Order two or more copies of the same title and we'll automatically give you 5% off list price on that title.
To get 2+ Pricing , just add two or more copies of a title to your shopping cart. Your discount will be immediately applied to your order.
Sale titles, hymnals, and ShowKits (MTI's Broadway Junior Collection, Getting to Know... Collection (G2K) and MTI's Kids Collection) do not qualify for 2+ Pricing
If you have any questions or comments regarding 2+ Pricing , please feel free to email us at info@sheetmusicplus.com
Composed by Alex Jung, Fourscore, Oscar Pettiford, and Tobias Meinhart. CD. Duration 59'. Intuition #INT 34212. Published by Intuition (M7.INT-34212).
UPC: 750447342125.
For nearly a hundred and twenty years, jazz has been the flexible quintessence of constant renewal. What is avantgarde today can turn into tradition tomorrow, but anyone who loses sight of the tradition is holding bad cards for the renewal. In the age of globalization and virtualization, artistic niches and epi-centers begin to break down in every conceivable cultural experience. That is precisely were a band like Fourscore sees its chance. Fourscore is four young German jazz musicians, and yet they have no use for labels like Young German Jazz or the Next Generation. Fourscore can live with people liking them or not, sharing their view of jazz or not. Because they have a story to tell. But what does it mean to say a young, almost unknown German bad stands entirely for itself? After all, Fourscore is not reinventing jazz. On the contrary, every note reveals a devoted respect for jazz tradition. More than almost anyone else in his generation, guitarist Alexander Jung has internalized the playing of guitar legend Jim Hall. Saxophonist Tobias Meinhart makes no secret of his admiration for Seamus Blake. Their music need not have been made in Germany. Fourscore is liberated from the dogma of Euro jazz. In their way of playing, the instant of immediate musical performance expands to fill half a century. They are traditionalists in the best sense of the word, skill-fully skirting the tempting traps of retro and revival. It took the young band four years to learn their own vocabulary. In fast-living times like ours, that is an enormously long time to transform arbitrariness into originality and models for imitation into one's own idiom. In the face of ever more rapid succession of alleged 'next generations,' who can still summon up that much patience? But Jung, Meinhart, and Co. know very well that the sweet days of youth vanish quickly. If the quartet is now finally daring to put out its debut album, Add to Friends, on a hopelessly overloaded and merciless market, it won't do any good to appeal to its role models. After all, anyone who wants Jim Hall, can buy Jim Hall. 'You have to have the courage to let go of your role models. Then your own stories emerge all by themselves,' is the band's credo. Nor does the band hide behind its youth bonus. The formula 'Buy us, because you feel sorry for the rising generation' is too cheap for them. At the same time, Fourscore enables us to experience how the creative potential of jazz leads from the past over the bridge of the present into the future. Without offending connoisseurs of traditional notions of jazz, the four musicians are putting down new rails. Their album sounds like the beginning of a journey whose point of departure is known precisely. They offer orientation by permit familiar and well-loved things. A delicate mesh of then and now, here and there makes it impossible to pigeonhole them clearly, despite all the connections to tradition. The almost symbiotic unisoni of guitar and saxophone, the gentle funk grooves of bassist Heiko Jung and drummer Nevyan Lenkov, the instinctive solos, the renunciation of all musical ballast, and the selfconfident understatement in the band's whole look betray an ap-proach to basic values of jazz that could hardly be more relaxed. Not a single note, not a single beat is wasted. With a seductive composure the quartet moves along its rails, knowing well that the switches are setting themselves. Listeners will imagine their own images for it, no matter whether they are anchored in jazz or not. Let us hope that the listeners feel as the band does when they say: 'In the best case, the music takes us somewhere where nothing else matters.' Munich or New York - who cares if a piece of music resolutely pursues its own geography? Fourscore has set off on a journey that will unite places and generations.
Composed by Alex Jung, Fourscore, Oscar Pettiford, and Tobias Meinhart. CD. Duration 59'. Intuition #INT 34212. Published by Intuition (M7.INT-34212).
UPC: 750447342125.
For nearly a hundred and twenty years, jazz has been the flexible quintessence of constant renewal. What is avantgarde today can turn into tradition tomorrow, but anyone who loses sight of the tradition is holding bad cards for the renewal. In the age of globalization and virtualization, artistic niches and epi-centers begin to break down in every conceivable cultural experience. That is precisely were a band like Fourscore sees its chance. Fourscore is four young German jazz musicians, and yet they have no use for labels like Young German Jazz or the Next Generation. Fourscore can live with people liking them or not, sharing their view of jazz or not. Because they have a story to tell. But what does it mean to say a young, almost unknown German bad stands entirely for itself? After all, Fourscore is not reinventing jazz. On the contrary, every note reveals a devoted respect for jazz tradition. More than almost anyone else in his generation, guitarist Alexander Jung has internalized the playing of guitar legend Jim Hall. Saxophonist Tobias Meinhart makes no secret of his admiration for Seamus Blake. Their music need not have been made in Germany. Fourscore is liberated from the dogma of Euro jazz. In their way of playing, the instant of immediate musical performance expands to fill half a century. They are traditionalists in the best sense of the word, skill-fully skirting the tempting traps of retro and revival. It took the young band four years to learn their own vocabulary. In fast-living times like ours, that is an enormously long time to transform arbitrariness into originality and models for imitation into one's own idiom. In the face of ever more rapid succession of alleged 'next generations,' who can still summon up that much patience? But Jung, Meinhart, and Co. know very well that the sweet days of youth vanish quickly. If the quartet is now finally daring to put out its debut album, Add to Friends, on a hopelessly overloaded and merciless market, it won't do any good to appeal to its role models. After all, anyone who wants Jim Hall, can buy Jim Hall. 'You have to have the courage to let go of your role models. Then your own stories emerge all by themselves,' is the band's credo. Nor does the band hide behind its youth bonus. The formula 'Buy us, because you feel sorry for the rising generation' is too cheap for them. At the same time, Fourscore enables us to experience how the creative potential of jazz leads from the past over the bridge of the present into the future. Without offending connoisseurs of traditional notions of jazz, the four musicians are putting down new rails. Their album sounds like the beginning of a journey whose point of departure is known precisely. They offer orientation by permit familiar and well-loved things. A delicate mesh of then and now, here and there makes it impossible to pigeonhole them clearly, despite all the connections to tradition. The almost symbiotic unisoni of guitar and saxophone, the gentle funk grooves of bassist Heiko Jung and drummer Nevyan Lenkov, the instinctive solos, the renunciation of all musical ballast, and the selfconfident understatement in the band's whole look betray an ap-proach to basic values of jazz that could hardly be more relaxed. Not a single note, not a single beat is wasted. With a seductive composure the quartet moves along its rails, knowing well that the switches are setting themselves. Listeners will imagine their own images for it, no matter whether they are anchored in jazz or not. Let us hope that the listeners feel as the band does when they say: 'In the best case, the music takes us somewhere where nothing else matters.' Munich or New York - who cares if a piece of music resolutely pursues its own geography? Fourscore has set off on a journey that will unite places and generations.
Storyville
Lina
3Malohne4
Morgenrot
Slightly
Seamus Jam
Utriculus
Frl. Annie
Laverne Walk
Preview: FourScore - Add To Friends
Ratings + Reviews
Review Guidelines
Explain exactly why you liked or disliked the product. Do you like the artist? Is the transcription accurate? Is it a good teaching tool?
Consider writing about your experience and musical tastes. Are you a beginner who started playing last month? Do you usually like this style of music?
Feel free to recommend similar pieces if you liked this piece, or alternatives if you didn't.
Be respectful of artists, readers, and your fellow reviewers. Please do not use inappropriate language, including profanity, vulgarity, or obscenity.
Avoid disclosing contact information (email addresses, phone numbers, etc.), or including URLs, time-sensitive material or alternative ordering information.
We cannot post your review if it violates these guidelines. If you have any suggestions or comments on the guidelines, please email us.
All submitted reviews become the licensed property of Sheet Music Plus and are subject to all laws pertaining thereto. If you believe that any review contained on our site infringes upon your copyright, please email us.
Tell a friend (or remind yourself) about this product. We'll instantly send an email containing product info and a link to it. You may also enter a personal message.
We do not use or store email addresses from this form for any other purpose than sending your share email.
After purchase, you can download your MP3 from your Sheet Music Plus Digital Library - no software installation is necessary! You can also listen to your MP3 at any time in your Digital Library.
Learn about Smart Music
After purchase, you can download your Smart Music from your Sheet Music Plus Digital Library - no software installation is necessary! You can also download at any time in your Digital Library.
Learn about Digital Video
After purchase you can download your video from your Digital Library. Your video is in XX format and is playable on most pre-installed video players.
This site uses cookies to analyze your use of our products, to assist with promotional and marketing efforts, to analyze our traffic and to provide content from third parties. You consent to our cookies and privacy policy if you continue to use this site. Please see our Privacy Policy for details.