The Bach Book

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 59:22

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interesting approach

bwhat

Jacques Loussier Trio has some interesting jazz performances of classics. I thoroughly enjoyed the version they did of the Four Seasons, and, while Bach is very different from Vivaldi, it's nonetheless interesting to see how those different classical periods are filtered into Loussier's jazz while retaining a bit of their heritage. A high quality performance, and a high quality recording (albeit as MP3), and worth downloading.

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Jazz + Bach

caro1eb

Excellent jazz piano/trio. Re my downloaded tracks 1, 5, 6, and 7-9, I’m estimating about 50 percent Bach, and the rest improvisation, so don’t expect anything less. They’re perfect. And also see his album “Plays Bach.”

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Technically this is up to par.

serpent

One compaint, and perhaps I'm the only one. When I think of the music of J.S. Bach as it pertains to my personally inner core, I think of the pieces he wrote in MINOR SCALE. None of it is to be seen here, so, I have to give this release 4 stars out of 5, as I do appreciate the ever flowing influx of Bach interpretations.

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They Say All Media Guide

There’s something ironic about the attraction jazz musicians all seem to feel for the work of J.S. Bach. It’s not that jazz and classical music aren’t related — on the contrary, jazz itself is a fusion of the rhythmic complexity of African music and the harmonic complexity of European music — it’s that Bach’s particular genius was for counterpoint, a technique that jazz largely ignores. You can’t improvise without abandoning strict counterpoint, and yet to depart from Bach’s contrapuntal structures is, often, to disembowel his music. So there’s a certain tension in the air when jazz players take on Bach. All of that said, there’s simply no denying the charm of Loussier’s trio arrangements. This program opens with “Prelude No. 1 in C Major” (from The Well-Tempered Clavier), then moves to the fifth “Brandenburg Concerto” (all three movements), “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring,” the gavotte movement from the D major orchestral suite, and then the three movements of the D major harpsichord concerto. Sometimes the arrangements sound a bit forced; the drumbeat Andre Arpino imposes on the opening movement of the Brandenburg sounds particularly clunky. But for the most part Loussier pulls off this risky experiment with taste and obvious delight. Recommended. – Rick Anderson

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