I have a difficult time with this each year. Like most everyone I find that my favorites shift over time. And I can't listen to everything that's out there - it's simply overwhelming to keep pace with what's released each year.
Here's all the new jazz releases from 2014 that I've listened to:
and from that list I've narrowed it down to these:
Adam Lane
Angels 9
Collocutor
Nels Cline
Omer Avital
Orrin Evans - Mother's Touch
Ruben Machtelinckx
Wayne Horvitz
Marius Neset
Matt Bauder
Mark Turner
This is so difficult to do.
What would you recommend?
Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
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Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
The Jacob Young is one of my favorites, and makes my list.
- Ron Thorne
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Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
Wow, Coda! That's a substantial list, to say the least. Did you acquire each of those albums and hear them in their entirety?
Agreed that there is so much music out there that it can get overwhelming in no time. Here are a few that rose to the top for me. The top one was an ArtistShare project, and really fine in my estimation.
Agreed that there is so much music out there that it can get overwhelming in no time. Here are a few that rose to the top for me. The top one was an ArtistShare project, and really fine in my estimation.
"Timing is everything" - Peppercorn
http://500px.com/rpthorne
http://500px.com/rpthorne
Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
Yes, I have music on all the time. I figure I get about 10 CDs per week and listen about 10 hours a day. On average that gives me about 7 listens per CD before it hit's the collection pile. Mind you I'm also doing other things during the ten hours so I can't say that I always listen intently.
I'm an eMusic member too with each CD costing about $5 on average.
That Jarrett Haden recording almost made my list, the emotion is on full display from start to finish.
I'm an eMusic member too with each CD costing about $5 on average.
That Jarrett Haden recording almost made my list, the emotion is on full display from start to finish.
- moldyfigg
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Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
I don't buy cds any more. 2,000 is ednough. I did buy Spike Jones Greatest Hits and a 1944 Hit Parade disc for a friend's birthday.
Bright moments
- Ron Thorne
- Fadda Timekeeper
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- Location: Anchorage, Alaska
Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
From Scott Yanow's Facebook page The Jazz World:
THE TOP JAZZ CDs OF 2014
Since there are many top 10 jazz CD lists for 2014 coming out, I decided to compile 25 of my favorites that come to mind. Nobody has heard every jazz CD of the past year, and more than 1,000 are rewarding. Only a few of the ones on my list have been mentioned by others. Are these the best? One can argue in favor of some others but few can dispute that these 15 new releases (which includes historic music from Charles Lloyd) and 10 reissues (listed in alphabetical order) are less than great. (Feel free to argue) -Scott Yanow
NEW RELEASES
Chick Corea – Triology – Concord
Akua Dixon – Akua Dixon - Akua’s Music
Echoes Of Swing – Blue Pepper – ACT
Corey Gemme’s Rolling Figs Jazz Orchestra – Let’s Get Rolling – Rolling Records
Gordon Goodwin Big Phat Band – Life In The Bubble – Telarc
Louis Hayes – Return Of The Jazz Communicators – Smoke Sessions
Marty Krystall – Moments Magical – K2B2
Charles Lloyd – Manhattan Stories – Resonance
Tina May – Divas – Hep
Sally Night – Love For Sale - Venus
Freda Payne – Come Back To Me Love – Artistry Music
Sonny Rollins – Road Shows, Volume 3 – Okeh
Carl Saunders – America – Summit
Three Cohens – Tightrope – Anzic
Gary Urwin Jazz Orchestra - A Beautiful Friendship - Summit
REISSUES
Louis Armstrong – Columbia and RCA Victor Live Recordings – Mosaic
Dave Brubeck – The Complete Storyville Broadcasts – Essential Jazz Classics
Miles Davis with John Coltrane – The Last Tour 1960 - Acrobat
Miles Davis – Miles At The Fillmore – Columbia/Legacy
Duke Ellington – The Concert At The Pleyel Paris 1958 – Sounds Of Yester Year
Chubby Jackson – Ooh, What An Outfit – New York 1949 – Uptown
Isham Jones – Happy – Archeophone
Clifford Jordan – The Complete Strata East Sessions – Mosaic
The Keynote Jazz Collection 1941-1947 – Fresh Sound
Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys – Riding Your Way 1946-1947 – Real Gone Music
THE TOP JAZZ CDs OF 2014
Since there are many top 10 jazz CD lists for 2014 coming out, I decided to compile 25 of my favorites that come to mind. Nobody has heard every jazz CD of the past year, and more than 1,000 are rewarding. Only a few of the ones on my list have been mentioned by others. Are these the best? One can argue in favor of some others but few can dispute that these 15 new releases (which includes historic music from Charles Lloyd) and 10 reissues (listed in alphabetical order) are less than great. (Feel free to argue) -Scott Yanow
NEW RELEASES
Chick Corea – Triology – Concord
Akua Dixon – Akua Dixon - Akua’s Music
Echoes Of Swing – Blue Pepper – ACT
Corey Gemme’s Rolling Figs Jazz Orchestra – Let’s Get Rolling – Rolling Records
Gordon Goodwin Big Phat Band – Life In The Bubble – Telarc
Louis Hayes – Return Of The Jazz Communicators – Smoke Sessions
Marty Krystall – Moments Magical – K2B2
Charles Lloyd – Manhattan Stories – Resonance
Tina May – Divas – Hep
Sally Night – Love For Sale - Venus
Freda Payne – Come Back To Me Love – Artistry Music
Sonny Rollins – Road Shows, Volume 3 – Okeh
Carl Saunders – America – Summit
Three Cohens – Tightrope – Anzic
Gary Urwin Jazz Orchestra - A Beautiful Friendship - Summit
REISSUES
Louis Armstrong – Columbia and RCA Victor Live Recordings – Mosaic
Dave Brubeck – The Complete Storyville Broadcasts – Essential Jazz Classics
Miles Davis with John Coltrane – The Last Tour 1960 - Acrobat
Miles Davis – Miles At The Fillmore – Columbia/Legacy
Duke Ellington – The Concert At The Pleyel Paris 1958 – Sounds Of Yester Year
Chubby Jackson – Ooh, What An Outfit – New York 1949 – Uptown
Isham Jones – Happy – Archeophone
Clifford Jordan – The Complete Strata East Sessions – Mosaic
The Keynote Jazz Collection 1941-1947 – Fresh Sound
Bob Wills and the Texas Playboys – Riding Your Way 1946-1947 – Real Gone Music
"Timing is everything" - Peppercorn
http://500px.com/rpthorne
http://500px.com/rpthorne
- rawac
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Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
I started to think about the problem three days ago. Wanted to make a short list, but every time I had chosen less records, it looked unfair to me for the others. Now i take a long list, and that's what I recommend out of 2014 releases:
- db: Dave Holland
p: Kenny Barron
- p: Paul Bley
- db: Cecil McBee
dr: Billy Hart
p: George Cables
sax: Billy Harper; Donald Harrison
tp: Eddie Henderson; David Weiss
- db: Luques Curtis
dr: Bill Steward
p: Orrin Evans
sax: JD Allen
tp: Sean Jones
voc: Joanna Pascale
- dr/perc: Günter "Baby" Sommer
p: Patrick Bebelaar
tba/eb/Serpent: Michel Godard
- db: John Hebert
dr/perc: Eric McPerson
p: Fred Hersch
- db: Reggie Workman
dr: Andrew Cyrille
p: Vijay Iyer
sax: Oliver Lake
- db: Charlie Haden
p: Keith Jarrett
- db: George Mraz
p: Emil Viklicky
- db: Matt Penman; Reuben Rogers
dr: Grogory Hutchinson
sax: Joshua Redman
- dr: Bobby Previte
eb: Steve Swallow
p/org: Jamie Saft
- cl: Louis Sclavis
gtr: Gilles Coronado
p/kb: Benjamin Moussay
perc: Keyvan Chemarini
- b-tbn/tba: Jan Schreiner
tbn: Bernhard Bamert
tbn/mdk: Nils Wogram
tbn/rec: Andreas Tschopp
- cond/arr/comp: John Zorn
db: Trevor Dunn
dr: Joey Baron
el: Ikue Mori
p: John Medeski
vib: Kenny Wollesen
Best wishes from the south-west corner of Germany
Ralf
Ralf
- Tom Storer
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- Joined: June 27th, 2013, 9:16 pm
Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
OK, here's mine. It's always a draft, as I'm sure there are things I've loved but can't remember right now. I'm not a list-maker by nature, and I'm not systematic about my enthusiasms (except for brief periods of obsession), and above all there is just so much I haven't heard yet. But these are some of the highlights of my jazz listening year:
Mark Turner, Lathe of Heaven. Turner has been working on this quartet (with Avishai Cohen, trumpet; Joe Martin, bass; Marcus Gilmore, drums) and its music for two or three years and it pays off with an exceptional recording.
Tom Harrell, Trip. Same instrumentation as the above, also featuring Turner, plus Ugonna Okegwo, bass, and Adam Cruz, drums. Completely different feel, as Harrell's music is more explicitly bop-derived, but equally fantastic music. Turner is a very active sideman and has learned to really put himself at the service of the music he's given. Unmistakably himself but really focused on the specifics of the material. Harrell's writing and playing is fabulous.
Kenny Barron/Dave Holland, The Art of Conversation. Perfection.
Chick Corea, Trilogy. A 3-CD set with Corea, Christian McBride and Brian Blade. Sparkling, energetic, virtuoso piano trio music. 2 CDs might have been enough, but it's thrilling to hear Blade and Corea swinging together.
Joshua Redman, Trios Live. With Greg Hutchinson on drums and either Reuben Rogers or Matt Penman on bass. Redman's recordings don't always communicate the excitement he can generate live, but this one does. He is a superb musician and these are inventive, high-octane performances. Hutchinson is definitely one of the best jazz drummers out there.
Frank Kimbrough, Quartet. With Steve Wilson, alto sax; Jay Anderson, bass; Lewis Nash, drums. Eloquent playing, beautiful melodies, often bittersweet. Rooted in bebop and Keith Jarrett's quartet music.
Michael Blake, Tiddy Boom. With Frank Kimbrough, piano; Ben Allison, bass; and Rudy Royston, drums. Blake's project here is to focus on Hawkins and Young, whereas he often strays much further from the mainstream. But he's confident and authoritative and this is not a pious rehash by any means. Biting, bracing, swinging, sometimes raucous playing.
Stanton Moore, Conversations. Moore, drums; David Torkanowsky, piano; James Singleton, bass. Moore is a major New Orleans drummer, usually heard in N.O. funk bands. He plays jazz here, always with that infectious second-line pulse somewhere in the mix. Drum aficionados shouldn't miss this.
Jason Marsalis Vibes Quartet, The 21st Century Trad Band. Marsalis, vibes; Austin Johnson, piano; Will Goble, bass; David Potter, drums. I didn't know what to expect from this. Marsalis is an impeccable drummer with chops galore, mostly heard backing Marcus Roberts, and then he added vibes to his repertoire. This is a delightful record, not what you might expect from a Marsalis. Swinging, to be sure, but not in a reverential, polish-your-shoes-this-is-jazz kind of way. Rather, you get the full sense of his idiosyncratic universe. Lots of fun.
Mark Turner, Lathe of Heaven. Turner has been working on this quartet (with Avishai Cohen, trumpet; Joe Martin, bass; Marcus Gilmore, drums) and its music for two or three years and it pays off with an exceptional recording.
Tom Harrell, Trip. Same instrumentation as the above, also featuring Turner, plus Ugonna Okegwo, bass, and Adam Cruz, drums. Completely different feel, as Harrell's music is more explicitly bop-derived, but equally fantastic music. Turner is a very active sideman and has learned to really put himself at the service of the music he's given. Unmistakably himself but really focused on the specifics of the material. Harrell's writing and playing is fabulous.
Kenny Barron/Dave Holland, The Art of Conversation. Perfection.
Chick Corea, Trilogy. A 3-CD set with Corea, Christian McBride and Brian Blade. Sparkling, energetic, virtuoso piano trio music. 2 CDs might have been enough, but it's thrilling to hear Blade and Corea swinging together.
Joshua Redman, Trios Live. With Greg Hutchinson on drums and either Reuben Rogers or Matt Penman on bass. Redman's recordings don't always communicate the excitement he can generate live, but this one does. He is a superb musician and these are inventive, high-octane performances. Hutchinson is definitely one of the best jazz drummers out there.
Frank Kimbrough, Quartet. With Steve Wilson, alto sax; Jay Anderson, bass; Lewis Nash, drums. Eloquent playing, beautiful melodies, often bittersweet. Rooted in bebop and Keith Jarrett's quartet music.
Michael Blake, Tiddy Boom. With Frank Kimbrough, piano; Ben Allison, bass; and Rudy Royston, drums. Blake's project here is to focus on Hawkins and Young, whereas he often strays much further from the mainstream. But he's confident and authoritative and this is not a pious rehash by any means. Biting, bracing, swinging, sometimes raucous playing.
Stanton Moore, Conversations. Moore, drums; David Torkanowsky, piano; James Singleton, bass. Moore is a major New Orleans drummer, usually heard in N.O. funk bands. He plays jazz here, always with that infectious second-line pulse somewhere in the mix. Drum aficionados shouldn't miss this.
Jason Marsalis Vibes Quartet, The 21st Century Trad Band. Marsalis, vibes; Austin Johnson, piano; Will Goble, bass; David Potter, drums. I didn't know what to expect from this. Marsalis is an impeccable drummer with chops galore, mostly heard backing Marcus Roberts, and then he added vibes to his repertoire. This is a delightful record, not what you might expect from a Marsalis. Swinging, to be sure, but not in a reverential, polish-your-shoes-this-is-jazz kind of way. Rather, you get the full sense of his idiosyncratic universe. Lots of fun.
Praise Cheeses!
Re: Favorite Jazz CDs of 2014
I think I bought one new release CD in all of 2014 -- George Cables' "Icons and Influences"
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