Topic: 728 (Pianoteq)

here's a very under-played tune in the book, Johnny Coles's "728".  Johnny Coles was a trumpet played who appeared on many albums, two especially famous ones were Herbie Hancock's "The Prisoner" and "Fat Albert Rotunda."  he also had a few solo albums too, and this comes from one of them.  definitely a lot of fun to play!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyAnhrwCf6o

Re: 728 (Pianoteq)

budo wrote:

here's a very under-played tune in the book, Johnny Coles's "728".  Johnny Coles was a trumpet played who appeared on many albums, two especially famous ones were Herbie Hancock's "The Prisoner" and "Fat Albert Rotunda."  he also had a few solo albums too, and this comes from one of them.  definitely a lot of fun to play!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyAnhrwCf6o

Hi Budo,

Wow very interesting, I like this a lot! Your performances always seem to have a way of pulling the listener in and building up in layers.

Thanks for sharing here!  As a side note, I was working on a style update in my algorithms which actually is more closely aligned with the style here, at least with the quicker repeating bassline at the beginning.

Ken

Re: 728 (Pianoteq)

budo wrote:

here's a very under-played tune in the book, Johnny Coles's "728".  Johnny Coles was a trumpet played who appeared on many albums, two especially famous ones were Herbie Hancock's "The Prisoner" and "Fat Albert Rotunda."  he also had a few solo albums too, and this comes from one of them.  definitely a lot of fun to play!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyAnhrwCf6o

Bravo budo!  A totally different piece as a change. The stop at 4,29 was a cool surprise and then the great on going playing on key f ? 4,29 - 4,40.  And 5,00 - 5,14 nice section.

Wondered what 728 means?
Google:
Meaning of 728: It's the name of the track, a common practice in jazz where numbers might reference dates (like '28/7/72'), addresses, or just abstract concepts, but here it's just the song's unique identifier.

Thanks again budo for sharing interesting music.

Best wishes,

Stig,   Pianoteqenthusiast, Organteqenthusiast and Syngularenthusiast. 

Re: 728 (Pianoteq)

kencarlino wrote:
budo wrote:

here's a very under-played tune in the book, Johnny Coles's "728".  Johnny Coles was a trumpet played who appeared on many albums, two especially famous ones were Herbie Hancock's "The Prisoner" and "Fat Albert Rotunda."  he also had a few solo albums too, and this comes from one of them.  definitely a lot of fun to play!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyAnhrwCf6o

Hi Budo,

Wow very interesting, I like this a lot! Your performances always seem to have a way of pulling the listener in and building up in layers.

Thanks for sharing here!  As a side note, I was working on a style update in my algorithms which actually is more closely aligned with the style here, at least with the quicker repeating bassline at the beginning.

Ken

thank you Ken that means a lot to me.  i'm glad that you enjoyed this!

Re: 728 (Pianoteq)

Pianoteqenthusiast wrote:
budo wrote:

here's a very under-played tune in the book, Johnny Coles's "728".  Johnny Coles was a trumpet played who appeared on many albums, two especially famous ones were Herbie Hancock's "The Prisoner" and "Fat Albert Rotunda."  he also had a few solo albums too, and this comes from one of them.  definitely a lot of fun to play!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UyAnhrwCf6o

Bravo budo!  A totally different piece as a change. The stop at 4,29 was a cool surprise and then the great on going playing on key f ? 4,29 - 4,40.  And 5,00 - 5,14 nice section.

Wondered what 728 means?
Google:
Meaning of 728: It's the name of the track, a common practice in jazz where numbers might reference dates (like '28/7/72'), addresses, or just abstract concepts, but here it's just the song's unique identifier.

Thanks again budo for sharing interesting music.

Best wishes,

Stig,   Pianoteqenthusiast, Organteqenthusiast and Syngularenthusiast. 

thank you Stig for your comments.  i have to admit, i have no idea what 728 means.  i think your guess is as good as anyone's