Keith Jarrett - Live In Japan 93/96 (2008) [2xDVD] + Solo Tribute: The 100th Performance In Japan 1987 (2002) [DVD]
2xDVD9 + DVD5 -> 17.2 Gb | All Regions | NTSC 16:9 & 4:3 | LinearPCM, 2 ch / Dolby AC3, 6 ch | ~ 5h 30m | ISO Images
Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 14 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 2002, 2008 Image Entertainment / ECM Records / VideoArts | DVD 177 2710 / 5722
Jazz / Post Bop / Live / Piano
These 2 shows by the Jarrett trio filmed live in Tokyo in 1993 and 1996. The material was previously released as single DVDs but has been now out of print for several years. The discs were originally issued, separately, as Live At Open Theater East 1993 and Trio Concert 1996. The 1993 set is an open air concert that tackles a large slice of jazz history from "Basin Street Blues" to Sonny Rollins' "Oleo", Jarrett's own "The Cure" and much more. The 1996 date is the filmed footage that corresponds to the trio's "Tokyo '96" CD but adds extra material.
Keith Jarrett Trio - Live In Japan 93/96 (2008) [2-DVD Set] {ECM}
2 DVD-9 -> 6.62 Gb + 6.54 Gb | All Regions | NTSC 16:9 & 4:3 | Audio : LinearPCM, 2 ch
Time: 02:09:11 + 01:41:01 | ISO Images | Full Artwork @ 300 dpi (jpg) -> 14 Mb | 5% repair rar
© 2008 ECM Records / VideoArts | DVD 177 2710
Jazz / Post Bop / Live / Piano
Together with Gary Peacock and Jack DeJohnette, jazz pianist Keith Jarrett entrances Japanese audiences this concert set, featuring two full-length performances from 1993 and 1996. On both nights the trio played a diverse collection of original improvisational pieces as well as standards ranging from Sonny Rollins' "Oleo" to "It Could Happen to You."
I'm a late convert to Keith Jarrett's music. I was turned off by the machine-like monotony of the best-selling Koln concert and was irritated by the pianist's antics–groaning and buzzing at a chord or a sequence he must have played five thousand times. But his genius grows on you. I started to connect when I heard Jarrett's Bach and Handel, and I was overwhelmed by The Melody at Night, With You. This led to a series of purchases on CD and DVD that brought me to the film under review. It is simply magnificent. Yes, the antics are still there; it's what Jarrett does. But look past them for the sound, the technique, and the incredible, swinging beauty that emerges from this splendid trio. Keith Jarrett has no equal at the jazz piano, and his overall talent must place him at or near the top of any list of great pianists anywhere, ever.
The DVD is well-filmed and the sound is excellent. Still, here's a radical thought: Why not film a musical performance with only one or two cameras, to minimize the distractions. There must be six or seven here. Focus on the artist and his keyboard, ignoring the back of the drummer's head during a momentous piano solo. Ah, just a dream.
Personnel: Keith Jarrett (piano); Gary Peacock (bass); Jack DeJohnette (drums).
tracklist:
DVD 1
01. Introduction
02. In Your Own Sweet Way
03. Butch And Butch
04. Basin Street Blues
05. Solar - Extension
06. If I Were A Bell
07. I Fall In Love Too Easily
08. Oleo
09. Bye Bye Blackbird
10. The Cure
11. I Thought About You
DVD 2
01. Introduction
02. It Could Happen To You
03. Never Let Me Go
04. Billie's Bounce
05. Summer Night
06. I'll Remember April
07. Mona Lisa
08. Autumn Leaves
09. Last Night When We Were Young – Caribbean Sky
10. John's Abbey
11. My Funny Valentine - Song
12. All The Things You Are
13. Tonk
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Keith Jarrett - Solo Tribute: The 100th Performance In Japan 1987 (2002) [DVD] {Image Entertainment}
DVD5 -> 4.1 Gb | All Regions | NTSC 4:3 | LinearPCM, 2 ch / Dolby AC3, 6 ch | ~ 1h 42m
ISO Image | Artwork | 5% repair rar
© 2002 Image Entertainment / Eagle Rock | 5722
Jazz / Post Bop / Live / Piano
Keith Jarrett is usually at the very top of his game in solo performances, in spite of his occasionally odd mannerisms on-stage. This 1987 concert at Suntory Hall in Tokyo is a wide-ranging program, in which Jarrett has the audience in the palms of his hands from the very beginning. How many pianists can capture the lyricism within "The Night We Called It a Day," then dig into a blues such as "Things Ain't What They Used to Be," offer an impressionistic arrangement of "I Loves You, Porgy," followed by a hard-charging post-bop take of "(There Is) No Greater Love"? Jarrett eschews the typically overly dramatic improvised introduction to "'Round Midnight," instead setting it up like any ballad, before putting his own melancholy stamp on Thelonious Monk's greatest work. The audio portion of this concert DVD is impeccable, while the video portion is generally excellent, except for a few too many long shots from the side of the stage and some weird shots like focusing just on Jarrett's head and shoulder at the beginning of "Solar." Fortunately, Jarrett keeps his distracting vocalizing to a minimum, while one gets used to his contorted body movements and grimaces with time. This concert DVD is an excellent starting point for those who might just be starting to investigate the work of Jarrett, though his fans will want to snap up this release without hesitation.
Personnel: Keith Jarrett (piano).
tracklist:
01. Program start : The Night We Called It a Day
02. I Love You
03. Things Ain't What They Used to Be
04. Sound
05. I Loves You Porgy
06. There Is No Greater Love
07. Round About Midnight
08. Solar
09. Then I'll Be Tired of You
10. Sweet and Lovely
11. The Wind
12. Do Nothing Till You Hear from Me
13. I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good
14. Summertime
15. End Credits
All thanks goes to the original releasers!