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 2 x CD |
7.513 Ft
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1. CD tartalma: |
1. | The Jones
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2. | Battle Royal
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3. | White Elephant
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4. | Easy On
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5. | Monkey
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6. | Broadway Joe
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7. | Animal Fat
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2. CD tartalma: |
1. | More To Love
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2. | Gunfighter
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3. | Peace Of Mind
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4. | Sunshine Clean
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5. | Dreamsong
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6. | Right Back
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7. | Look In His Eyes
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8. | Auld Lang Syne
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9. | Save The Water (Party)
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Jazz
White Elephant Orchestra
Joe Beck Guitar Warren Bernhardt Keyboards Michael Brecker Tenor Saxophone Randy Brecker Trumpet Sam Brown Guitar Ronny Cuber Baritone Saxophone Jon Faddis Lead Trumpet Steve Gadd Drums Nick Holmes Rhythm Guitar, Vocals Tony Levin Bass Mike Mainieri Arranger, keyboards, Vocals, Percussion & Ulcers Sue Manchester Vocals Bob Mann Guitar Hugh McCraken Acoustic, Electric & Slide Guitar, Harmonica Donald MacDonald Drums Paul Metzke Guitar Nat Pavone Lead Trumpet Jon Pierson Bass Trombone, Vocals Barry Rodgers Tenor Trombone Lew Soloff Trumpet David Spinozza Electric & Acoustic Guitar Ann E. Sutton Vocals Frank Vicari Tenor Saxophone George Young Alto Saxophone
The music embodied in these volumes are a collection of recordings from rehearsals, jam sessions and record dates that took place between 1969-1972, at various studios in New York City, usually beginning around 10 or 11 at night, and continuing until the early morning hous. Under my direction, these sessions were a continuing process of experimentation with the interaction of various musical forms. There were an opportunity to exchange musical, philosphical and political concepts, and a place to hang out, get hig, coolout from a day recording sessions or gather after a nightly gig. For many of us, it became an Oasis in the middle of the City.
The first rehearsals initially began in 1965, with a small circle of members from the Jeremy Steig group "The Satyrs". They included pianist Warren Bernhardt, acoustic bassist Hal Galor (later replaced by Eddie Gomez, and then electric bassist Tony Levin), drummer and resident guru Donald MacDonald, guitarist Joe Beck, and myself. By 1969, this ensemble gradually grew into what became a 'tribal experience'. Our wives, husbands, friends, lovers and children were as important to the experience as the music itself. After all, it was the 60's.
Some nights only a few stragglers would arrive, but there were many nights 20 or 30 hippies would play, sing and dance until we shook the 50's out of our skins. The musical ideas were launched from single sketches and vamps that would sometimes last for nearly an hour: changing shape, tempos and soloists, depending on who suddenly fell by or split. Everyone had a choice to blow, sing, or perform spoken word.
Perhaps the makeshift lyrics on some of the 'shouts' seem naive and a little corny now in these cold, gray nineties, but they were sung as an affirmation as to why we were there together. The experience was ours, and it bonded us for life.
On a few occasions, the White Elephant Band performed in public as a 23 piece group, but that 'Elephant' wasn't designed to fly. Instead, this 'tribal experience' spawned several permutationsthat proliferated in smaller ensembles. Dreams, Ars Nova, The Brecker Brothers, L'Image and Steps Ahead, were a few of the goups that followed.
I hope the music contained in these recordings brings you back to that special time, and allows you to reflect on the mmuicians involved, who have played an instrumental part in my life. ---Mike Mainieri January, 1996 |
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