Here you will find the latest additions and new music to pdfjazzmusic.com - in addition to the latest rant by the owner about big band charts, arrangements, arrangers, composers, jazz books, jazz recordings, etc.
Ever wonder how websites get so far up in the search engines for various search terms? No one knows for sure just what Google, Yahoo and others uses to determine just how search engine results are compiled, but one thing for sure is that you need to have a good amount inbound links from other related websites to rank really well.
I’ve just implemented an easy way for other music (especially jazz related websites) to exchange links with PDFjazzmusic.com
Click here to exchange links quickly and easily with this site. Your site link will then show up on this page at the bottom as a “recently added link”.
PDFjazzmusic.com has a pagerank of 3 so it gets crawled by the search engines frequently. Your site will be found by Google and others quickly and indexed if it is not already.
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posted by Jim @ 9:17 AM 0 comments
Hurricane Katrina may have devastated New Orleans and surrounding Gulf communities in 2005, but it was also a forceful reminder of the Crescent City`s world renowned status as the epicenter of much American musical heritage. This benefit album (all net proceeds will be donated to the local relief efforts of Habitat for Humanity, with a portion specifically set aside to provide housing for local musicians left homeless by the disaster) picks up that latter thread, a sometimes bittersweet reminder of how deepy ingrained, yet all-too-fragile, that cultural legacy really is. Allen Toussaint`s succulent reworking of his "Yes We Can Can" sets a rhythmic, optimistic tone that parallels his city`s own historical resilience, while Dr. John turns in a bluesy, laid-back "World I Never Made" that`s a sharp contrast to the flashes of anger he showed on Tab Benoit`s earlier benefit collection, Voice of the Wetlands. Irma Thomas gives a swampy, timely edge to Bessie Smith`s "Back Water Blues" while others pay tribute to the region`s history of gospel (Davell Crawford, Eddie Bo), indigenous cajun folk (Buckwheat Zydeco, Beausolei, Carol Fran) and legacy as the Birthplace of Jazz (vibrantly disparate contributions from Dr. Michael White, Dirty Dozen Brass Band and the venerable Preservation Hall Jazz Band). The Wild Magnolias` medley "Brother John Is Gone/Herc-Jolly-John" is a joyous, African-rooted gumbo of musical possibilities, while Donald Harrison`s sax work with The Wardell Querzergue`s Orchestra`s on "What a Wonderful World" is a fine preamble for Toussaint`s elegiac solo piano rendition of "Tipitina and Me." Randy Newman`s closer, a melancholic new version of Good Old Boys` "Louisiana 1927," is a tribute to his own N.O. roots whose refrain--"Louisiana, they`re trying to wash us away"--is also a forceful, tragic reminder that history does indeed repeat. --Jerry McCulley
posted by Jim @ 7:00 AM 0 comments
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