15 August 2012

A Midsummer Blindfold Test (3rd Edition)


An easy test for this year: who plays this fine version of "Someday My Prince Will Come"?

Someday My Prince Will Come

12 comments:

  1. All things are easy if you are an expert (or lucky), riccardo!

    I don't know the recording.

    At first I thought it was a blind pianist, since there were very few "leaps" in the intro.

    Then the bass and drums came in, and it sounded very like Scott LaFaro, or a disciple (such as Eddie Gomez). Heavier thumps than Marty Morell or Paul Motian usually hits, though (maybe this is a question of microphone positions).

    But then it didn't sound a bit like Bill. Too pecky, too perky. Unless he was in one of his "moods".

    Jan Hammer in his Junior Trio days? George Shearing on a bender? Dave Brubeck? (certainly sounds heavy enough)

    I give up!

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  2. Actually, not Jan Hammer.

    A definite Evansite in his early days, but was more reflective than this.

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  3. Well, the bassist surely overplays in the annoying way Eddie Gomez does...pretty sure it's him. And the phrase at the very end of the piano solo sure smacks of Chick Corea.

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  4. I would love to think it was Cecil Taylor and chums moonlighting. However, is it Keith Jarrett?

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  5. @ Craig Nixon
    you're right with the pianist, now is easy to complete the line-up!

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  6. @ Peter

    I understand your confusion: Bill Evans played (and recorded) this song dozens of times...

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  7. Spotting Corea was pretty easy. The drummer had me stumped though. Thought perhaps Airto from back in the day when he still played traps, but didn't sound like him either.

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  8. @ Craig Nixon

    I may add that this trio made his debut in the late sixties and then
    continued to meet (from time to time) until a couple of years ago.

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  9. miroslav vitous on bass and roy haynes on drums ?

    giovanni

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  10. @ giovanni

    exact: Trio Music (C.Corea/M.Vitous/R.Haynes)

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  11. Hmmmmm ... well, I didn't get anywhere near that.

    Except curiously, in part, on a tangent. The Junior Trio I mentioned consisted of Jan Hammer, Miroslav Vitous and Alan Vitous. I can't claim credit even for that though, as I was trying to get at the pianist!

    Roy Haynes gives it quite a bit of a wallop. May partly be mic positions, as I mentioned. But I noticed Roy became more inclined to hit harder after the 60s. ~ But then again, wasn't he the young drummer Lester Young took to task at the end of the 40s for "dropping bombs" (bass drum overuse)? :D

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