Joe Harriott热门歌曲下载
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歌曲 | 专辑 | 时长 |
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1
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Tempo (Remastered 2015) SQ | Free Form (Remastered 2015) | 06:23 |
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2
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Tempo SQ | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 06:23 |
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3
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Introduction | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 06:49 |
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4
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Summertime | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 03:30 |
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5
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Best Behavior SQ | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 02:59 |
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6
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Cherokee | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 03:02 |
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7
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Harlem | 06:38 | |
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8
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Bang | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 02:53 |
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9
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Just Friends | Early Free Jazz Fusion | 02:42 |
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10
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Hum Dono SQ | Hum Dono (Doxy Collection) | 06:56 |
Joe Harriott最新专辑下载
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Hum Dono (Hd Remastered Edition)
2018-01-28
Remastered Hits (All Tracks Remastered)
2017-06-07
Tuesday Morning Swing
2016-08-04
Straight Lines
2016-03-24
Caravan
2016-03-24
Easy To Love
2016-03-24
Last Resort
2016-03-24
Joe Harriott歌手简介
by Chris KelseyJoe Harriotts music goes virtually unheard today, yet the alto saxophonist exerted a powerful influence on early free jazz in England. The Jamaican-born and raised Harriott played with his countrymen, trumpeter Dizzy Reece and tenor saxophonist Wilton Bogey Gaynair, before emigrating to England in 1951. In London, Harriott worked freelance and in the band of trumpeter Pete Pitterson. In 1954, he landed an important gig with drummer Tony Kinsey; the next year he played in saxophonist Ronnie Scotts big band. His first album as a leader was 1959s Southern Horizon. Originally a bop-oriented player, Harriott gradually grew away from the conventions of that style. During a 1960 hospital stay, Harriott envisaged a new method of improvisation that, to an extent, paralleled the innovations of Ornette Coleman. Harriott was initially branded a mere imitator of Coleman, but close listening to both men reveals distinct differences in their respective styles. Harriott manifested a more explicit philosophical connection with bebop, for one thing, and his music was more concerned with ensemble interaction than was Colemans early work. The 1960 album Free Form, which included trumpeter Shake Keane, pianist Pat Smythe, bassist Coleridge Goode, and drummer Phil Seaman, illustrated Harriotts new techniques. Beginning in 1965, he began fusing jazz with various types of world folk musics. He collaborated with Indian musician John Mayer on a record — 1967s Indo-Jazz Suite — that utilized modal and free jazz procedures. The albums traditional jazz quintet instrumentation was augmented by a violin, sitar, tambura, and tabla. Harriotts recorded output was scarce and virtually none of it remains in print.