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Jimmy Ponder - Live At The Other End '2007

Live At The Other End
ArtistJimmy Ponder Related artists
Album name Live At The Other End
Country
Date 2007
GenreJazz Guitar
Play time 00:54:41
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 223 mb
PriceDownload $1.95
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Tracks list

Tracklist

01. The Work Song
02. Jitterbug Waltz
03. Freedom Jazz Dance
04. Con Alma
05. Milestones
06. Stella By Starlight
07. All The Things You Are

Let's face it, solo jazz guitar records - by most guitar masters anyway - would
become rather ho hum unless of course you are a student of the instrument or a
die-hard fanatic. There are exceptions: Jim Hall, Bola Sete, Tal Farlow, as well
as others purposely omitted for brevity here. Live at the Other End by Jimmy
Ponder is not only engaging for its entire 55 minutes' running time, it's
downright dazzling, and not only in technical acumen - which it certainly is -
but in its pure singing musicality. Given that the Other End - formerly the
legendary Bitter End - was, in 1982, a pop-oriented room, a solo gig by a jazz
guitarist was risky for the club to be sure, but more so for the guitarist.
While acid jazz fans dig deep into Ponder's sides with Lou Donaldson and the
late Charles Earland, as well as his High Note solo date, Alone, it is this set
that best defines the guitarist - preceding the High Note session by eight years
- and brings into the open his considerable gifts. This is a burner of a show.
Whether he's digging into the Cannonball Adderley classic "Work Song," in which
he - sans pick like his man Wes Montgomery - wrings every ounce of funky
blues-shouting feeling, or transforms a ballad standard such as "Stella by
Starlight" with killer middle-register runs, angular bass notes, and dazzling
scalar runs, or turns "All the Things You Are" into a soulful history lesson in
the jazz masters of the past as read through the wily soul-jazz era, or funks
the joint out with an eight-minute bass note-heavy "Freedom Jazz Dance" by Eddie
Harris, it's all jaw-droppingly awesome. If anything, this set, recorded by the
great Mark Hood and mastered impeccably by Yoichi Namekata, is perhaps the
defining moment for Ponder as one of jazz's underappreciated greats (it's
curious that it took the hip-hop and acid jazz generations to cement his rep),
and is one of the finest solo jazz guitar records in the canon, period. 

Jimmy Ponder


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