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10-15-2021 05:22 PM
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Thanks for the video! Those were the days. (Too bad the audio wasn’t a little better).
I really loved McLaughlin’s archtop sound, an escape from the more processed electric sounds, before and after.
Matthew Garrison is/was a beast! He joined McLaughlin later. The Coltrane connection and all that, really pretty amazing when you think about it.
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Wonderful !
Is it Paco Sery on drums ?
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Originally Posted by 339 in june
John McLaughlin (gut)
Paco Séry (dr)
Arto Tunçboyac?an (perc)
Matthew Garrison (b)
Fareed Haque (r.gut)
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Originally Posted by Donplaysguitar
Listened to a lot of Zawinul this weekend, including Dialects. His post-WR work is quite amazing. One wonders where he gets the inspiration for such unusual sounds. How a guy from Hungary could be so conversant in African and other world musics is a real mystery.
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
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incredible
I wonder how many other guitar players could even hang in that situation ?
it would scare the shit outa me ....
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Originally Posted by BigDaddyLoveHandles
But Zawinul is not a Germanic name. I thought I read someplace his family was from Hungary. I could be wrong.
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
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Originally Posted by kris
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
Back home in Basel with access to my record collection, I can finally post my little homage to Joe Zawinul who passed away last week. Zawinul’s life is well documented all over the world wide web, so I’ll refrain from repeating what others already might have written much better. Just to create a clearer connection to this blog I’d point out a less known fact that Zawinul, born in Austria in 1932, also had Czech roots: his grand father hailed from Moravia. The origin is also obvious if you look at the literal meaning of the surname Zawinul. “Zavinout” means in Czech “to wrap up” or “to swathe” which is pretty well illustrated by the Czech word for the @ symbol: “zaviná?” (zaviná? is actually a rollmops).
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Originally Posted by Doctor Jeff
Grant Green, What is This Thing
Today, 01:59 PM in Ear Training, Transcribing & Reading