| Can I Come Look At These Items? | | This online store is in association with Amazon.com, so these great, high-qualiy products will come from their warehouse or from other partners. Thanks for shopping! |
|
|
|
Live | 
enlarge
| Artist: Brad Mehldau Trio Label: Nonesuch Category: Music
List Price: $19.98 Buy New: $9.49 You Save: $10.49 (53%)
New (47) Used (11) from $9.49
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 1836
Format: Live Media: Audio CD Discs: 2 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2 Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5
MPN: 376252 UPC: 075597995657 EAN: 0075597995657 ASIN: B0013D8JCO
Release Date: March 25, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand New - Factory Sealed - Shipped from Florida via USPS First class mail. We ONLY sell what we have in stock. NO back orders here.Import Edition
|
| Tracks:
Disc 1
| • | Introduction | | • | Wonderwall | | • | Ruby's Rub | | • | O Que Sera | | • | B-Flat Waltz | | • | Black Hole Sun | | • | Very Thought of You |
Disc 2
| • | Buddha Realm | | • | Fit Cat | | • | Secret Beach | | • | C.T.A. | | • | More Than You Know | | • | Countdown |
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description The dozen tracks on this double-disc set, produced by Mehldau, were recorded at the Village Vanguard over four evenings, from October 11 to October 15, 2006. New York Times critic Nate Chinen was there on opening night and called the set a marvel of concentration and restraint...On a brisk new original called Ruby's Rub, the trio applied a simmering heat of the sort that once propelled Miles Davis s mid-1960's rhythm section, which featured Herbie Hancock on piano and Tony Williams on drums. Mr. Mehldau soloed judiciously, leaving plenty of space between one phrase and the next. Each opening was an opportunity for Mr. Ballard, whose responses indicated a thoughtful rigor. The other new piece Buddha Realm, an anagram of Mr. Mehldau's name had a similarly investigative quality. Mr. Grenadier provided its anchor, a one-note ostinato. Confident in this mooring, Mr. Mehldau opted for a floating sensibility in his solo, along with some unforced ambidexterity. Brad Mehldau Trio Live opens with a cover of Wonderwall, from the nineties Brit-pop band Oasis, and concludes with a rendition of John Coltrane s Countdown. In between, Mehldau and his cohorts radically and elegantly reinterpret bossa nova (Chico Buarque's O Que Sera ), Seattle grunge (Soundgarden s Black Hole Sun ) and Tin Pan Alley (the 1929 classic More Than You, featured in Barbra Streisand s Funny Lady). The trio also offers its own version of Mehldau's Secret Beach, which first appeared on Metheny /Mehldau Quartet. (That disc, released in 2007, contains tracks cut live in the studio with guitarist Pat Metheny in December 2005). The Brad Mehldau Trio launches its 2008 North American tour in late January with a six-night return to the Village Vanguard. The first leg of the tour runs through June, with a brief overseas trip in March for dates in France and Eastern Europe, including an evening at the Tchaikovsky Concert Hall in Moscow. The original Brad Mehldau Trio, with the rhythm section of bassist Larry Grenadier and drummer Jorge Rossy, played together for nearly a decade, and released two acclaimed live Art of the Trio sets for Warner Bros., recorded at Mehldau's regular haunt in Manhattan, the Village Vanguard. After Rossy retired from the combo, Mehldau introduced a new lineup, featuring drummer Jeff Ballard, on his 2005 Nonesuch disc, Day Is Done. The revamped trio s debut studio recording wound up on many critics year-end best-of lists. All About Jazz declared, There s no better scenario than having Jeff Ballard take Jorge Rossy's place in the trio s drum chair... Ballard is every bit as experienced, open, and on fire as Mehldau and bassist Larry Grenadier. Pop Matters called the album the Mehldau Trio's most aggressive and vibrant studio effort to date.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
Live it is ! August 18, 2008 I began with Largo and have not stopped... 2 CD's of scary chops and all of it LIVE !
Awesome Cd May 25, 2008 1 out of 3 found this review helpful
This new Releases of Brads is awesome. It blows you away. Its 1 of the finest live recordings of all time. Awesome musicianship,awesome arrangements & very talented artist. Id go out as quick as you can & buy this Cd its that awesome.
Good as it gets May 25, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Mehldau, Grenadier, Ballard during a week at the Vanguard when everything was working. The trio is driving in these live recordings. Jeff Ballard may have taken a season to integrate with longtime collaborators Mehldau and Grenadier. Their style is more direct/forward. When the improvisation moves toward the free/dissonant, Mehldau's playing evolves into compelling/catchy original passages. Complicated but direct; cerebral but grounded. I'm not likely to dance to it, but it demands a physical reaction.
Sensational on every level-- Rhythms, melodies, sounds
Brad Mehldau Trio, Live May 9, 2008 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Great, I like this new release of Brad Melhdau Trio. He is going to be one of the great jazzman!!! I strongly recommend the CD.
A Great Listen Despite Some Weak Moments May 1, 2008 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I'm a huge Mehldau fan. I own all of his recordings as a leader and many of him as a sideman and have seen him live a few times. This is the trio's sixth live album (though the "Art of the Trio" title seems to have died with Mehldau's switch from Warner Bros. to Nonesuch). One of the real defining features of Mehldau's trio albums is that his playing consistently excellent (remarkably so!) througout. He seems to fall away from that a bit here as he tries a few new things. He does a lot of playing on the lowest notes of the piano in a few songs. To me these moments seem less spirited and a bit harder on the ear than most of Mehldau's earlier playing. Mehldau also plays a lot more ruminatively in some songs than he typically does. His playing sounds tentative in these moments, almost as if he is thinking too hard about what notes to play before he plays them. Finally, there are spots in a few songs where the band simply seems to lose its direction. There is a particularly long section of this in Mehldau's cover of "Black Hole Sun," but it occurs in other tunes as well. In a few of these moments, Mehldau seems to want to play back and forth with bassist Larry Grenadier, but the music ends up sounding more disconnected than it should. If anything, Grenadier keeps up his end of these exchanges better than Mehldau does (and his bass is mixed pretty loudly, which I enjoy). Despite those occasional negatives, there is a lot to like here. Mehldau's tune "Secret Beach" is among the best he has recorded with his trio, and the compositions written by Mehldau himself tend to be the best on the album ("Fit Cat" and "B-Flat Waltz" are also quite good). It simply seems he is a bit too concerned with testing the limits of the form in his playing of standards (if recent pop songs like "Wonderwall" and "Black Hole Sun" can be considered standards). Overall, I would recommend this to fans of Mehldau. If you are new to the trio, I would recommend buying The Art of the Trio Vol. 2 or Vol 5 (also a double cd) first.
|
|
| | |