2 CD
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Label Fondamenta |
UPC 0889854691721 |
Catalogue number FON 170402 |
Release date 08 December 2017 |
"The double CD provides insight into a historic moment in which Monk visited our country. A beautiful and very dynamic recording."
Music Emotion, 30-3-2018When he set foot on the stage of Club Doelen on Oct. 28, 1967 in Rotterdam, Thelonious Monk had just turned 50. 15 years later, he disappeared from the music scene and spent his 6 final years in New York, at Pannonica de Koenigswater's, and never touched a piano again.
This concert is a testament to his genius. Opening and ending with two “classic pieces”, “Ruby, My Dear” and “Blue Monk”, he led for over 80 minutes the quartet and his accomplices, Charlie Rouse, Larry Gales, Ben Riley, and guests.
Larry Gales's bass seems to pop out like a jack-in-the-box at the end of “Hackensack”, the brass instruments get carried away towards the middle of “We see”, and billow out and away in the breathtaking “Oska”. And it all leads to a solo time on “Don't Blame Me”: his fingers must be widely spread apart as he hits the keys the way you'd hit and shuffle cards. And then it's time to conclude with one of his classic tunes “Blue Monk”. The architect can set down his tools, what remains is pure art.
The double CD provides insight into a historic moment in which Monk visited our country. A beautiful and very dynamic recording.
Music Emotion, 30-3-2018
Virtuoso, technically stunning, these are not concepts which labeled Thelonious Monk. But there is probably no other pianist who can speak so much with one note.
De Nieuwe Muze, 21-2-2018
Proud of this document from Rotterdam.
Jazzism, 16-2-2018
The concert sounds like it happened yesterday and completely shades all previous unofficial, inferior (and incomplete) editions. Bravo!
Mania, 02-2-2018
Thelonious Monk was a musical innovator, always looking for new ways of playing where he sometimes ‘just’ stopped playing during solo’s and thus gave the soloist plenty of room, using new harmonies and tempo doubling (‘Epistrophy’). With this double CD it’s so great to enjoy The High Priest of Bebop over and over again.
Music Frames, 08-1-2018
The albums have been exceptionally well-edited, with pleasantly felt cardboard covers and luxuriously executed booklets. The fitting name for this special series is 'The Lost Recordings'.
Jazzenzo, 02-12-2017