The best music in the history of the world, ever.
73Personal and subjective choices
I've just updated this hub with a terrific video of Bobby McFerrin - check it out below!
If you are a musician you could try learning the jazz standards listed. There is a miniature music lesson contained in each piece, so memorize as much as possible. For me, a track by Weather Report entitled "A Remark You Made" takes a lot of beating- see below.
If you're not really into jazz, you might need to listen to it a few times as it's complex music and a lot of the effect is from the changing textures in the music. It features a bass solo from Jaco Pastorius, one of the all-time greats.
Single best song - My Funny Valentine (Rodgers and Hart)
Other contenders:
The Nearness of You (Hoagy Carmichael)
Embracable You (Gershwin)
These three songs really stand out from the standards, due to their wonderful chord progressions, strong melodies, and inventive lyrics. They are tunes that are constantly reworked and re-recorded, and also give a strong enough harmony to support endless improvisations.
Best orchestral work - Rodrigo, Adagio from Concierto De Aranjuez. It's got Spain written all over it, in a good way.The Jim Hall jazz version is terrific, and by some strange fluke of nature it costs $2.60 for the album! That's only about 3 cents per thousand notes! Please buy it, you can't go wrong. Jim Hall is an American national treasure, though I'm not sure he is recognised as such. You also have Paul Desmond of Take Five fame improvising on the track.
Other great music- The end (ballad) section of Layla, which I believe is called Peaches and Cream. Here Comes the Sun. The guitar break in Badge (Cream with George Harrison)
John Coltrane version of My Favourite Things
A Remark You Made
Bobby McFerrin sings Bach
Best compositions and songs
- Duke Ellington: East St.Louis Toodle-oo, Take the A Train, In a Mellow Tone
- Antonio Jobim: How Insensitive (Insensatez)
- Thelonius Monk: Blue Monk, Round Midnight
- JS Bach: Air on a G string, Brandenburg concertos, cello suites. Prelude in C.
- The Beatles: Penny Lane, Strawberry Fields Forever, A Day in The Life, In My Life, For no-one, I Will, Yesterday,We Can Work it Out, Blackbird, Here there and everywhere.
- Joni Mitchell: Refuge of the Roads, Edith and the Kingpin, A Case of You.
- Erik Satie: Gnossiennes,Gymnopedies
- The Beach Boys: God Only Knows
- Rodrigo: Concierto De Aranjuez (Adagio)
- Raglan Road (Trad.Irish)
- Arthur McBride (Paul Brady version)
- Night Passage (Forcione)
- A Remark You Made (Weather Report)
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Leonard Cohen- Famous Blue Raincoat (Jennifer Warnes version)
- Up on the Roof - Carole King, James Taylor version
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Randy Newman - Still the same girl, Feels Like Home, Jolly Coppers on Parade.
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Django Reinhardt: Tears, Nuages, Manoir De Mes Reves (see my hub Django's legacy)
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John Coltrane - My Favourite Things
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Love's in need of love today (Stevie Wonder)
Cole Porter - Ev'ry Time We say Goodbye
- Standards:
- My Funny Valentine
- Embraceable You
- The Nearness of You
- Take Five
- Autumn Leaves
- Bewitched,Bothered and Bewildered
- Over the Rainbow
- Someone to Watch Over Me
- Day in the Life of a Fool
- How Insensitive
- I'm Old Fashioned
- With a Song in My Heart
- The Way you look Tonight.
Greatest improvisers (random order)
- Art Pepper, especially the later years - terrific sax and clarinet soloist.
- Robben Ford, a brilliant blues and jazz guitarist
- Django Reinhardt,the original guitar superstar from the 1930s, still revered today
- Bireli Lagrene,the most recent the better - don't like his child prodigy stuff, but now he is great. Gypsy Jazz lives on!
- Art Tatum,amazing piano player from back in the day.
- Miles Davis, massively influential jazz trumpet.
- John Coltrane,one of the greatest sax players,but prone to playing weird stuff!
- Charlie Parker, - mostly on Youtube.
Less well known greats
- Antonio Forcione (guitar)
- Danny Gatton (guitar)
- Mike Stern (guitar)
- Lyle Mays (piano)
- Richard Bona (bass)
- Jaco Pastorius (bass)
- Ted Greene (guitar)
- Jim Hall (guitar)
- John Scofield (guitar)
- Debashish Bhattacharya (Indian slide guitar!)
Great writers from yesteryear
- Fats Waller
- Louis Jordan
- Harry Warren
- Jerome Kern
- Cole Porter
- Hoagy Carmichael
Too many great songs to list here, but essential listening, with great lyrics. A good place to start is always the Ella Fitzgerald version from the Songbooks series. Try some web shopping for Ella CDs - many musicians agree they're the best source for accurate versions of the great standards from the American songbook.
Concierto by Jim Hall -amazing track, $2!
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Hemispheres
Price: $26.95
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Live (Dig)
Price: $5.99
List Price: $11.98 |
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Concierto
Price: $3.63
List Price: $6.99 |
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Concierto
Price: $19.95
List Price: $9.98 |
Ella Fitzgerald
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Pure Ella: The Very Best of Ella Fitzgerald
Price: $9.97
List Price: $13.98 |
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The Best of the Song Books
Price: $5.58
List Price: $11.98 |
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Twelve Nights in Hollywood
Price: $58.04
List Price: $69.98 |
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Best Of Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong
Price: $5.73
List Price: $11.98 |
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Comments
Hi Kosmo. Forgot to include Pat Metheny,one of my favourites. Recently saw Bob Brozman on slide guitar who was excellent, and a great teacher too. His playing is all over youtube. Cheers, JG
What, no Ellington? I saw the Duke live in Glasgow and remember it to this day. Johnny Hodges (alto) was already dead but Harry Carney (baritone) was still going strong.
Day in the Life of a Fool - I reckon it's the only well known melody where the first two notes form a minor sixth. Over to you?
Hi Paraglider - that's a fair point, will act on it.
Minor 6th - yes, but Love story theme (Where Do I Begin) is another one I reckon.
Cheers, Jon Green
true, but descending :)
Good choice from Ellington (and Billy Strayhorn). My favourites would include Mood Indigo and Sophisticated Lady. But he did so much.
Yes, they're both great tunes. Something that you may not know (I didn"t) is that The Real Book is now available as an app on the i-phone - as of yesterday the new one is much faster (i-phoneS). I've heard of people using it on the bandstand through a sat nav sized screen! So Ellington is now in cyberspace too.
Sketches of Spain By Miles; Rahsaan Roland Kirk's Raped Voices; Thelonious Monk's Blue Monk. In fact, you should check out my Internet Station called FASTTRACKS on Live365.com/stations/djtot12, I am sure you'll find a lot through listening. Please contact me if you do through the station's Shout Out or email. Great Hub!
Thanks ixwa, will do.













Kosmo says:
18 months ago
I'm definitely one to compile lists regarding music, particularly rock and jazz. Thanks for mentioning Miles Davis and John Scofield, who once played and recorded together in the early eighties. Please check out my hubs!
Kosmo