【Jazz talk :500】WE AND THE SEA


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We and the Sea Review by Richard S. Ginell

Once called the Tamba Trio (they became a quartet in 1966), the Tamba 4 made its North American debut with an often adventurous recording that stretched the boundaries not only of bossa nova but of producer Creed Taylor's soundworld at A&M. The erudite composer/pianist/organist Luíz Eça was the band's intellectual spark plug; his cross-genre borrowings would eventually pave the way for present-day Latin piano virtuosos like Chucho Valdés and Gonzalo Rubalcaba. Bebeto played lively jazz flute and bass, Drio handled bass, guitar and percussion, and Ohana was the extraordinarily flexible drummer. Along with their classical pretensions and straight-ahead bossa nova swinging, the group dabbles with voodoo-like incantations that could weave a seductive spell on tunes like "Lemanjá" and "Chant of Ossanha." Their take on Jobim's "O Morro" is a lengthy, complex, structured composition with Eça's piano frequently summoning forth Ravel, Gershwin, and 20th century dissonance, finally bursting into ecstatic Brazilian swing at close. Bebeto also sings in silky mellow Portuguese on "Flower Girl," and the foursome provides its own shadowy vocal support on several tracks. Impeccably recorded at Rudy Van Gelder's studio in New Jersey, this recording ought to be high on Brazilian jazz collectors' want lists.


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This is the American debut album (A&M, CIT's first release) of the Tumblr 4, considered the best combo in bossa nova, and is also their greatest masterpiece. Produced by the master Creed Taylor, this is a timeless masterpiece that expresses a grand and profound world and can be called the "quintessence of bossa nova aesthetics."


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  やっぱり、JAZZは素敵 

今日は、WE AND THE SEA

Tamba 4 

ですね。

一曲目最高なんですよねこれこれ

是非、お試しください!

ありがとう 素晴らしいアルバム