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(Avant-Garde / Modern Creative / World Fusion) Don Byron (with Jason Moran, Jack DeJohnette, Ralph Alessi, Lonnie Plaxico) - Ivey-Divey - 2004, FLAC (image+.cue) lossless

Don Byron (with Jason Moran, Jack DeJohnette, Ralph Alessi, Lonnie Plaxico) - Ivey-Divey Жанр: Avant-Garde / Modern Creative / World Fusion Страна-производитель диска: USA Год издания диска: 2004 Издатель (лейбл): Blue Note Records Номер по каталогу: 7243 5 78215 2 0 Аудио кодек: FLAC (*.flac) Тип рипа: image+.cue Битрейт аудио: lossless Продолжительность: 01:14:59 Источник (релизер): собственный рип с оригинального CD (Darkman) Наличие сканов в содержимом раздачи: да (полный набор сканов, 300 dpi)Треклист:01. I Want to Be Happy 02. Somebody Loves Me 03. I Cover the Waterfront 04. I've Found a New Baby 05. Himm (for Our Lord and Kirk Franklin) 06. The Goon Drag 07. Abie the Fishman 08. Lefty Teachers at Home 09. "Leopold, Leopold..." 10. Freddie Freeloader 11. In A Silent Way 12. Somebody Loves Me (alternate take)Don Byron - clarinet, bass clarinet, tenor saxophone Jason Moran - piano Jack DeJohnette - drumswith Ralph Alessi - trumpet (on 6, 9) Lonnie Plaxico - bass (on 6-9, 11)Produced by Hans Wendl  Лог создания рипа (EAC Log) Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 5 from 4. May 2009EAC extraction logfile from 5. November 2010, 1:14Don Byron / Ivey-DiveyUsed drive : HL-DT-STDVD-RAM GSA-H54N Adapter: 0 ID: 0Read mode : SecureUtilize accurate stream : YesDefeat audio cache : YesMake use of C2 pointers : NoRead offset correction : 102Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : NoFill up missing offset samples with silence : YesDelete leading and trailing silent blocks : NoNull samples used in CRC calculations : YesUsed interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000Used output format : User Defined EncoderSelected bitrate : 320 kBit/sQuality : HighAdd ID3 tag : NoCommand line compressor : C:\Program Files\Exact Audio Copy\Flac\flac.exeAdditional command line options : -8 -V %sTOC of the extracted CD Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector --------------------------------------------------------- 1 | 0:00.00 | 8:47.16 | 0 | 39540 2 | 8:47.16 | 7:15.53 | 39541 | 72218 3 | 16:02.69 | 5:05.41 | 72219 | 95134 4 | 21:08.35 | 6:05.65 | 95135 | 122574 5 | 27:14.25 | 5:29.12 | 122575 | 147261 6 | 32:43.37 | 3:18.23 | 147262 | 162134 7 | 36:01.60 | 5:08.10 | 162135 | 185244 8 | 41:09.70 | 6:35.30 | 185245 | 214899 9 | 47:45.25 | 4:02.48 | 214900 | 233097 10 | 51:47.73 | 7:09.33 | 233098 | 265305 11 | 58:57.31 | 9:29.69 | 265306 | 308049 12 | 68:27.25 | 6:32.21 | 308050 | 337470Range status and errorsSelected range Filename C:\EAC\Don Byron - Ivey-Divey.wav Peak level 99.8 % Range quality 100.0 % Test CRC D86943E4 Copy CRC D86943E4 Copy OKNo errors occurredAccurateRip summaryTrack 1 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [4116C8BA]Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [0801DE1B]Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [2B08E333]Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [93A12D13]Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [F1A32846]Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [2F90CDE1]Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [D0B8A31B]Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [1DBFCF4E]Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [5E0528B0]Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [A467D01B]Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [17A016C8]Track 12 accurately ripped (confidence 11) [9AF7E101]All tracks accurately rippedEnd of status report  All About JazzIvey-Divey Don Byron | Blue Note Records (2004)By JOHN KELMAN Published: September 20, 2004Clarinetist Don Byron has fashioned a career something akin to a great jazz history lesson. With albums like Plays the Music of Mickey Katz and Bug Music , he demonstrated some of its traditional roots, whereas Music for Six Musicians and You are #6 explored the Latin and Afro-Cuban legacies. Tuskegee Experiments and the frighteningly good live record No Vibe Zone demonstrated where jazz might be going, at least in one person's view. Now, with Ivey-Divey , Byron consolidates it all into a recording that tells of the music's past, present and possible future all in one seventy-five minute stretch.With a core group featuring piano wunderkind Jason Moran and drummer Jack DeJohnette, inarguably one of the most stylistically broad players of the past forty years, Byron pays homage to the similarly bass-less trio of Lester Young, Nat "King" Cole, and Buddy Rich. But this is no mere tribute record; in fact, Byron is quick to point out that "this is less of a repertory record than some of my others, I didn't want this just to be 'Don Byron Plays Lester Young.'" Nor is it. Instead, Byron, Moran and DeJohnette take five pieces commonly associated with Young, and stretch them to their limits.Take "Somebody Loves Me," which is presented in two vastly different takes. Moran's modernistic stride takes both versions to places Cole might only have dreamed of, in particular on the alternate take, where the trio plays loose and free with time in ways that would have been unheard of in the '40s, while still maintaining a reverence that clearly draws a line from the past to the present.Elsewhere Byron contributes four originals that deliver on everything from the absurd Bugs Bunny-influenced funk groove of "Leopold, Leopold!" with bassist Lonnie Plaxico providing some nice contrast to the trio pieces, to the lyrical "Himm (for Our Lord and Kirk Franklin)," a stately duo between Byron and Moran, which extends gospel into the 21st century.And to draw a link between the distant past and the present/future, Byron tackles two pieces associated with Miles Davis, from two different periods. The bluesy "Freddie Freeloader," another trio piece, begins with a cool yet slightly disjointed groove, but soon picks up steam, heading for reaches farther afield. "In a Silent Way," with Plaxico once again sitting in, is an interesting take on the original, with an approach that is more organic yet, when DeJohnette comes in with his take on Tony Williams' signature drum beat, completely on target.Ivey-Divey manages to succeed on many fronts, but mostly it's a consolidation of sorts, one that looks to the future without neglecting the past. The clarinet may not be the most popular instrument in jazz these days, although it does seem to be making something of a comeback, but in the hands of Byron, it's as vital and significant as any other.  Matt Collar (AMG)Clarinetist Don Byron once again mixes post-bop, swing, and funk into a unique concoction on Ivey-Divey. Just like Bug Music wasn't necessarily '30s swing and A Fine Line: Arias and Lieder wasn't exactly a classical album, Ivey-Divey isn't truly a straight-ahead, mainstream jazz album, although purists and avant-garde fans alike should find much common ground here. To these ends, Byron gets humorously rambunctious and a little "out" on such tracks as the swinging "I've Found a New Baby," the reverent and bluesy "Himm (For Our Lord and Kirk Franklin)," and the funky downtown jam "'Leopold, Leopold...'." Backing Byron here are the always adventurous talents of pianist Jason Moran, drummer Jack DeJohnette, trumpeter Ralph Alessi, and bassist Lonnie Plaxico. Matt Collar (AMG) Music from EMI
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