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Happy 100th Birthday, Thelonious Monk! (Original Post) klook Oct 2017 OP
Oh Yes! malaise Oct 2017 #1
Happy Birthday! G_j Oct 2017 #2
Love Monk's Dream SummerSnow Oct 2017 #3
'Round Midnight, baby Brother Buzz Oct 2017 #4
A classic malaise Oct 2017 #5
The comments are almost as good as the music malaise Oct 2017 #9
so many great tunes, but I love "Nutty" Demit Oct 2017 #6
Straight, No Chaser Spider Jerusalem Oct 2017 #7
Well You Needn't. Codeine Oct 2017 #8
A Lovely Combo malaise Oct 2017 #10
Happy Birthday - Love Thelonious Monk smirkymonkey Oct 2017 #11
Message auto-removed Name removed Oct 2017 #12
Monk dances during Charlie Rouse's tenor solo klook Oct 2017 #13
LOVE! ellie Oct 2017 #14
T. Monk's Advice klook Oct 2017 #15
A friend sent this last night malaise Oct 2017 #16
Beautiful piece - thanks. klook Oct 2017 #18
Yes that was a beautiful piece your thread malaise Oct 2017 #19
My Childhood Piano Hero ProfessorGAC Oct 2017 #17

malaise

(268,919 posts)
1. Oh Yes!
Tue Oct 10, 2017, 05:42 PM
Oct 2017

Thelonious Monk was a genius.
How my father loved him.

His most appropriate piece for the Dotard's tenure

Brother Buzz

(36,416 posts)
4. 'Round Midnight, baby
Tue Oct 10, 2017, 05:53 PM
Oct 2017

Damn, you'd be hard pressed to find a Jazz musician that didn't cover one of the best jazz standards out there

Response to klook (Original post)

klook

(12,154 posts)
13. Monk dances during Charlie Rouse's tenor solo
Tue Oct 10, 2017, 07:52 PM
Oct 2017

and then rushes back to the piano just in the nick of time!



I love this guy so much.

malaise

(268,919 posts)
16. A friend sent this last night
Wed Oct 11, 2017, 07:47 AM
Oct 2017
https://www.thedailybeast.com/thelonious-monk-will-change-your-life-even-from-the-grave
<snip>
Thelonious Monk and I were in the same room at the same time just once, in the summer of 1968, at the Winston-Salem, North Carolina Coliseum, the first stop on a 21-city tour for a package show of jazz artists that included Cannonball Adderley, Gary Burton, Dionne Warwick, and Monk. Wes Montgomery was supposed to have played, but he died several days before.

Monk was 50. I was 16. He was the reason I went to that concert. I’m not sure how I heard of him. Everyone I knew listened to rock or soul. There was a country station that no one I knew listened to. The local college station played classical. No stations played jazz. Not even the one African-American radio station played anything but rhythm and blues.

I go into all this detail, because I want to at least sketch out a cultural territory that no longer exists. Today, wherever you may live, if you can get online, you can hear about almost any kind of music, and what you don’t hear, your friends do. Today everyone is on the same page, or the page they want to be on, from Boise to Berlin to Bangkok.

In the ’60s, you worked alone. In our city of 130,000 people, if you were curious about anything that wasn’t utterly mainstream, you were on your own. I knew people who were knowledgeable about rock but no one who knew more than I did about, say, jazz or classical or country, and I knew next to nothing.

klook

(12,154 posts)
18. Beautiful piece - thanks.
Wed Oct 11, 2017, 05:24 PM
Oct 2017

The memories of a landscape where musical explorers were largely isolated rings true for me. Almost all of my early jazz education was haphazard, the result of an accidental encounter or a serendipitous discovery. (And I owe a huge debt of thanks to some unknown staff member at my local public library who ordered jazz albums, unusual classical records, and other wonderful treasures that I got to check out.)

I discovered Thelonious Monk thanks to a college friend who played me "Live at Town Hall," with the incredible Hall Overton arrangements and performances by Donald Byrd, Phil Woods, and other greats. Wow - I felt like pure energy had been poured into my veins every time I listened to this record. Still do!!

ProfessorGAC

(64,995 posts)
17. My Childhood Piano Hero
Wed Oct 11, 2017, 08:39 AM
Oct 2017

Made me switch from classical (which i didn't like playing anyway, even as a 10 year old) to a jazz guy.

My dad was a "cool jazz" guy. (Getz, Brubeck, Farlow, Randolph, et al). He had this one album of Dizzy's band (live) and he never played it because he didn't care for it. I pulled it out and played it on my record player, and wham! "Dad, i want to play this kind of piano!"

Changed teachers a week or two later and never looked back.

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