Tasjii
Member
- Messages
- 98
- Location
- Dorchester, Dorset
I first fell in love with the saxophone when I heard Candy Dulfer play, must have been late 80's early 90's have loved sax music ever since. What I would not give to be able to play like her...
Oh yes. I bought El Pampero and Fenix back in the 70s and I'm sure his sound influenced my idea of what a tenor should sound like.Just one name: Leandro "Gato" Barbieri, a gigantic saxophonist player from my country...
Oh yes. I bought El Pampero and Fenix back in the 70s and I'm sure his sound influenced my idea of what a tenor should sound like.
I'm from a rock & roll background sound tend to growl a lot but his continuous snarl always seemed one hell of a feat of.. if nothing else... not breaking down and coughing.Oh yes. I bought El Pampero and Fenix back in the 70s and I'm sure his sound influenced my idea of what a tenor should sound like.
I wonder if he got the growling from Pharoah Sanders?He was the king of the growl... Did you know he play with a Berg 95/1 with a reed 1? Yes, 1... total bright sound...
I have same mouthpiece and one of this days I gonna get a 1 reed and tried it... Impressive musician. He passed away past year on april...
he played with Don Cherry on several if his albums and there are live recordings from tours of Europe with him in the mid 60's as well as on Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra, Mike Mantler's Jazz Composer's Orchestra and Carla Bley's Escalator Over The HillGato Barbieri always told they're influencers were Parker, Alberto Hervier and, specially, Don Cherry, an incredible free jazz trompetist.
Wikipedia named between they're influencers at Pharoah Sanders, Carlos Santana and John Coltrane.
He work with Lalo Schifrin and different film music (the most important was "The last tango in Paris" for Bertolucci).
he played with Don Cherry on several if his albums and there are live recordings from tours of Europe with him in the mid 60's as well as on Charlie Haden's Liberation Music Orchestra, Mike Mantler's Jazz Composer's Orchestra and Carla Bley's Escalator Over The Hill
I think he's playing on this film from Bologna 65 with Don Cherry about 21 minutes in - he's not mentioned in the end credits, but neither is Steve Lacy
View: https://youtu.be/RvvMBFE_fu0
Dick Morrissey - Alto Saxophone on 'Love Theme' from the film 'Bladerunner'.
For the record written by Vangelis.
I think it's the long shank on his mouthpiece and he's not got it pushed very far onto the cork - looks like a Conn 10M tenor he was playing back then..It's me or it's a REALLY long neck?? take at look how much distance between the sax and mouthpiece..
Several months after joining the 7th grade band some of my friends and I were playing a rock song in the band room after school and the same director told us to leave. At that point I knew I was doing something right and was going to have fun!
I know, it takes a lot of time and practice to sound effortless otherwise freedom of expression consists of honks, burrrrs, split octaves, squeaks and sometimes no sound at all.Apologies for not reading the whole thread but in my my case, no-one did. I just saw an ad in a local paper from a music shop The ad said I could hire a sax for a minimum of 3 months at a reasonable rate.
Having played classical guitar up until then (and getting a bit fed up with the discipline of practicing) I had the illusion that playing sax would be easier, more free and more expressive than playing classical guitar. To some extent that was true but the illusion lasted about a month. Then I discovered that playing sax well required just as much 'disciplined practice' as playing guitar.
This begs the question why I associated playing sax with freedom of expression. Cliches, but the sax parts on Baker Street, Dire Straights, etc. always sounded 'free' to me. Sax was the the ultimate unconstrained instrument. Whatever you felt, whatever you wanted to express, you could do it with a sax. That's why I replied to the ad in the local paper.
Mike
