Sunbear Concerts

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (30 ratings)

We’re sorry. This album is unavailable for download in your country (United States) at this time.

Sunbear Concerts album cover
Album Information
LIVE

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 397:03

Write a Review 4 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

Great Value

JazzNBluesLover

The best value download on eMusic. What was 12 lps, then 6 cds is now 13 downloads. Most people perfer "The Koln Concerts" or "The Solo Concerts (Breman/Lausane)" and chose to denegrade this because of the the perceived conceit of the release. In reality the quality of the music is not much different to those two masterpieces.

user avatar

fantastic

antjohnkidd

this must be the best value download ever , since subscribing emusic I have chanced upon so many great downloads, so much so i have been recommending this site to all my friends and relatives .

user avatar

ECM great

DottoreDeFunk

How wonderful to have this and the other ECM albums on Emusic! I can't quite believe it.

user avatar

One of the best bargains on eMusic!

Fitterstoke45

To be able to obtain Keith Jarrett's grandest, most overtly self-indulgent (yet wonderful) solo piano album - all 10 LP's worth - for the price of a pint of ale is something of a commercial miracle. The Tokyo concert is especially lovely, but there are moments - and half hours - of sheer magic throughout this set. This may just be the best value-for-money musical download on the net!

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Impulse’s Deep Bench: The New 2-fers

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

There was always more to Impulse than John Coltrane. As part of the label's 50th anniversary victory lap in 2011, Impulse launched the "2-on-1" reissue series, pairing compatible '60s or '70s LPs, usually on one CD. The series digs deep into that catalogue's riches, reflecting its diversity. The New York avant-garde is represented, but also bebop and hardbop stars, distinguished Ellingtonians, drummers and pop-influenced guitarists: music for big, small, hot and sweet bands. The series… more »

0

Six Degrees of Esperanza Spalding’s Radio Music Society

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

It used to be easier to pretend that an album was its own perfectly self-contained artifact. The great records certainly feel that way. But albums are more permeable than solid, their motivations, executions and inspirations informed by, and often stolen from, their peers and forbearers. It all sounds awfully formal, but it's not. It's the very nature of music — of art, even. The Six Degrees features examine the relationships between classic records and five… more »

0

New This Week: Sharon Van Etten, Twilight Sad & More

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

OK! Are you guys ready to get bummed out? Because it's the week before Valentine's Day and, man, do we have some sad records for you. I mean, sad even for indie rock, which has sad basically branded into its DNA. So if you're ready to be heartbroken, let's get going. Sharon Van Etten, Tramp: Basically, the only record you need today. A great leap forward from her previous, folky outings, Tramp finds Van Etten falling… more »

0

New This Week: Cloud Nothings, Craig Finn and More

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

The first HUGE new release day of 2012, so strap in and get ready for a pretty comprehensive rundown! Dave Sumner's got your jazz picks, and I've got the rest. Here we go! Cloud Nothings, Attack on Memory: ALBUM OF THE DAY. Dylan Baldi grows up in a nanosecond, making a snarling rock record that hurtles forward with the speed and fury of a meteor. The sonic touchstones here are '90s emo greats like Jawbreaker, the… more »

0

2011 Jazz: Echoing the ’70s, in a Good Way

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

It says something about the timeless state of modern jazz that one of 2011's memorable releases, saxophonist/composer Tim Berne's Insomnia, was recorded in 1997. Nothing about the music sounds dated: not his curvy, harmonized melodies, the ways they jostle the spirited improvising, the lushness of an octet with a built-in chamber trio (violin, cello, bass), or the sure pacing of long suite-like sets. His concept was fully developed, then as now. (ECM's putting out a… more »

They Say All Music Guide

This gargantuan package — a ten-LP set now compressed into a chunky six-CD box — once was derided as the ultimate ego trip, probably by many who didn’t take the time to hear it all. You have to go back to Art Tatum’s solo records for Norman Granz in the ’50s to find another large single outpouring of solo jazz piano like this, all of it improvised on the wing before five Japanese audiences in Kyoto, Osaka, Nagoya, Tokyo, and Sapporo. Yet the miracle is how consistently good much of this giant box is. In the opening Kyoto concert, Jarrett’s gospel-driven muse is in full play, up to the level of his peak solo performances in Bremen and Koln, and the Osaka and Nagoya concerts have pockets of first-rate, often folk-like, even profound, lyrical ideas. The Tokyo concert takes a while to get in gear, but when Jarrett finally locks into one of his grooving vamps, he carries us along, and there is a memorably melodic encore. In Sapporo, Jarrett breaks from a nicely flowing pattern into a jumpy rhythm that reminds one of C&W guitar fingerpicking, and there’s some exuberant barrelhouse stuff and outbreaks of dissonance in part two. Each concert is placed on a single CD, while the much briefer sixth disc is reserved for the encores from Nagoya, Tokyo, and Sapporo. While Sun Bear breaks little ground that his earlier solo piano albums had not already covered, it is nevertheless richly inventive within Jarrett’s personal parameter of idioms. If price is not a barrier, the Jarrett devotee need not hesitate. – Richard S. Ginell

more »