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RIP- Paul Motian

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Topic: RIP- Paul Motian
Posted By: Stooge
Subject: RIP- Paul Motian
Date Posted: 22 Nov 2011 at 2:51pm
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/23/arts/music/paul-motian-jazz-drummer-is-dead-at-80.html" rel="nofollow - http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/23/arts/music/paul-motian-jazz-drummer-is-dead-at-80.html

Paul Motian, Jazz Drummer, Is Dead at 80

By BEN RATLIFF
Published: November 22, 2011

Paul Motian, a drummer, bandleader, and composer of grace and abstraction, and one of the most influential jazz musicians of the last 50 years, died early Tuesday morning at Mount Sinai Hospital in NewYork. He was 80 and lived in Manhattan.

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/23/arts/music/paul-motian-jazz-drummer-is-dead-at-80.html" rel="nofollow - Enlarge This Image
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/23/arts/music/paul-motian-jazz-drummer-is-dead-at-80.html" rel="nofollow">
Brian Harkin for The New York Times

Paul Motian performing at the Village Vanguard in June.

The cause was complications of myelodisplastic syndrome, a bone-marrow disorder, said his friend, Carole d’Inverno Frisell.

Mr. Motian was a living connection to some of the groups of the past that informed what jazz sounds like today: he had been in Bill Evans’s great trio in the late 1950s and early 1960s, playing on the albums “Waltz for Debby” and “Sunday at the Village Vanguard,” and in Keith Jarrett’s American quartet during the 1970s. But it was in the second half of his life that Mr. Motian found himself as a composer and a bandleader, and his own work took off.

He worked steadily, and for the last six years or so almost entirely in Manhattan, with the support of the record producers Stefan Winter and Manfred Eicher, who streamed out his albums, and Lorraine Gordon of the Village Vanguard, who eventually booked his groups for up to four or five weeks per year.

Then there were the many musicians he played with regularly, including the saxophonist Joe Lovano and the guitarist Bill Frisell, with whom he kept a working trio; the pianist Masabumi Kikuchi and the saxophonists Greg Osby and Chris Potter, with whom he played in trios and quartets; the members of the Electric Bebop Band, with multiple electric guitars, which in 2006 became the Paul Motian Band; and dozens of other musicians, from young unknowns to old masters.

For almost all of his bands, his repertory was a combination of terse and mysterious originals he composed at the piano, American songbook standards, and music from the bebop tradition: Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, Charlie Parker, Charles Mingus.




Replies:
Posted By: Cannonball With Hat
Date Posted: 22 Nov 2011 at 3:39pm
Not all too familar with his work, but RIP nonetheless.

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Hit it on Five.

Saxophone Scatterbrain Blitzberg

Stab them in the ears.


Posted By: idlero
Date Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 3:52am
RIP
Another great musician gone...


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I think the problem with a lot of the fusion music is that it's extremely predictable, it's a rock rhythm and the solos all play the same stuff and they play it over and over again ...
Ken Burns


Posted By: Sean Trane
Date Posted: 23 Nov 2011 at 8:58am
Wow!!
 
RIP, Paul
 
Thanks for everything


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my music collection increased tenfolds when I switched from drug-addicted musicians to crazy ones....




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