| 1. The Sea |
| 2. Retro |
| 3. Ndozi |
| 4. Birds Cryin |
| 5. In Waiting |
| 6. Zyla |
| 7. Dream Catcher |
| 8. Agar Ratis |
| 9. Interlude |
| 10. I Cried |
| 11. The Soldier |
| 12. Third Stream |
Editorial Reviews
In music [especially in the Jazz idiom], "third stream" refers to taking elements of other genres and combining them into a new, pioneering style. On his appropriately titled album Tomi Osuna demonstrates this practice quite well. However, in experimenting with known structures and building new ones, Osuna also bespeaks a command of the many forms, he employs. 0suna incorporates a wide array of instruments [some invented] and arrangements [many improvised] to compose an album that acts both as introduction to and exploration of a diverse geography of sounds.
Product Description
The Osuna project defines a new, composite format for the late 90's: Exotic Rock. It combines the classic sounds of the 60's and 70's with exotic and surreal textures. Composer and primary performer on the album, Tomi Osuna integrates a broad range of international styles, melding the key elements of Classic Rock, Arabic, Caribbean, Native American, and African timbres to construct what has become a truly unique edifice.
Executive producer, composer, and profiled artist, Tomi Osuna is a prodigious talent, not only on the guitar, but in the studio. Third Stream exhibits superior production skill...Osuna has a talent for recognizing and applying varied contributors' skills to the main attraction. Consequently, we hear from the studio what is vividly manifest on stage: a panoply of performers, from North Indian Classical vocalists to Middle Eastern belly dancers. Our take-home message: this is a fresh, unique, and cutting edge music of equal appeal to various major segments of the mainstream and connoisseurs' listening audience: Unplugged, Alternative, AOR, New Age, Instrumental, World, and Adult Contemporary.
Third Stream
Third Stream,Tomi Osuna
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The Dave Brubeck Quartet at Carnegie Hall
Dave Brubeck Manufacturer: Sony ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00005AWMW Release Date: 2001-04-10 |
Tracks:
- St. Louis Blues
- Bossa Nova U.S.A.
- For All We Know
- Pennies From Heaven
- Southern Scene
- Three To Get Ready
Tracks:
- Eleven Four
- It's A Raggy Waltz
- King For A Day
- Castilian Drums
- Blue Rondo A La Turk
- Take Five
Customer Reviews:
Brubeck!.......2007-05-13
A must buy.......2007-03-05
The Perfect Quartet.......2007-01-03
this group supurb.
Jazzman since 1942.......2006-11-10
Anyway The concert on CD is a must in all that Jazz collections, therefore the 5 stars.
Degree'd.......2006-01-31
At the same time, the earlier recordings have their own strengths. Nowhere does the quartet sound more genuinely inspired than on "Jazz at Oberlin," "Jazz at the College of the Pacific," and "Jazz Goes to College"--performances that are characterized by in-the-moment creation and the sheer joy of discovery. Listen to Brubeck's heavy-handed bitonality and polyrhythmic thunder on "St. Louis Blues" from the Carnegie Hall date. It's in many respects dramatic and engaging but in a calculated, crowd-arousing manner that is not the case on the earlier, 1950's live recordings. Even though the other members of the rhythm section--usually Bob Bates and Joe Dodge--are clearly not marquee musicians, they're as empathetic and supportive a pair of team players as the two emerging stars could ask for.
Forget "Time Out" and go directly to "At Carnegie Hall." But on the way be sure to check out Oberlin, College of the Pacific, and those other academic venues so vital to Brubeck's and any jazz listener's education.
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Satie: Gymnopedies Gnossiennes / Jacques Loussier Trio
Benoit Dunoyer De Segonzac , Andre Arpino , Jacques Loussier , Jacques Loussier Trio , and Erik Satie Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000007NGR Release Date: 1998-05-26 |
Tracks:
- Gymnopedie No.1 / Var. 1
- Gymnopedie No. 1 / Var. 2
- Gnossienne No. 3
- Gnossienne No. 6
- Gnossienne No. 2
- Gnossienne No. 1 / Var. 3
- Gnossienne No. 4
- Gnossienne No. 5
- Gymnopedie No. 1 / Var. 4
- Gnossienne No. 1
- Pas A Pas
Customer Reviews:
Be transported.......2006-12-25
"Satie: Gymnopedies/Gnossiennes" is haunting and atmospheric musical poetry and, I think, superior to their other attempts at integrating classical and jazz into one musical statement. The entire CD reminds me of the musical equivalent of J.M.W. Turner's Venetian watercolours. Stunning! Also, check out "JLT Plays Debussy".
Jacques Loussier Trio's "Satie" takes the listener on a trip. Gnossienne No. 4 is especially effective in transporting the listener to a quiet "cinema noir" oasis full of intrigue. This jazz trio's technique lends itself much better to interpretations of delicate impressionist masterworks rather than to classic baroque. This is NOT smooth jazz but each piece is "fluid" or "atmospheric", just as Satie would have wanted it! The haunting sound is perfect- translucent as any mountain lake. In my opinion, this is Loussier's best disc and rates as one of the top discs in the classical-jazz hybrid genre, "Third Stream".
Satie with a Twist!.......2006-01-11
First, I disagree vehemently with what one can only describe as the dense and snobbish two star review below. Satie's music is not degraded here; it is simply reinterpreted into a new genre. But my ears (nor those of any other reviewer, it seems) detect any degredation or "dumbing down" of Satie. Rather, the Loussier Trio handle Satie's delicate pieces with all the care they deserve. They do well at playing minimalistically, using no more notes than are necessary. I can't help but think that this is the way Satie would have wanted it, as his compositions cry out for exactly that style.
While there are a few question marks on the CD (for instance, trying to fit a 3/4 Gymnopedie into 4/4)even the weaker tracks (relatively speaking) are worth a good listen. The Gnossienne (particularly the first four) take the cake, though!
A brief descriptive note before I leave you to buy the CD. Any lover of the "new" European (particularly Nordic) jazz, such as the Esbjorn Svensson trio, or the Tord Gustavsen trio, will UNQUESTIONABLY love the Jacques Loussier trio. Loussier has mastered the type of sparse and dark sound achieved by the said trios.
You are in for a treat, indeed!
A Win --- on many counts.......2004-04-03
I was immediately obsessed with finding out who/what/where.
I did, and I purchased this disc and several others. I was not disappointed. Other writers here are far more eloquent than I about the musical content; suffice it to say that Loussier remains true to the mood and emotion of the original, and his improvizations on those themes brings a new and fresh point of view to these already beautiful works.
Last, I'll comment on a technical point. These recordings are stunning. Totally natural sounds, and a stunning mix. Everything is in its place, you hear everything. The SACD version is even better. The older recordings (like the original Bach) are not at all dated in their sound.
I applaud this artist, this work, and this recording. Few of my recent CD purchases have been this satisfying.
Dumbing down Satie.......2004-01-12
Loussier takes on Satie.......2000-09-12
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Bach: The Brandenburgs
Jacques Loussier Trio Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000IFQLSC Release Date: 2006-10-24 |
Tracks:
- I. (Allegro)
- II. Adagio
- III. Allegro
- I. (Allegro)
- II. Andante
- III. Allegro Assasi
- I. (Allegro)
- II. Adagio
- III. Allegro
- I. Allegro
- II. Andante
- III. Presto
- I. Allegro
- II. Affettuoso
- III. Allegro
- I. (Allegro)
- II. Allegro
- III. Adagio Ma Non Troppo
Amazon.com
In bringing a sprightly jazz-trio sound to classical works, most notably by J.S. Bach, pianist Jacques Loussier has been dismissed as a lightweight popularizer by both hardcore jazz fans and serious classical enthusiasts. Yet he must be doing something right to be at it more than 45 years after founding his Play Bach Trio. Loussier's strategy in tackling all six of Bach's beloved Brandenburg Concertos, he said, involved "reducing his music to its essence" rather than elaborating on the musical texts as he once did. As ever, the notes are exceptionally clean and the rhythms neat, though bassist Benoit Dunoyer de Segonzac and drummer Andre Aprino give them a bit more oomph. Lo these decades after crossover ventures such as Dave Brubeck's "Blue Rondo a la Turk," and the Modern Jazz Quartet's superior Bachian delights, the jazz-meets-classical concept can be a bit dated. But Loussier's commitment to it can't be denied. --Lloyd SachsCustomer Reviews:
THAT was a Brandenburg?.......2007-01-11
Lossy Compression.......2006-12-24
Loussier's interpretations excel when he adds to the work being interpreted rather than simplifying the work as in this interpretation. When he takes a concerto for a solo instrument and adds the bass and drums the richness of Bach's original is preserved and highlighted in a new and intriguing way.
Still, even Loussier's less-successful work is head and shoulders above 99% of the feeble reinterpretations of the great master. Loussier understands Bach, loves Bach and provides an angle on Bach's music that should be part of any library; however, don't start with this one.
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Blues on Bach
The Modern Jazz Quartet Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002I6B Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Regret?
- Blues In B Flat
- Rise Up In The Morning
- Blues In A Minor
- Precious Joy
- Blues In C Minor
- Don't Stop This Train
- Blues In H (B)
- Tears From The Children
Amazon.com essential recording
In the MJQ's early years, critics often found something incompatible between John Lewis's European classical leanings, particularly the baroque, and Milt Jackson's unfettered gifts improvising over bop-blues changes. This 1973 date is structured by that dichotomy, alternating between Lewis's compositions (based on some of Bach's best-known melodies) and a series of original blues, the first three by Lewis, the last by Jackson. Lewis emphasizes the contrast by playing harpsichord on the Bach tunes. His treatment of Bach can drift toward the merely pretty, as in his handling of "Sleepers Awake," but there's a genuine beauty in "Don't Stop This Train" and "Tears from the Children," based on Bach keyboard works. Jackson's fluent solos on the blues are a continuing delight, while Lewis demonstrates once again that he, too, is a musician imbued with the same roots, inserting a telling variation on "St. James Infirmary" into "Blues in A Minor."--Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
MJQ's Blues on Bach.......2006-08-25
If you like the MJQ, this is one of their best albums; Pyramid and Concorde being my other favorites.
To my mind wholly successful.......2005-10-18
Fabulous Album!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2004-06-22
INTERESTING........................................2004-04-13
Unique and enjoyable MJQ.......2003-06-23
I like Bach and I like MJQ--so I had to like this one. However, I wish Lewis had done a whole CD with the Bach material and another one with the blues material, expanding each concept to a full CD of material. Each type is worth listening to and in each format Lewis and MJQ had something interesting to say. The alternating track format is, to my ears, jarring -- I'm just getting "into" Lewis doing Bach on harpsicord and we're back to the jazz/blues format. But even that doesn't stop me from enjoying the music--and it is very enjoyable, indeed.
Listening to the Bach tracks with vibes and harpsicord working the theme is good stuff! Lewis' treatment of the Bach themes is very interesting--you'll never miss the basic theme but he manages nice touches to rework and embellish. The blues/jazz tracks are stronger and begin to show what MJQ is all about.
If you're new to MJQ go get a couple others first (Fontessa would be a better starting point). Then, if you're like me and enjoy Bach and MJQ then get this one, its a natural. If you're extending a collection of MJQ then this one is worthwhile mainly because of its uniqueness.
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The Complete Last Concert
The Modern Jazz Quartet Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002IO8 Release Date: 1990-10-25 |
Tracks:
- Softly As In A Mornig Sunrise
- The Cylinder
- Summertime
- Really True Blues
- What's New
- Blues In The Mirror
- Confirmation
- Round Midnight
- Night In Tunisla
- Tears From The Children
- Blues In H
- England's Carol
Tracks:
- The Golden Striker
- One Never Knows
- Trav'lin
- Skating In Central Park
- The Legendary Profile
- Concierto De Aranjuez
- The Jasmine Tree
- In Memoriam
- Django
- Bags Groove
Customer Reviews:
F.R.S.......2006-03-18
Each disc all the songs are great, they bring back many old memories. I'm just sorry three quarters of the band are no longer with us.
A Sentimental Favorite, but Somewhat Overrated.......2004-07-30
The excitement the MJQ at its best generated in live performance is much better captured by the excellent "Dedicated to Connie" (ASIN B000002J4T) and "European Concert" (ASIN B000058TGY, but currently out of print). Both were recorded in Europe in 1960, when the group was at the height of its ability but still had something to prove, and both feature taut, committed performances of an intensity that "The Last Concert" doesn't quite match.
Down Home Swingin'. (no dancing please!).......2004-04-13
A Great Summation of the MJQ's career.......2003-08-09
The classical aspect of their music, so often likened to chamber-music, is well displayed in several tunes from their "Blues on Bach" album, but if you listen to Milt Jackson when he swirls and weaves his melody around the steady pulse by both drums and bass, you realize that this interpretation is beyond both classical music and Jazz. However, their reading of "Concierto de Aranjuez" is far closer to the original than the one done by Miles Davis on "Sketches of Spain".
Standards such as "Summertime" and "'Round Midnight", as well as tunes that recall the quartet's origin in Dizzy Gillespie's band, such as "Confirmation" and "A Night in Tunisia", are also present. But mostly the tunes are by pianist John Lewis and, with stronger leanings to the blues, by Milt Jackson. Lewis' "Skatin' in Central Park" and "One Never Knows", for example, are both lovely ballads, whereas Jackson's "Really True Blues" and "The Cylinder" are more deeply rooted in the realm of Jazz and Blues.
This only shows how much the music and the programme of the band was always built around the contrasting musical personalities of John Lewis, the quartet's musical director, and Milt Jackson, their main soloist, who embodies perfectly grace, style, time and swing at the same time. He was certainly one of the great masters of Jazz, and his at times forceful and energetic, but also often cool and crisp playing is to me the main attraction of the quartet. This edition is the first complete rendition of the now legendary concert (needless to say that they gave many more afterwards), and for that fact alone, the CD deserves six stars. If your new to the MJQ, you cannot find a better and more comprehensive collection of their playing. If you are a fan, what took you so long to get this marvellous highlight of their career? Get it!
A great concert disc, and a jazz classic.......2001-08-17
As for highlights...there are so many the whole set could just be called one continuous highlight of the quartet's legacy. But there are some standouts: the opening, disarmingly-complex "Softly As In A Morning Sunrise," the bluesy "Summertime," the funky "True Blues," the smokey "'Round Midnight" (featuring one of Milt's best solos on record for which he gets a deserved spirited ovation), the very sweet and sentimental "Skating In Central Park," the virtuostic "Blues in A minor," the delicate "One Never Knows," the energetic "Jasmine Tree," and two encores that are the group's signature pieces, "Django" and (of course!) "Bags' Groove" in what I promise you is the wildest rendition of this piece you will ever hear. All the selections have intricacy and interplay (each man knew when the other was going to breathe) beyond what can be described here. Suffice it to say these four men get textures, colors and tones that are quite unlike any other jazz group, and any other group of musicians in any genre. It's hard to appreciate today how innovative their approach was in the 1950s and 60s because so much of what they've done has become so assimilated by pop, jazz, TV and movie music, and classical. (Of course, they did a lot of assimilating of their own; it was a symbiotic relationship.)
Despite the overall high quality of music here, there are a few lowlights, and they underscore the reasons the MJQ became unglued and, frankly, *needed* to disband. They were being pushed more and more into Lewis' Third-Stream mode towards the end, and a lot of the compositions were forced and contrived. (Of course this conflict existed from the beginning, but Jackson and co. managed to actually feed off the tension. By the late 60s, though, Jackson was sounding in a rut.) I love the Third-Stream movement of music (and if you don't know what this is, go to any good music dictionary and look up "Gunther Schuller"), and wish more exploration had been done in this area (the economics made it prohibitive). But many of Lewis' "serious" compositions are, honestly, pretentious hybirds that Jackson and the others never could quite get down on. The audience applauds politely, but there's not much real enthusiasm for the sprawling and unoriginal "In Memoriam," the dry, dutiful reading of Rodrigo's famous "Concierto de Aranjuez" or the incredibly pretentious "Tears For The Children." (With a title like this you know it's going to be pretentious, and it delivers.) These tunes were kept off the original LP of this concert, and frankly, it was no loss. It's worth having here only for completeness' sake.
Still, these are but small nicks on a great masterpiece of an historic evening. If there were only a handful of jazz albums I could own, this would be one of them. (Pyramid and The Comedy would be two other MJQ albums on that list.) Of course we all know the group got back together again, but they never again made music like this.
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Django
The Modern Jazz Quartet Manufacturer: Prestige ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000EMGIJ6 Release Date: 2006-03-21 |
Tracks:
- Django
- One Bass Hit
- La Ronde Suite
- The Queen's Fancy
- Delaunay's Dilemma
- Autumn In New York
- But Not For Me
- Milano
Amazon.com
Pianist John Lewis, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, bassist Percy Heath, and drummer Kenny Clarke were fresh from serving as the rhythm section in the Dizzy Gillespie orchestra when they went into the studio in 1953 to record--only their second session together. "Autumn in New York," which would go on to become one of the group's staple performances in concert, summarized their cameo-like pictorial strengths. The December 23, 1954 session produced two of the group's enduring masterpieces--"Django," Lewis's tribute to the then-recently deceased French gypsy guitarist, Django Reinhardt, and "One Bass Hit," with its delightfully understated exchange between Lewis and Jackson. The "La Ronda Suite" fills out a great collection. --John SwensonCustomer Reviews:
One of the most unique sounds in all of music..........2007-02-14
Overall, this is just one of those recordings that as a jazz fan you have to own. It's a classic on anyone's list and RVG does another fantastic job as the "messenger" releasing it to sound as perfect and clear as if you were in the studio listening to it live. These guys were some kind of foursome and although I am huge fan of the horns, I still put these four at the top of my list of all-time favorite quartets. I highly recommend that if you are new to jazz and do not own this album then please purchase it immediately. You won't be disappointed!
Rudy remaster is remarkable.......2006-03-24
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Fontessa
The Modern Jazz Quartet Manufacturer: Atlantic / Wea ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000002I4D Release Date: 1990-01-31 |
Tracks:
- Versailles (Porte De Versailles)
- Angel Eyes
- Fantessa
- Over The Rainbow
- Bluesology
- Willow Weep For Me
- Woodyn You
Amazon.com essential recording
This 1956 record marked the beginning of the Modern Jazz Quartet's long and fruitful relationship with Atlantic Records and was one of their most inspired visits to a studio. While there had been excellent bands in the past that created a chamber-jazz genre, such as Red Norvo's trio, John Lewis's vision of a fusion of jazz and classical elements was distinctly original. It's apparent here in the controlled counterpoint of "Versailles," the extended first recording on "Fontessa," with Lewis's spare and precise piano perfectly complementing the looser swing of Milt Jackson's glistening vibraphone sound. The group mingles beautifully around Percy Heath's supple, melodic bass lines and Connie Kay's discrete and gently propulsive beat. Jackson's "Bluesology" and Dizzy Gillespie's "Woody'n You" inspire boppish invention, while the limpidly beautiful standards "Willow Weep for Me" and "Angel Eyes" demonstrate Jackson's ability to shift mood in a single phrase. --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
one of MJQ's best, of course.......2007-01-18
Thoughtful music.......2004-08-03
FINE SWINGIN LYRICAL ALBUM!!!!!!!!!!!!!.......2004-02-28
I wish to email the guy in Linkoping Sweden please.......2004-02-01
Thanks for reading
An essential and beautiful recording.......2002-12-05
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The Best of Play Bach [Stereo/Multichannel]
Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0001BDAQO Release Date: 2004-02-24 |
Tracks:
- Prelude No.1 In C Major
- Allegro
- Andante
- Presto
- Air On A G String
- Toccata & Fugue In D Minor
- Pastorale In C Minor
- Jesu, Joy Of Man's Desiring
- Gavotte In B Minor
- Fugue No.5 In D Major
- Gavotte In D Major
Customer Reviews:
Inovative!.......2007-04-02
One of the best quality SACDs I own!.......2006-07-16
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Plays Debussy
The Jacques Loussier Trio Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004Y6SM Release Date: 2000-09-26 |
Tracks:
- Clair De Lune
- Prelude A L'apres-midi D'un Faune
- Arabesque (From Deux Arabesques)
- La Fille Aux Cheveux De Lin (From Preludes Book 1)
- L'isle Joyeuse
- Reverie
- La Cathedrale Engloutie (From Preludes Book 1)
- Syrinx
Customer Reviews:
the first work to die for..........2007-04-18
"you complete me".......2006-02-21
Beautiful compliation of Debussy - Jacques Loussier's BEST!.......2003-01-13
joyful.......2002-10-31
Masterful Jazz Renditions of Debussy.......2001-03-01
So, on to this CD... The Jacques Loussier Trio play exceptional jazz renditions of more than a handful of Debussy greats, such as Claire de Lune, Arabesque, and L'Apres midi d'une Faune. This is an incredible accomplishment considering some of Debussy's original pieces, such as "L'Apres midi..", were almost entirely devoid of beat and consistent measure. One would assume that such an undertaking would produce garbage, but whoa- here the Trio has created delicious and highly-professional, polished jazz. The Jacques Loussier are not new to this kind of transmogrification of classical into jazz, some of their other CD's are devoted to jazz renditions of Bach and Vivaldi (Four Seasons).
The trio consists of piano, bass, and drums. Each carry their distinctive instrumental essences with complexity yet smoothly and with soul. Taken together, the chemistry of the trio is sublime. Sumptuous!
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Solo Piano: Impressions on Chopin's Nocturnes
Manufacturer: Telarc ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00062P5MU Release Date: 2004-10-26 |
Tracks:
- Nocturne No. 1 In B-Flat Minor, Op. 9, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 2 In E-Flat Major, Op. 9, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 3 In B Major, Op. 9, No. 3
- Nocturne No. 4 In F Major, Op. 15, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 5 In F-Sharp Major, Op. 15, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 6 In G Minor, Op. 15, No. 3
- Nocturne No. 7 In C-Sharp Minor, Op. 27, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 8 In D-Flat Major, Op. 27, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 9 In B Major, Op. 32, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 10 In A-Flat Major, Op. 32, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 11 In G Minor, Op. 37, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 12 In G Major, Op. 37, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 13 In C Minor, Op. 48, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 14 In F-Sharp Minor, Op. 48, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 15 In F Minor, Op. 55, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 16 In E-Flat Major, Op. 55, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 17 In B Major, Op. 62, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 18 In E Major, Op. 62, No. 2
- Nocturne No. 19 In E Minor, Op. 72, No. 1
- Nocturne No. 20 In C-Sharp Minor, Op. Posthume
- Nocturne No. 21 In C Minor, Op. Posthume
Customer Reviews:
A Masterpiece !! - The best Nocturnes in 150 years!.......2005-11-13
What we listen is Loussier impressions on Chopin's nocturnes, not the nocturnes themselves. Great! It's just the thing LISZT would like to compose, since he loved to discuss at the piano through paraphrases on other composers. Some of them are so amazing that we could easily consider them a new masterpiece since Chopin.
This is really what I call creativity. By listening to these miniatures, we finally understand what creativity means. I ofter have some points against some of the pieces Loussier plays with Trio, but after listen carefully to these pieces , I have to say this man has moments of geniality.
One of the most interesting to my taste if what he did with Chopin's nocturne Op 55 # 2. Incredible. I cannot guess what Chick Corea, Keith Jarrett, or even Herbie Hancock could made it better. Amazing!
Buy it! You don't know what you're missing!
And, please, Mr. Loussier, do record more Solo Piano. By listening to the Nocturnes, I'd like to hear the Waltzes, Scherzos, Impromptus, Polonaises, etc...you have discovered a brand new world!
Dihelson Mendonça
Classical and Jazz pianist/Composer.
Lloyal fan, but disappointed.......2005-05-22
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- Year Zero
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