tenor sax surfs the drum wave
[ Fo ] 12/31/10
Daybreak, 2010
POSTBOP – On tour in Belgium, saxophonist Dave Liebman decided one night to drop his planned repertoire and just play blues-based tunes associated with John Coltrane. No planning, no arrangements, no rehearsals; just play. Thank heavens someone recorded it! This is a true blowing session in the old-fashioned sense, recorded live, and the trio just tears it up. It’s vigorous and burning, straight up and REAL.
All good, try any track.
1. 9:20 – Miles classic at brisk tempo: soprano sax wails over rolling groove. Chills out in the last few minutes.
2. 8:11 – twisty tenor sax in a midtempo walking-bass groove with prodding drums; mic pics up lots of groans and grunts from the bandstand.
3. 11:08 – drops right into bass solo, then drums kick it into gear. It’s well in the groove by the halfway mark, with some really knotty tenor sax
4. 15:33 – lazy blues stroll: soprano sax bobs and weaves in a sleazy groove, slowly adding heat… cools for bass solo, drums give it a late surge
5. 8:58 – quick-paced swing: early bass solo, tenor sax surfs the drum wave
[ Fo ] 12/31/10
Track Listing
1. | All Blues | 4. | Village Blues | |||
2. | Up Against The Wall | 5. | Take The Coltrane | |||
3. | Mr. P.C. | . |