jet_porkins
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I used the search tool and found no immediate results under "favorite genre," so I'm going on a limb and assuming this thread hasn't been done before.
The poll is self-explanatory. Choose your favorite genre listed! In an attempt to be as inclusive as possible, I will generalize genres (i.e. "Rock" will represent metal, oldies such as the Beach Boys/Beatles/Elvis, punk, classic rock, etc). If you are very passionate about some variant of a genre such as metal, please specify. If your genre isn't listed, please click "other" and specify.
The rules are: Describe why this is your favorite genre (perhaps you might provide anecdotes of how you came to really enjoy said genre?). You may choose to be brief, or you may express your deepest feelings in an eloquent, properly punctuated explication. Also, provide between 1 and 3 of your favorite YouTube videos from your genre (NO MORE THAN 3!). Reach in and bring out your inner-musician on this one (even if you aren't a musician) :thumbs:. EDIT: New Rule: Everyone has to watch the first video I post. Jeff Coffin's badassness must be known throughout the series of tubes we call the internet.
I'll start:
<<<<<>>><<<<>>>><<<<>>>>><<<>>>>
I have plenty of reasons to love jazz. The obvious would be because I really love the sounds it produces -- such as harmonies, melodies, the instrumentation used, and the millions of different grooves and rhythms. Delving further yet, within jazz are jillions of sub-genres: dixieland, bebop, big band/small combo, avant garde, post-modern, funk/fusion, modal, latin, and the list can go on. I'm a lover of mostly everything it provides. I guess you could say I love the diversity jazz provides. In today's post-modernist world, it reaches out to just about every fundamental western genre (and even many world music genres, considering it has African roots) in some way or another.
I'm a big fan of improvisation. My favorite feature of jazz is that two different groups can play the same tune and the interpretation can be totally different. In addition, the same group can play one tune twice in completely different interpretive ways. Even if a tune - let's say, How Insensitive - is played in the same style by groups A and B, the improvisation that takes place in the middle will always be different, and might even come to a point where the intensity of the improvisation changes the style completely. I also find the math involved in improv to be fascinating.
Also, as I've stated before, I really dig the grooves, especially when an odd meter is involved, say when a tune is in 7.
Here are a few videos:
Completely badass sax solo by Jeff Coffin. The group is Bela Fleck and the Flecktones:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUMGSr3b67g
Branford Marsalis quartet performing John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" mov I. For those of you who actually care to watch these videos, I encourage watching this one all the way through. This improv is pretty intense, and the groove will stick with you for a little while.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfHtVgM14sM
My third is John Coltrane's "classic quartet" (Coltrane, McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums) playing "Impressions." Also featuring Eric Dolphy on Alto Sax http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kUzFbT5JT1M
The poll is self-explanatory. Choose your favorite genre listed! In an attempt to be as inclusive as possible, I will generalize genres (i.e. "Rock" will represent metal, oldies such as the Beach Boys/Beatles/Elvis, punk, classic rock, etc). If you are very passionate about some variant of a genre such as metal, please specify. If your genre isn't listed, please click "other" and specify.
The rules are: Describe why this is your favorite genre (perhaps you might provide anecdotes of how you came to really enjoy said genre?). You may choose to be brief, or you may express your deepest feelings in an eloquent, properly punctuated explication. Also, provide between 1 and 3 of your favorite YouTube videos from your genre (NO MORE THAN 3!). Reach in and bring out your inner-musician on this one (even if you aren't a musician) :thumbs:. EDIT: New Rule: Everyone has to watch the first video I post. Jeff Coffin's badassness must be known throughout the series of tubes we call the internet.
I'll start:
<<<<<>>><<<<>>>><<<<>>>>><<<>>>>
I have plenty of reasons to love jazz. The obvious would be because I really love the sounds it produces -- such as harmonies, melodies, the instrumentation used, and the millions of different grooves and rhythms. Delving further yet, within jazz are jillions of sub-genres: dixieland, bebop, big band/small combo, avant garde, post-modern, funk/fusion, modal, latin, and the list can go on. I'm a lover of mostly everything it provides. I guess you could say I love the diversity jazz provides. In today's post-modernist world, it reaches out to just about every fundamental western genre (and even many world music genres, considering it has African roots) in some way or another.
I'm a big fan of improvisation. My favorite feature of jazz is that two different groups can play the same tune and the interpretation can be totally different. In addition, the same group can play one tune twice in completely different interpretive ways. Even if a tune - let's say, How Insensitive - is played in the same style by groups A and B, the improvisation that takes place in the middle will always be different, and might even come to a point where the intensity of the improvisation changes the style completely. I also find the math involved in improv to be fascinating.
Also, as I've stated before, I really dig the grooves, especially when an odd meter is involved, say when a tune is in 7.
Here are a few videos:
Completely badass sax solo by Jeff Coffin. The group is Bela Fleck and the Flecktones:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lUMGSr3b67g
Branford Marsalis quartet performing John Coltrane's "A Love Supreme" mov I. For those of you who actually care to watch these videos, I encourage watching this one all the way through. This improv is pretty intense, and the groove will stick with you for a little while.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rfHtVgM14sM
My third is John Coltrane's "classic quartet" (Coltrane, McCoy Tyner on piano, Jimmy Garrison on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums) playing "Impressions." Also featuring Eric Dolphy on Alto Sax http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kUzFbT5JT1M