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A Jazz Immuno-Booster: Part 2
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Our sequestration continues. But so does this mix-tape series featuring music selected by jazz musicians to whom we have asked to share one song they rely on when they need to be uplifted, or soothed, and to make us fly beyond the walls that keep us protected from the greatest pandemic of our generation.The second installment of this mix-tape series features selections by

Yazz Ahmed
trumpet
Antibalas
b.1998
Ahn Trio
band / ensemble / orchestra
Luca Aquino
trumpetb.1974

Lakecia Benjamin
saxophone, alto
Steven Bernstein
trumpetb.1961

Michael Blake
saxophone, tenorb.1964

Camille Bertault
vocalsb.1986

Erik Friedlander
cellob.1960

Wayne Horvitz
keyboardsb.1955

James Brandon Lewis
saxophone, tenorb.1983

Krystle Warren
vocalsb.1981
Happy listening! Stay safe and sane with the help of great music!
For details on the tunes see the playlist below. If you're curious about the rationale behind these choices, here is what the selectors had to say [comments listed in chronological order, by reference to the songs they refer to].
Michael Blake
Once I heard this
Stevie Wonder
vocalsb.1950
Duke Amayo
I have chosen
George Benson
guitarb.1943
The Ahn Trio
With
Pat Metheny
guitarb.1954
Wayne Horvitz
There is this tune, "Lalene" from
Keith Jarrett
pianob.1945
Camille Bertault
Voz e sour by Nana Caymmi and " data-original-title="" title="">Cesar Camargo Mariano is an amazing album for any kind of mood. It might be my all time favorite record. It's quite rare and not easy to find or hear on the radio. A very intimate and personal work. In general, I love duos, but this one is off the charts! I also love it because it has some imperfections... at times Nana sounds slightly off key and Cesar's Fender Rhodes has a very old-fashioned sound, but perfect because it conjures up a special atmosphere. So it comes across as very natural. It feels as if it was just two friends getting together and playing without any intention to make a perfect recording. And these imperfections make it perfect!Erik Friedlander
"Stolen Moments" by
Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975
Luca Aquino
The rendition of "On the Sunny Side of the Street" played by
Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Sonny Stitt
saxophone1924 - 1982

Sonny Rollins
saxophoneb.1930
Lakecia Benjamin
I listened to this song by
Abdullah Ibrahim
pianob.1934
Yazz Ahmed
I've recently discovered a band called
Moonchild
band / ensemble / orchestraKrystle Warren
I've been thinking long and hard, and while there isn't a tune I go to for comfort per se, I do have one tune in my life that never fails to make me feel light and airy; like the perfect, lazy afternoon, and that's "Everybody's Jumpin," by
Dave Brubeck
piano1920 - 2012
Steven Bernstein
Try not to smile and groove when you listen to
Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
Playlist
- Michael Blake: Stevie Wonder "We Can Work It Out" Signed, Sealed and Delivered (Tamla/Motown) 0:00
- James Brandon Lewis: " data-original-title="" title="">William Parker / Raining on the Moon "Corn Meal Dance" Corn Meal Dance (AUM Fidelity) 3:10
William Parker
bass
b.1952 - Duke Amayo: George Benson "Moody's Mood" Give Me the Night (Warner Bros) 11:30
- The Ahn Trio: Pat Metheny Group "Letter from Home" Letter from Home (Geffen) 14:54
- Wayne Horvitz: Keith Jarrett "Lalene" Facing You (ECM) 17:26
- Camille Bertault: Nana Caymmi, Cesar Camargo "Velho Piano" Voz e sour (EMI) 25:42
- Erik Friedlander: Oliver Nelson "Stolen Moments" Blues and the Abstract Truth (Impulse!) 29:21
- Luca Aquino: Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, Sonny Rollins "On the Sunny Side of the Street" Sonny Side Up (Verve) 38:04
- Lakecia Benjamin: Abdullah Ibrahim & Ekaya "The Mountain" The Mountain (Kaz) 43:44
- Yazz Ahmed: Moonchild "Wise Women" Little Ghost (Tru Thoughts) 46:44
- Kristle Warren: Dave Brubeck, "Everybody's Jumpin'" Time Out (Columbia) 50:30
- Steven Bernstein: Charles Mingus "Eat That Chicken" Oh Yeah (Atlantic) 54:52
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