-
4 votes
-
Classical entrée: Nikolai Kapustin ― Eight Concert Études, No. 6. "Pastorale"
6 votes -
Thelonious Monk’s unlikely Palo Alto High show becomes thrilling live album
12 votes -
Sammy Rae - Jackie Onassis (2021)
3 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show - episode 12: Troubled Waters
3 votes -
Smoove - The Revolution Will Be Televised (2003)
3 votes -
Jimmy Cobb, drummer on Miles Davis's Kind of Blue, dies aged 91
5 votes -
The Big Dig Jazz Show episode 11: Vocal Distancing
5 votes -
Henry Grimes, a jazz bassist. Disappeared in 1970 and was presumed dead. Was found by a social worker in 2002, destitute and with no bass. Eventually won a lifetime achievement award in 2016
12 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 10: Large and In Charge (Big Band Sounds)
7 votes -
Five Elise – Take Five and Fur Elise mashup (2020)
10 votes -
Jazz Liberatorz - Speak The Language (Instrumental)
3 votes -
Hailu Mergia - Yefikir Engurguro (2018)
4 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show episode 9 - "newish" jazz
5 votes -
Joshua Paxton plays James Booker - great quarantine concert of solo piano from New Orleans
3 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 8 - Quarantine Workflow Edition
9 votes -
Kurt Rosenwinkel - Casio Vanguard (2017)
4 votes -
716lavie: 716 Playlists - Arnaud Switch Groov Exp Playlist
2 votes -
Sam Gendel - Pure Imagination (2018)
3 votes -
Jake Chudnow - Moon Men
4 votes -
Ibrahim Maalouf - True Sorry
5 votes -
Toti Panzanelli, Marco Pierini, Roberto Piermartire - Viola (2015)
3 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 7: The Spy Who Funked Me
3 votes -
Jeff Parker - Go Away (2020)
5 votes -
Martin Denny - Was It Really Love (1969)
3 votes -
Magma - De Futura (1976)
3 votes -
The Comet Is Coming: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert (2019)
5 votes -
Sounds Vintage v7 - Forward (2019)
2 votes -
Slayer - Reign In Jazz (Andy Rehfeldt Version)
5 votes -
Soil & "Pimp" Sessions - Man Steals The Stars (2019)
3 votes -
Snarky Puppy - NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert (2019)
9 votes -
Dirty Dozen Brass Band - Feet Don't Fail Me Now (NPR Tiny Desk) (2017)
4 votes -
Hearing Things - Transit Of Venus (2019)
4 votes -
Isamu McGregor / Evan Marien / Ari Hoenig - Actual Proof (2013)
4 votes -
Zion80 - Holy Brother (2016)
3 votes -
John Beasley - Shatita Boom Boom (2009)
4 votes -
Rahsaan Roland Kirk - One Ton (1969)
4 votes -
Josef Leimberg - Boiler Room Los Angeles Live Set (2017)
3 votes -
Yugo Kanno - Il Vento d'Oro (The Golden Wind) (2018)
3 votes -
In the Spirit of South African Jazz ... (from 70's up to present day) by Nicky Vour (2019)
5 votes -
Dan Tepfer (Human - Computer Duet) - NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert
Video Link I decided to post this as a text topic since IMO the video description is really important to understanding this performance: Aug. 29, 2019 | Colin Marshall -- Dan Tepfer has...
I decided to post this as a text topic since IMO the video description is really important to understanding this performance:
Aug. 29, 2019 | Colin Marshall -- Dan Tepfer has transformed the acoustic piano entirely with his new project, Natural Machines. Watch the keys and you'll see this Disklavier — a player piano — plucking notes on its own. But it's not a prerecorded script.
Here's how it works: Tepfer plays a note, and a computer program he authored reads those notes and tells the piano what to play in response. Tepfer can load different algorithms into the program that determine the pattern of playback, like one that returns the same note, only an octave higher. Another will play the inverted note based on the center of the piano keys. These rules create interesting restrictions that Tepfer says make room for thoughtful improvisation. In his words, he's not writing these songs, so much as writing the way they work. To better communicate what's happening between him and the piano, Tepfer converted these audio-impulse data into visualizations on the screen behind him, displaying in real time the notes he plays followed by the piano's feedback. We dive even deeper into this project in a recent Jazz Night in America video piece.
Perhaps the trickiest part here, unlike a human-to-human duo, is that the computer plays along with 100 percent accuracy based solely on Tepfer's moves. He compares it to dancing with a robot that never misses a beat. Tepfer has to play in kind to keep the train on the tracks, but if he falls out of step, so does the computer. On the other hand, Tepfer has unlocked a new frontier of music available to acoustic piano players: He's essentially given himself more limbs to play the piano at once, and at times we see more than 10 keys pressed at a time or a sequence of notes played at seemingly superhuman speeds. It's a central idea to what innovative technology enables for us — that which is impossible for us to achieve on our own.
edit: Nice related video from Jazz Night in America with Dan explaining some of how it works:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0L6tzG3FkcU7 votes -
Pat Metheny Group - Have You Heard (1989)
8 votes -
Shaped By What We Love - Threads Radio - June 2019 by Olaf Stephenson (2019)
3 votes -
The Comet Is Coming - Blood Of The Past (2019)
4 votes -
Sting And Shaggy: NPR Music Tiny Desk Concert (2019)
3 votes -
Spring Heel Jack – Disappeared (2000)
2 votes -
Manu Delago Ensemble - The Silent Flight of the Owl (2019)
1 vote -
jizue - P.D.A
4 votes -
Ninja Tune: Solid Steel 03.07.19. - Four Tet + Trevor Jackson
3 votes -
Internet Public Radio: Cheb Gero - Anti Apartheid (30 June 2019)
3 votes