Roland Dyens Night And Day Rarest

Posted on by
See All 11 Rows On Www.allmusic.com

VISITE AU JAZZ ROLAND DYENS. Skip navigation. NIGHT AND DAY Cole Porter arranged by ROLAND DYENS CLAUDIO. Roland Dyens - A Night in Tunisia. Composed by Dizzy Gilespie and arranged for classical guitar by Roland Dyens. Mix - Roland Dyens - A Night in Tunisia YouTube; Roland Dyens. Dyens, Roland: NIGHT AND DAY of me Bluesette Night and day Misty All the things you arre Over the rainbow Take the A train I love Paris A night in Tunisia Polkadots. Listen to songs from the album Night and Day - Visite au Jazz, including 'All of Me', 'Bluesette', 'Night and Day', and many more. Buy the album for $9.90.

It's not a shift, but a paradigm chasm from classical to jazz guitar playing. Although all music shares a common vocabulary, the vernacular of jazz with its odd idioms of syncopation and blue notes might seem like an exotic dialect to a classical player, a southern drawl to one raised speaking an Irish brogue. Truly authentic communication with an instrument via classical or jazz, as with a brogue or drawl, demands there be no mimicry. The dialect must be a native tongue. Roland Dyens proves on Night and Day that he is fabulously bilingual.

Although having firmly established his preeminence as a classical guitar player with prior recordings of Villa-Lobos, Satie, Sor and Weiss, Dyens has shown perhaps more fluency with modern genres, including arrangements of Georges Brassens songs, Thelonius Monk and Django Reinhardt standards, even a tribute to the music of Frank Zappa. Night and Day likewise showcases Dyens' facility with novel and virtuosic renderings of classic American jazz standards on solo nylon-string guitar. Like Martin Taylor, Dyens plays on one guitar that which sounds to be impossible, both in speed and articulation of diverging counterpoints. Bai Lin Lip Flexibilities Pdf Viewer.

Particularly on Bluesette, All the Things You Are and Take the A Train, one must pause to verify that these are not duos. And as any serious musician strives to do, the technical difficulty of these arrangements is camouflaged, made subliminal by the carefree and contagious exuberance Dyens infuses into these tunes.

Even the simpler, slower melodies I Love Paris, Misty, and Over the Rainbow find a very complex expression with Dyens' genius for arranging. But in the process of finding their way to your ear become simple again, natural, a native tongue that speaks to you sincerely in a dialect you've always heard. Minor7th © Alan Fark.