Author Topic: bLUE nOTE  (Read 3348 times)

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Offline Garbarek

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Offline Garbarek

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Offline parasuco

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #7 on: Wednesday 22 March 2006, 12:56:49 »
unele melodii imi plac, poate le poti pune in locuri de unde pot fi date jos... ;)


Offline Garbarek

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #8 on: Wednesday 22 March 2006, 13:23:05 »
da-mi o adresa  de mess sau mail, spune-mi care melodii iti plac, si rezolvam problema ;)



Offline zzzburlici

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #11 on: Saturday 25 March 2006, 09:20:33 »
...........

e intotdeauna placut sa auzi pe cineva vorbind pe limba ta :)
garbarek.. he, he..   8)


Offline Garbarek

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Offline zzzburlici

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #13 on: Saturday 25 March 2006, 12:06:41 »
...si in cazul asta...cu dedicatie pentru zzzzburlici...nitel garbarek  ;)

he he.. s-au dus vremurile alea.. baga mai bine un gotan project, galliano, lhasa, ceva.


Offline zzzburlici

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #15 on: Wednesday 29 March 2006, 07:27:36 »
multumesc! :)

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Offline dayzee

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #16 on: Monday 03 April 2006, 15:57:53 »


Dream a little dream of me

Stars shining bright above you
Night breezes seem to whisper "i love you"
Birds singin’ in the sycamore trees
Dream a little dream of me

Say nighty-night and kiss me
Just hold me tight and tell me you’ll miss me
While I’m alone and blue as can be
Dream a little dream of me

Stars fading but I linger on dear
Still craving your kiss
I’m longin’ to linger till dawn dear
Just saying this

Sweet dreams till sunbeams find you
Sweet dreams that leave all worries behind you
But in your dreams whatever they be
Dream a little dream of me

Stars shining up above you
Night breezes seem to whisper "i love you"
Birds singin’ in the sycamore trees
Dream a little dream of me

Sweet dreams till sunbeams find you
Sweet dreams that leave all worries behind you
But in your dreams whatever they be
Dream a little dream of me

Yes, dream a little dream of me...

http://media.putfile.com/Ella-Fitzgerald-and-Louis-Armstrong---Dream-a-Little-Dream

Offline Garbarek

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #17 on: Tuesday 04 April 2006, 15:46:51 »
excelenta alegere Dayzee...poftim la noi ;)...la mai multe

Offline Garbarek

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Offline dayzee

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Re: bLUE nOTE
« Reply #19 on: Tuesday 04 April 2006, 18:28:25 »
George Gershwin -Rhapsody in blue



http://media.putfile.com/Rhapsody-in-Blue30


How Rhapsody came to be
:  Sometime in late 1923, the bandleader  Paul Whiteman asked George Gershwin  to think about writing a jazz piece for his band. Gershwin gave it some thought, sketched some possible themes, and left it at that. On January 4, 1924 to his surprise, a report appeared in the New York Tribune announcing that George Gershwin was at work on a "jazz concerto" to be premiered by the Whiteman Band at the Aeolian Hall in New York on February 12, in a concert to be called An Experiment in Modern Music. At the time, he was in the thick of his Broadway commitments and the jazz concerto was barely more than a thought, but Gershwin's genius rose to the occasion. He would later point to the rhythm and rattle of the Boston train he was once on as the source of his rhythmic ideas, and to James McNeill Whistler's painting Nocturne in Black and Gold as the inspiration for Rhapsody's title. On February 12, at the appointed time, which was toward the end of the programme, he delivered his first large-scale work - to an audience that included luminaries like  Sergei Rachmaninoff, Jascha Heifetz, and Efrem Zimbalist, Sr.  The wailing of the clarinet as the work opened could only have seduced the audience. Rhapsody was a huge success, the day's most talked about musical "experiment" eclipsing the rest of the programme. It was very American in its daring and its energy. And like America, it was a veritable "melting pot" of the influences that shaped Gershwin's musical language - Scott Joplin's tuneful piano rags, the rhythmic  jazz of Harlem's clubs, the folk music of the  Yiddish theater,  and the new post-Romantic music of Ravel and Schoenberg and Stravinsky.  It was a stunning performance, with George Gershwin himself playing the piano solo. Rhapsody was a great "hit" through the years and in its first decade (which included the Depression years) earned the composer big bucks - over $250,000. A fortune in those days. An uncommon reward for a most uncommon composer.

What the critics said. Enthused by Rhapsody's daring novelty, most critics found it possible to think of George Gershwin, then only 25, as a composer of "serious" music. But for many years some critics were of two minds about Rhapsody - praising "...the rich inventiveness of its rhythms, the saliency and vividness of the orchestral color" while lamenting the loose, episodic nature of its musical themes and "...the lifelessness of its melody and harmony, so derivative, so stale, so inexpressive...." And when it became known that  Rhapsody was orchestrated by Whiteman's chief arranger, Ferde Grofé (who would later compose the Grand Canyon Suite), Gershwin became even more suspect - wouldl he even make it to Carnegie Hall? Having never before written for orchestra, and given the time constraints, Gershwin had no other choice but to have someone orchestrate the music for him (which to this day is standard practice on Broadway). But nothing can stand in the way of musical genius. As determined to be a composer of "serious" symphonic music as he was convinced about the validity of popular song, Gershwin aided by his mentors honed his compositional skills and would eventually put these doubts about him to rest.