Hints and tips:
...Leonard Bernstein’s “Somewhere” was the evening’s ballad, opening with a beautiful duet between guitar and double bass....
...There were passages of house, techno and drum and bass alongside the blocky beats of their core 1990s sound, a kind of dance-music boom-bap....
...It combines a handpicked band of McCraven regulars with the London Contemporary Orchestra, whose credits range from Radiohead to Terry Riley and Jimmy Page. November 11, Barbican Centre 8....
...He also played piano, synthesisers and at one point a harp, while Yorke moved between keyboards and guitars, including bass....
...Curated by Lloyd Bradley, author of the books Bass Culture and Sounds Like London, the season explores, among other things, potent US-Jamaican musical exchanges....
...The album begins with Coltrane’s brief statement of “Acknowledgement”, Love Supreme’s opening theme, and bassist Jimmy Garrison’s riff prompting a change of tension and pace....
...LeDonne’s style combines modal thrust with the pyrotechnics of Jimmy Smith and the earth of Jimmy McGriff....
...Jimmy Cauty and Bill Drummond were back, almost 30 years after scuttling their band in the most flamboyant fashion — when they fired machine gun blanks at music industry schmoozers at the 1992 Brit Awards...
...“Split Kick”, written by Horace Silver, fiendishly harmonises sax and guitar while Jimmy Raney’s “Motion” delivers twisty unison lines at pace....
...Among the factors in Led Zeppelin’s defence was the argument that the chord progression in Jimmy Page’s guitar intro turns up in songs dating back 300 years....
...Then drummer Elvin Jones brushes his cymbals into a drumroll that slowly fades out the other instruments, before bassist Jimmy Garrison begins what will become a repetitive four-note riff carried throughout...
...Musical arrangements are mostly gentle and circular, a lightly shimmering “countrypolitan” landscape of steel and acoustic guitars, cello, accordion, rising and falling bass notes and brushed drums....
...Elsewhere, “Like Sonny”, from the same album but with a different rhythm section, is elegantly delivered and the blues “Traneing In”, the album’s longest track, opens with Jimmy Garrison’s bass and captures...
...Its longstanding director Christian Sochon recalls a dinner in the early 1970s when Richard Nixon arrived with Sir Jimmy and the entire room stood up to honour the then US president....
...Ever since she began her career in Brechtian political big bands before going head-to-head with Jimmy Somerville on the Communards’ joyous version of “Don’t Leave Me This Way”, she has reimagined everyone...
...Cinematic associations continue on “I’d Rather, Jack”, on which the trio of Sam Barton, Mike Bourne and Jimmy Martin are joined by electronic music producer Erol Alkan....
...it, the 72 musicians of the BBC National Orchestra of Wales added such depth that it was like listening to lots of the very best bits of the late 1960s and early ’70s put together: there were hints of Jimmy...
...The opening track, “Untitled Original 11383”, featuring Coltrane on soprano sax and a rare Jimmy Garrison bowed bass solo, captures the probing aesthetic of Coltrane’s quartet on a twisty blues....
...There was also a single ballad, the flamenco-inflected “Theme for Jimmy Green”....
...This was a shame, as there was a fine solo quartet of singers sharing the Evangelist’s narration and Jimmy Holliday made a rapt bass Jesus....
...Jordan, while at the Urban League, scolded President Jimmy Carter for ignoring the plight of black Americans. But predictably, he is protective of his friend....
...We are on to our third course, a selection of nigiri made with yellowtail, sea bass and other pieces of succulent fish....
...Three numbers in, Garnett introduced Jimmy Heath’s “A Sound for Sore Ears” as once being a favourite theme tune for Ronnie Scott....
...He also played bass in a band. “The lousy guitar player in any band is the bass player.” The group was called Phantasy — “We couldn’t spell” — and played Rolling Stones covers....
...(Warner Bros) Was Jimmy Page’s praise for Royal Blood tinged with a note of anxiety?...
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