![]() Between the swinging 'Straight No Chaser' and 'Butch and Butch,' there's more than enough to get excited about. One cannot help but notice how energetic, for the most part, this session is. The high-end musings into which the music evolves speak to the ecstasy that any such musician must have felt at those moments of ethereal access. The title opener welcomes us into a nostalgic world, glimpses of what it must have been like to work with Miles. Writing for ECM blog Between Sound and Space, Tyran Grillo commented: " Bye Bye Blackbird sits above the rest for its sheer profundity of expression. ![]() DeJohnette performs wonders, changing metre subtly with almost every bar on 'Straight No Chaser.' An excellent record, beautifully packaged." are as intensely felt as anything Jarrett has done in recent years, and the level of abstraction that has crept back into the music is well judged and unobtrusive. and immaculately played, as this group always plays. The choice of material is refreshingly unobvious. The authors of The Penguin Guide to Jazz wrote: " Bye Bye Blackbird is a wonderful record. As an immediate response to a traumatic event, Jarrett and his colleagues strike the right emotional balance to create one of their more meaningful albums." There is symmetry in the organization of the album, with 'Bye Bye Blackbird' opening and the trio's equally jaunty 'Blackbird, Bye Bye' closing the album, and the interior tracks immediately following the former and preceding the latter are 'You Won't Forget Me' and 'I Thought About You'. Keith Jarrett's piano solo on 'Butch and Butch' live in Tokyo (July 25, 1993) Free pdf: The chords on the transcription are simplifi. ![]() Ginell wrote: "The lonely figure in shadow with a horn on the cover contrasts with the joyous spirit of many of the tracks on this CD, yet there is still a ghostly presence to deal with-and in keeping with Miles' credo, Jarrett's choice of notes is often more purposefully spare than usual. Reception Professional ratings Review scores Jarrett / Peacock / DeJohnette chronologyīye Bye Blackbird is a studio album by the Keith Jarrett Trio recorded on Octoin tribute to Miles Davis, who had died two weeks earlier, and released on ECM in April 1993-the first and last studio recording by Jarrett's " Standards Trio", featuring rhythm section Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette since their 1983 debut. ![]()
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