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Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Legal. Afficher tous les articles
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dimanche 6 mars 2016

2016 : 637 Go de JAZZ Gratuit et Légal , The David W. Niven Collection of Early Jazz Legends, 1921-1991

The David W. Niven Collection of Early Jazz Legends, 1921-1991 est une incroyable collection mise a notre disposition gratuitement et légalement sur archive.org ,collection de 1 378 fichiers WAV de  , 637 Go de musique qualité CD , ce qui fait plus de 1000 heures de jazz en concert joué par les plus grands artistes de Jazz . Une exceptionnelle collection d'enregistrements directs des concerts concernant les plus grands artistes de Jazz de tous les temps et de toutes les époques depuis les années 1920 jusqu'en 1991.Tous les morceaux de musique sont téléchargeables légalement directement et en plusieurs formats qualité CD sur le site archive.org .  la qualité de certaines bandes est plus dégradé que d'autres. Ces fichiers sont des reproductions de qualité CD de ce qui était en l'état sur les bandes de l'année 2010 à 2011 .

https://archive.org/details/davidwnivenjazz

 

Exemple avec Chet Baker 1953-1956

 

Extrait du Listing Full Text : 

Henry "Red" Allen (trumpet) Louis Armstrong 1 (cornet, trumpet, vocal) Chet Baker 2 (trumpet, flugelhorn, vocal) Sidney Bechet (clarinet) Bix Beiderbecke (trumpet) Chu Berry (tenor sax) Clifford Brown (trumpet) Lawrence Brown 3 (trombone) Pete Brown (alto sax) California Ramblers (big band) Benny Carter 4 (arr., big band, alto sax, clar., trumpet) Charlie Christian (guitar) Buck Clayton 5 (trumpet, arranger) Wild Bill Davison (cornet, trumpet) Vic Dickenson (trombone) Johnnie Dodds (clarinet) Harry Edison (trumpet) Roy Eldridge (trumpet) Duke Ellington (piano, arr., big band) Duke's Sidemen (piano, arr.) Bill Evans (piano) Bud Freeman (tenor sax) Stan Getz (tenor sax) Benny Goodman 6 (clarinet, big band) Al Grey (trombone) Bobby Hackett (cornet, trumpet, vocal) Scott Hamilton (tenor sax) Lionel Hampton (vibes) Jimmy Harrison (trombone) Coleman Hawkins (tenor sax) Fletcher Henderson (arranger, big band) J.C. Higginbotham (trombone) Earl Hines (piano) Johnny Hodges 7 (alto sax) Billie Holiday (vocal) J.J. Johnson (trombone) James P. Johnson (piano) Keg Johnson (trombone) Barney Kessel (guitar) Includes some Jack Teagarden (trombone). Includes some Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax). 3 See also Duke Ellington (piano, arranger, big band). 4 Includes some Count Basie (piano, big band). 5 Includes some Count Basie (piano, big band). 6 Includes some Charlie Christian (guitar), Lionel Hampton (vibes), Harry James (trumpet), Gene Krupa (drums), Teddy Wilson (piano). See also Duke Ellington (piano, arranger, big band). Andy Kirk Orchestra 8 (big band) Tommy Ladnier (trumpet) Eddie Lang (guitar) (same tapes as Joe Venuti) McKinney's Cotton Pickers (big band) Mid 40's All Stars (miscellaneous) Mid 50's All Stars (miscellaneous) Ernest "Punch" Miller (trumpet) Thelonious Monk (piano) Jelly Roll Morton (piano) Jimmie Noone (clarinet) Red Norvo (vibes) Floyd O'Brien (trombone) King Oliver (cornet, trumpet) Kid Ory (trombone) Charlie Parker (alto sax) Joe Pass (guitar) Oscar Peterson 9 (piano) Bud Powell (piano) Andre Previn (piano) Django Reinhardt (guitar) Gene Schroeder (piano) Frank Sinatra (vocal) Bessie Smith (vocal) Willie "The Lion" Smith (piano) Joe Sullivan (piano) Art Tatum (piano) Jack Teagarden (trombone) Frank Teschemacher (clarinet) Clark Terry 10 (trumpet, flugelhorn) Frank Trumbauer (C-melody sax, clarinet, alto sax) Joe Venuti (violin) (same tapes as Eddie Lang) Fats Waller (piano) Dinah Washington (vocal) Chick Webb's Orchestra (big band) Ben Webster 1112 (tenor sax) Teddy Wilson 13 (piano) Lester Young 14 (tenor sax) Trummy Young (trombone) Includes some Mary Lou Williams (piano, arranger). Includes some Ben Webster (tenor sax). 10 See also Duke Ellington (piano, arranger, big band). 11 See also Duke Ellington (piano, arranger, big band). 12 Includes some Bennie Moten (piano, big band). 13 Includes some Benny Goodman (clarinet, big band). 14 Includes some Count Basie (piano, big band). An Early Jazz Recording Collection by David W. Niven My 20-year-old cousin introduced me to jazz when I was 10. It was a 10" 78 RPM OK recording of "My Heart" made in Chicago on November 12, 1925, by Louis Armstrong's Hot Five with Kid Ory, trombone; Johnny Dodds, clarinet; Lil Armstrong, piano; and Johnny St. Cyr, banjo. On the reverse was "Cornet Chop Suey." My hip cousin then advised me to get some recordings by another cornetist, Bix Beiderbecke, who started recording for OK the same year (1925). I dug, again, into my newspaper route money (35 cents) and bought the October 5, 1927, recording of "At the Jazz Band Ball," backed by "Jazz Me Blues" by "Bix and his Gang": Bix on cornet; Bill Rank, trombone; Don Murray, clarinet; Adrian Rollini, bass sax; Frank Signorelli, piano; and Chauncey Morehouse, drums. Over the next few years, I acquired every record Bix made prior to his early death in 193 1 . Encouraged by my interest in jazz recordings, my cousin came up with a third suggestion for my collection: Duke Ellington. One year prior to Louis' and Bix's first recording, Duke and his six piece band "The Washingtonians" with Bubber Miley, cornet; Charlie Irvis, trombone; Otto Hardwicke, sax; Fred Guy, banjo; Sonny Greer, drums; and Duke, piano, had their initial commercial recording date in November 1924. I became the proud owner of every recording up to the start of WWII and some 75% of his recordings until his death in 1974, some 180 hours of the recorded Duke Ellington. Throughout the ten years prior to WWII, during my high school and college years, my 78 RPM 10", followed by 33 1/3 RPM LP, collection grew to the thousands. All the big names of jazz, along with lesser legends, were included, and I found myself with a first class treasure of early jazz music. But I also found that such a collection was a first-class burden when I was moving through the post-war years with family, financial, and other fidelity responsibilities taking priority. I had always hoped that maybe at least one of my kids would show an interest in my collection, so I began making tapes that could include a chronological compilation of my collection, along with commentary: date and place of recording, personnel, soloists, etc. The main reason for doing this rather major project was to put my collection into some kind of compendium form that would attract my children to the music that had been of such significance in my life. My collection amounted to over 10,000 15 hours of tapes. I will list here most (but not all) of the Legends included, along with the years of their recording and the number of hours on the tapes. No two people will agree with my selection of Legends. I decided to choose from the years prior to the BeBop period, i.e., before Gillespie, Bird, Monk, Miles. Archivist's Notes by Kevin J. Powers Origins It appears, based on Mr. Niven's audio commentaries referencing certain artists still being alive at the time of the commentaries (for example, Buck Clayton, who passed away in 1991, is living, and Johnny Hodges' salary is compared to "1993 dollars"), that he put the tape compilation together during a period of time beginning somewhere in the mid to late 1980s and ending somewhere in the early 1990s. His own memory on this point is no longer clear. In my conversations with Mr. Niven, he has indicated that the materials in this selection of "Early Jazz Legends" only represents about 40-50% of what he once had in his jazz record collection. Other legends, such as Bennie Moten and many, many others, were in his collection did not make the "cut" for these tapes. Mr. Niven contacted Steve Massey, Director of Music for the Foxborough Public Schools and Director of the Foxborough High School Jazz Program, in autumn of 2010 with an offer for the music program to "download" the tapes for use by the students. Mr. Niven was probably not aware of the fact that there is no way to download cassette tapes as one would download a CD or other digital medium to a computer. Instead, cassette tapes, to be converted to a digital format, must be played back in their entirety into a 15 Archivist's note: The actual figure is "over 1,000 hours of tapes," a still very remarkable collection. computer sound card and recorded in real-time — just as creating a new cassette from another cassette requires playing the entire source cassette while recording into the copy cassette. In other words, while a CD can be downloaded to digital audio in a minute or so, a 90-minute cassette requires 90 minutes in order to be converted to digital audio; a 110-minute cassette requires 110 minutes in order to be converted to digital audio, and so forth. Equipment & Process For this project, I used a TEAC AD-500 cassette deck, a desktop computer with a modern SoundBlaster sound card, and the audio recording program GoldWave. Each cassette was recorded to a single WAV-format file at 44100 kHz, 16-bit quality, to match the quality of CD-audio. Each resulting WAV file was split at the division between Side A and Side B of the cassette, in order to make it possible for each WAV file to fit on a single 80-minute CD. I did not have the time (though perhaps someone else will in the future) to cut the WAV files into shorter segments for each individual tune. To have done so would have delayed this project many years. At any rate, much of the joy involved in listening to these tapes is having Mr. Niven's insightful commentary as a guide. Especially for a generation of listeners who have grown up pulling individual MP3 files for specific tunes off of the Internet, it is a beneficial experience to have a jazz expert (as Mr. Niven most definitely is) guide the listener through the life and times of the most illustrious figures in jazz — and, in the process, introduce the listener to numerous recordings with which he is doubtless unfamiliar. Although MP3 files are more common than WAV files, only WAV files, while much larger, are complete, uncompressed reproductions of the sound recorded by the computer. The compression process involved in producing an MP3 removes portions of sound. Therefore, while this project will ultimately include a corresponding set of high-quality MP3 files, the WAV files will remain as a fully accurate reproduction of the tapes. At Steve Massey's request, I began archiving these cassettes in November of 2010. The project was completed in October of 201 1 . We started with Benny Goodman Tape 1 , and we ended the initial run with the final recordings of Duke Ellington And His Orchestra. We then made corrected copies of about 60 tapes that appeared to have had gaps in their initial run copies. Liner Cards In order to create a complete copy of all of Mr. Niven's liner cards, I scanned each card at 400 dpi resolution. The JPEG images that resulted are as legible as the original liner cards. Until I or someone else type up all of the liner card listings, we have a complete copy of the cards. Each card lists artist, tape number, years, and tunes. Below the tunes is a key to the numbers next to each tune, which indicate the source recordings. For example "1 Cottontail" and "1 : RCA Victor LP In A Mellotone" indicates that the recording of "Cottontail" is from RCA Victor LP "In a Mellotone." Condition of the Tapes Many, if not most, of these tapes are in terrific shape, but others are in mediocre or even poor condition. I have rigorously and regularly cleaned, maintained, and tested (with known excellent-condition cassettes) the heads of the cassette deck used for this project. All defects heard here are on the tapes themselves rather than the deck used to play the tapes back. Final Thoughts This is an extraordinary collection. It has been Mr. Niven's life's work. It represents the very finest American music of the twentieth century, and because Mr. Niven took the time and care to record these commentaries, he has produced a library that is accessible to everyone from jazz aficionados to jazz novices. For the Foxborough High School Jazz Program, which has enriched the lives of so many students, this remarkable compendium of jazz recordings should similarly enrich the program itself. This is all made even more remarkable by the fact that, had Mr. Niven not had the foresight to contact Steve Massey in 2010, this entire collection may have disappeared. How many collections of jazz like this get junked after estate sales every year? Thank you, David — your devotion to jazz will enrich the musical education of hundreds of students! Legend David W. Niven Collection of Legends of Jazz on 90-Minute Tapes 16 Years Recordings Made Total Hours Trumpets Louis Armstrong Roy Eldridge Bix Beiderbecke Henry "Red" Allen Tommy Ladnier Bobby Hackett Wild Bill Davison Buck Clayton Harry Edison Clifford Brown Chet Baker Clark Terry Ernest "Punch" Miller 1923-1972 1935-1977 1924-1930 1929-1965 1923-1938 1938-1975 1943-1980 1937-1960 1938-1978 1953-1956 1963-1965 1952-1990 1925-1930 54 hours 7.5 hours 7.5 hours 9 hours 1.5 hours 1 5 hours 12 hours 8 hours 6 hours 16.5 hours 10.5 hours 1 5 hours 1.5 hours Trombones KidOry J.C. Higginbotham Vic Dickinson J.J. Johnson Jack Teagarden Lawrence Brown Jimmy Harrison Keg Johnson Floyd O'Brien Trummy Young Big Bands Duke Ellington And His Orchestra Duke's Sidemen Fletcher Henderson McKinney's Cotton Pickers California Ramblers Andy Kirk Orchestra Chick Webb's Orchestra Benny Goodman 1925-1956 1928-1966 1938-1982 1946-1980 1928-1962 1930-1962 1927-1930 1933-1940 1933-? 1934-1961 1929-1972 1936-1951 1924-1937 1928-1930 1922-1926 1924-1942 1929-1939 1926-1986 7.5 hours 9 hours 7.5 hours 6 hours 1 8 hours 25.25 hours 0.75 hours 0.75 hours 1.5 hours 5 hours 192 hours 10.5 hours 9 hours 2 hours 1 hour 1.5 hours 6 hours 50 hours Although the majority of tapes in this collection are 90-minute tapes, a large number are 60-minute tapes, 100-minute tapes, 110- minute tapes, and 120-minute tapes. Clarinets and Alto Saxes Benny Carter Johnny Hodges Frankie Trumbauer Pete Brown Charlie Parker 1927-1988 1928-1970 1926-1936 1938-1957 1940-1954 21.5 hours 58.5 hours 6 hours 3 hours 14 hours Soprano Saxes Sydney Bechet Clarinets 1923-1958 9 hours Jimmie Noone Johnnie Dodds Frank Teschemacher 1923-1944 1923-1940 1927-1930 1.5 hours 10.5 hours 3 hours Tenor Saxes Coleman Hawkins Chu Berry Ben Webster Bud Freeman Lester Young Stan Getz Scott Hamilton 1923-1968 1933-1941 1932-1959 1927-1976 1936-1956 1945-1981 1977-1981 24 hours 7.5 hours 13.5 hours 1 5 hours 1 5 hours 1 5 hours 9.5 hours Pianos James P. Johnson Thomas "Fats" Waller Willie "The Lion" Smith Jelly Roll Morton Art Tatum Teddy Wilson Earl Hines Joe Sullivan Gene Schroeder Thelonious Monk Bud Powell Bill Evans Oscar Peterson Andre Previn 1921-1947 1922-1943 1934 1923-1938 1933-1956 1953-1980 1927-1974 1927-1961 1948-1952 1947-1971 1946-1960 1956-1979 1945-1979 1945-1958 3 hours 12 hours 1.5 hours 9 hours 12 hours 21 hours 1 5 hours 4.5 hours 4.5 hours 10.5 hours 7.5 hours 9 hours 16.5 hours 1.5 hours Vibraphones/Xylophones Lionel Hampton Red Norvo 1930-1991 1933-1975 10 hours 10.5 hours Guitars Eddie Lang Django Reinhardt Charlie Christian Joe Pass Barney Kessel 1926-1946 1935-1953 1939-1991 1963-1983 1952-1958 6 hours 3 hours 1.5 hours 6 hours 1.75 hours Violin Joe Venuti 1926-1977 7.5 hours Female Vocalists Bessie Smith Billie Holiday Dinah Washington 1923-1933 1933-1959 1954-1955 4.5 hours 12 hours 1.5 hours Male Vocalists Louis Armstrong Frank Sinatra 1923-1972 1940-1978 54 hours 12 hours Miscellaneous Mid 40's All Stars Mid 50's All Stars 1940s 1950s 1 hour 3 hours

samedi 14 avril 2012

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