Showing posts with label Bill Frisell. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bill Frisell. Show all posts

May 15, 2011

Bill Frisell "Disfarmer - musical portraits from Herber Springs" live at NDR 2011


Bill Frisell (git)
Greg Leisz (pedal steel git, dobro)
Viktor Krauss (b)
Carrie Rodriguez (viol, git)

recorded live at Rolf-Liebermann- Studio, NDR, Hamburg, March 18, 2011

1. Disfarmer Theme (Frisell)
2. Lonely Man (Frisell)
3. Lost, night (Frisel)
4. Farmer (Frisell)
5. Focus (Frisell)
6. Peter Miller's Discovery (Frisell)
7. That's alright Mama (Arthur Crudup)
8. Exposed (Frisell)
9. The Wizard (Frisell)
10. Think (Frisell)
11. I am not a farmer (Frisell)
12. Arkansas (Part 2) (Frisell)
13. I'm so lonesome I could cry (Hank Williams)

Bill Frisell launched an 11-city European tour featuring the music of his last Nonesuch album, Disfarmer, with this concert in Hamburg, Germany. Joining him on tour are steel-guitar player Greg Leisz, bassist Viktor Krauss, and violinist Carrie Rodriquez. In the multimedia piece, inspired by the life, work, and subjects of eccentric photographer Mike Disfarmer, projected images of Disfarmer's portraits illuminate Frisell's musical perspectives on this fascinating character.
The late Michael Disfarmer was an odd, curmudgeonly character in the rural community of Heber Springs, Arkansas, who, despite his anti-social character, chose to record the stark images of his fellow townspeople, during the 1940s and '50s, in cheap black-and-white photographic portraits. Decades after the photographer’s passing, a cache of work made by this solitary and oft-reviled man was rediscovered, and he has come to be regarded as an important outsider artist. Among the many drawn to his plain yet deeply evocative pictures was Chuck Helm, Director of the Performing Arts at the Wexner Center in Columbus, Ohio, who introduced guitarist and composer Bill Frisell to Disfarmer’s oeuvre on the hunch that Frisell might be inspired by it.

January 03, 2011

Bill Frisell Trio live at JazzFest Berlin 2005

 
Bill Frisell · guitar
Jenny Scheinman · violin
Greg Leisz · pedal steel + slide guitar

recorded live at Quasimodo, Berlin, November 5, 2005

1. Across the universe (John Lennon/Paul McCartney)
2. You’ve got to hide your love away (John Lennon/Paul McCartney)
3. Come together (John Lennon/Paul McCartney)
4. Lucy in the sky with diamonds (John Lennon/Paul McCartney)
5. Imagine (John Lennon)

For twenty years Bill Frisell has been reinventing the jazz guitar in adapting well-tried traditions to jazz. On his album Nashville (1997) for instance he has been combining jazz with – guess what(!) – country music. In the beginning of the 90s his trio with Joey Baron and Kermit Driscoll rose to international fame. Coming from there he continues likewise with Jenny Scheinman and Greg Leisz. Both have been part in Frisell’s The Intercontinentals project. Jenny Scheinman’s violin playing is influenced by klezmer, jazzrock, modern music and improvisation. Greg Leisz likes to be associated with his slide-, lap- and pedal-steel guitar and as an all-round studio ‘handyman’.


December 02, 2010

Bill Frisell & Arve Henriksen live at moers festival 2010


Bill Frisell, g
Arve Henriksen, tp, laptop, voc

recorded live at moers festival, Moers/ Germany, May 23, 2010

1. Fields of Moers # 1
2. Fields of Moers # 2
3. Fields of Moers # 3
4. Both Sides Now (Joni Mitchell)

The idea of forming a duo with Bill Frisell stems from the time when Arve Henriksen was Artist in Residence here in 2006. Now, four years later, the encounter between one of Europe's greatest improvisers and one of North America's greatest improvisers has finally been made possible. Henriksen claims that Frisell is the musician who has had the greatest influence on him. What the two have in common is the fact that neither of them are jazz musicians in the strict sense, but folk musicians in the best sense.
Frisell´s latest CD is a trio recording called "Beautiful Dreamer".


November 25, 2009

Bill Frisell “858 QUARTET” live at WDR Jazz Cologne 2009

Photo © by Michael Wilson

Bill Frisell – guitar
Hank Roberts – cello
Ron Miles – trumpet
Eyvind Kang – viola

recorded live at WDR Funkhaus Köln, Klaus-von-Bismarck-Saal, October 29, 2009

1. Medley:
- Baba Drame (Boubacar Traore)
- Monroe (Bill Frisell)
- Probability Cloud (Bill Frisell)
- Rag (Bill Frisell)
2. Skippy (Monk)
3. Beautiful Dreamer (Stephen Foster)
4. Bennys Bugle (Charlie Christian)

The "858 Quartet" recorded the album "Richter 858" as a tribute to German artist Gerhard Richter. For this concert violinist Jenny Scheinman was replaced by Ron Miles.