excerpt from 'The Great Jazz Pianists: Speaking of Their Lives and Music' pp. 261 (92 words)

excerpt from 'The Great Jazz Pianists: Speaking of Their Lives and Music' pp. 261 (92 words)

part of

The Great Jazz Pianists: Speaking of Their Lives and Music

original language

urn:iso:std:iso:639:ed-3:eng

in pages

261

type

text excerpt

encoded value

Recently I put on a tape of the Coltrane quartet in my car and caught the middle of this tune where there was this far-out dialogue between Trane and Elvin Jones. I was thinking, what the hell are they doing? A minute or two later it became clear: They were playing the blues. They had really abstracted the form, but then they landed where it was really coming from. There's something powerful in hearing that grounding come through. It's not possible to understand that very abstract stuff without understanding a basic blues.

appears in search results as

excerpt from 'The Great Jazz Pianists: Speaking of Their Lives and Music' pp. 261 (92 words)

1431349292807:

reported in source

1431349292807

documented in
Page data computed in 330 ms with 1,598,192 bytes allocated and 35 SPARQL queries executed.