About Me
ART PEPPER VOLUME III:
THE CROYDON CONCERT
NOW AVAILABLE!
UNRELEASED ART,
VOLUME THREE
CD now available for purchase at the following link: http://cdbaby.com/cd/artpepper3
Art Pepper: Unreleased Art, Volume III,
The Croydon Concert
(Live At the Fairfield Hall,
Croydon, England)
Recorded live on May 14, 1981 with Milcho Leviev on piano, Bob Magnusson on upright bass, Carl Burnett on drums.
Track Listing: 1 Blues for Blanche 2 Talk, Band Intro 3 Ophelia 4 Mambo De La Pinta 5 Patricia
6 Cherokee 7 Goodbye 8 Yours Is My Heart Alone
9 Dedicated 10 Make a List (Make a Wish)
For more info please visit straightlife.org .
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UNRELEASED ART,
VOLUME TWO
CD now available for purchase at the following link: http://cdbaby.com/cd/artpepper2
Art Pepper: Unreleased Art, Volume II,
The Last Concert
(Live At the Kool Jazz Festival,
Kennedy Center, Washington D.C.)
Recorded live on May 30, 1982 with Roger Kellaway, David Williams & Carl Burnett.
The preview track in the MySpace MP3 player above is Art's solo on "Mambo Koyama" and has been graciously provided to this site by Laurie Pepper.
Track Listing:
Landscape; Ophelia; Mambo Koyama; Over The Rainbow; When You're Smiling
For more info please visit straightlife.org .
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UNRELEASED ART,
VOLUME ONE
CD available for purchase at the following link: http://cdbaby.com/cd/artpepper
Art Pepper: Unreleased Art, Volume I,
The Abashiri (Japan) Concert
Recorded live in November 1981 with George Cables, David Williams & Carl Burnett.
The amazing preview track in the MP3 player above is a smoking version of "Straight Life" from Disc One of the set and has been graciously provided to this site by Laurie Pepper.
Please visit http://straightlife.org/cd.html to order. The site is paypal ready for your convenience.
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"LOST LIFE" EXCLUSIVE MYSPACE DOWNLOAD!
Laurie Pepper has granted an exclusive download for Art's MySpace friends- so fans, collectors and completists gather round... It's Art Pepper live in January 1979 performing a stunning version of his original composition ballad, "Lost Life", at Douglas's Beach House in Half Moon Bay, California. This track was only available for a short time on an obscure Japanese LP in the early 80's and hasn't been in-print for 20 plus years!
(many thanks to Laurie for this gift. For further information, please visit her site at StraightLife.org )
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FROM ART PEPPER'S MEMOIR, "STRAIGHT LIFE":
I remember one time when I was playing at the Blackhawk in San Francisco. I forget the date, but Sonny Stitt... came in and wanted to jam with me. We both play alto, which is... it really makes it a contest. But Sonny is one of those guys, that's the thing with him. It's a communion. It'a a battle. It's an ego trip. It's a testing ground. And that's the beautiful part of it. It's like two guys that play great pool wanting to play pool together or two great football teams or two maginificent basketball teams, and just the joy of playing with someone great...
I said "what do you want to play?" Sonny says "Let's play 'Cherokee.'" That's a song jazz musicians used to play. The bridge, which is the middle part, has all kinds of chord changes in it. It's very difficult. If some kid came around, and he wanted to play, you'd say "Let's play 'Cherokee'" and you'd count it off real fast. I said "Well, beat it off." He went "one-two, one-two;" he was flying. We played the head, the melody and then he took the first solo. He played, I don't know, about forty choruses. He played for an hour maybe, did everything that could be done on a saxophone, everything you could play, as much as Charlie Parker could've played if he'd been there. Then he stopped. And he looked at me. Gave me one of those looks, "All right, suckah, your turn." And it's my job, it's my gig.
I was strung out. I was hooked. I was drunk. I was having a hassle with my wife, Diane, who'd threatened to kill herself in our hotel room next door. I had marks on my arm. I thought there were narcs in the club, and I all of a sudden realized that it was me. He'd done all those things and now I had to put up or shut up or get off or forget it or quit or kill myself or do something.
I forgot everything, and everything came out. I played way over my head. I played completely different than he did. I searched and found my own way, and what I said reached the people. I played myself, and I knew I was right, and the people loved it, and they felt it. I blew and blew and when I finally finished I was shaking all over; my heart was pounding; I was soaked in sweat, and the people were screaming, the people were clapping... and I looked at Sonny, but I just kind of nodded, and he went "All right. And that was it. That's what it's all about.
I want to be more than just a "jazz player" playing. I want to make people forget the categories and hear what's really happening. I want to make them feel the joy or sadness. I want to make them open up and listen. That's what I've always wanted.
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STRAIGHT LIFE
THE MOVIE
Directed By Laurie Pepper
For More Info Visit: Straight Life, The Movie
Suicide Attempt
Meets Genius