Paul Bley Trio

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
Ida Lupino 02:57 Tools
And Now The Queen 00:00 Tools
Closer 00:00 Tools
Start 00:00 Tools
Santa Claus Is Coming to Town 00:00 Tools
Crossroads 00:00 Tools
Sideways In Mexico 00:00 Tools
Batterie 00:00 Tools
Cartoon 00:00 Tools
Violin 00:00 Tools
Figfoot 00:00 Tools
Vashkar 00:00 Tools
Floater 00:00 Tools
When Will the Blues Leave? 00:00 Tools
Blood 00:00 Tools
The New You 00:00 Tools
Around again 00:00 Tools
Albert's Love Theme 00:00 Tools
Seven 00:00 Tools
Mister Joy 00:00 Tools
Syndrome 00:00 Tools
El Cordobes 00:00 Tools
Sweet Talk 00:00 Tools
Only Sweetly 00:00 Tools
Turns 00:00 Tools
When Will The Blues Leave 00:00 Tools
Like Someone in Love 00:00 Tools
Funhouse 00:00 Tools
King Korn 00:00 Tools
Ballad No.1 00:00 Tools
Ramblin' 00:00 Tools
Kid Dynamite 00:00 Tools
Wisecracks 00:00 Tools
Nothing Ever Was, Anyway 00:00 Tools
Blues 00:00 Tools
Pig Foot 00:00 Tools
The Nearness of You 00:00 Tools
Spot 00:00 Tools
Please Don't 00:00 Tools
i can't get started 00:00 Tools
Decompose 00:00 Tools
Russell 00:00 Tools
Cousins 00:00 Tools
Stereophrenic 00:00 Tools
spontaneous combustion 00:00 Tools
Digitant 00:00 Tools
Loose Change 00:00 Tools
Opus One 00:00 Tools
(Teapot) Walkin' 00:00 Tools
Ballad No.4 00:00 Tools
Ballad No.2 00:00 Tools
Long Ago And Far Away 00:00 Tools
the theme 00:00 Tools
Moor 00:00 Tools
Around Again (Second Version) 00:00 Tools
split kick 00:00 Tools
Gary 00:00 Tools
King Korn (Alternate Take) 00:00 Tools
Ornithology 00:00 Tools
Now's The Time 00:00 Tools
Big Foot 00:00 Tools
My Little Suede Shoes 00:00 Tools
Getting Startet 00:00 Tools
Touching 00:00 Tools
Don't Blame Me 00:00 Tools
Steeplechase 00:00 Tools
Bebop 00:00 Tools
Barbados 00:00 Tools
Tenderly 00:00 Tools
Ladybird 00:00 Tools
Lover Man 00:00 Tools
Alberts Love Theme 00:00 Tools
52nd Street Theme 00:00 Tools
All The Things You Are 00:00 Tools
I'm Glad There's You 00:00 Tools
Deviation 00:00 Tools
Gettin' Started 00:00 Tools
A Night in Tunisia 00:00 Tools
If I'm Lucky 00:00 Tools
Black And Blue 00:00 Tools
This Can't Be Love 00:00 Tools
Becky 00:00 Tools
Goodbye 00:00 Tools
Silent Night 00:00 Tools
Almost Persuaded 00:00 Tools
Ah-Ha 00:00 Tools
You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To 00:00 Tools
Blues Waltz 00:00 Tools
Both 00:00 Tools
A.R.B. 00:00 Tools
Bolivar Blues 00:00 Tools
How Long Has This Been Going On 00:00 Tools
Ictus 00:00 Tools
Pablo 00:00 Tools
Latin Ideas 00:00 Tools
Rainbow Cry 00:00 Tools
I Wish I Knew 00:00 Tools
Hymn 00:00 Tools
Interiors 00:00 Tools
Ending 00:00 Tools
Zen Palace 00:00 Tools
Emerald Blue 00:00 Tools
Chanted Evening 00:00 Tools
We'll Be Together Again 00:00 Tools
Lullaby Of Birdland 00:00 Tools
zootcase 00:00 Tools
After Me 00:00 Tools
Where Is Paul? 00:00 Tools
Foolishly 00:00 Tools
Ramblin 00:00 Tools
Reality Check 00:00 Tools
A Night in Tunesia 00:00 Tools
Donkey 00:00 Tools
52nd Street Blues 00:00 Tools
this time the dream's on me 00:00 Tools
These Foolish Things 00:00 Tools
What a Difference a Day Makes 00:00 Tools
Blues in the Closet 00:00 Tools
Orchid Smile 00:00 Tools
Dialogue 00:00 Tools
Circles 00:00 Tools
Russel 00:00 Tools
Mazatalan 00:00 Tools
Paul 00:00 Tools
Downward Spiral 00:00 Tools
Time On My Hands 00:00 Tools
Spiral 2 00:00 Tools
So hard it hurts 00:00 Tools
Spiral 1 00:00 Tools
Nothing Ever Was Anyway 00:00 Tools
Ida 00:00 Tools
Closer - Paul Bley Trio 00:00 Tools
Mazatlan 00:00 Tools
Olhos De Gato 00:00 Tools
I Want Be Happy 00:00 Tools
52nd St. Theme 00:00 Tools
opus 1 00:00 Tools
My One and Only (What Am I Gonna Do?) 00:00 Tools
Turnaround 00:00 Tools
Long Ago And Faraway 00:00 Tools
I Surrender Dear 00:00 Tools
Around Again (Alternate Take) 00:00 Tools
Getting Started 00:00 Tools
For George 00:00 Tools
Lorraine 00:00 Tools
Compassion 00:00 Tools
Lady Bird 00:00 Tools
Gettin Started 00:00 Tools
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Hyman Paul Bley, CM (November 10, 1932 - January 3, 2016) was a Canadian pianist known for his contributions to the free jazz movement of the 1960s as well as his innovations and influence on trio playing. Bley was a long-time resident of the United States. His music characteristically featured strong senses both of melodic voicing and space. Paul Bley was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada; his adoptive parents were Betty Marcovitch, an immigrant from Romania, and Joe Bley, owner of an embroidery factory. In the 1950s Bley founded the Jazz Workshop in Montreal, performing on piano and recording with be-bop alto saxophonist and composer Charlie Parker. He also performed with tenor saxophonists Lester Young and Ben Webster at that time. In 1953 he conducted for bassist Charles Mingus on the Charles Mingus and His Orchestra album. That same year Mingus produced the Introducing Paul Bley album with Mingus and drummer Art Blakey. In 1960 Bley recorded on piano with the Charles Mingus Group. In 1958, he hired young avant garde musicians Don Cherry, alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman, bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Billy Higgins to play at the Hillcrest Club in California. In the early 1960s he was part of the Jimmy Giuffre 3, with Giuffre on clarinet, and bassist Steve Swallow. The quiet understatement of this music made it possible to overlook its degree of innovation, as well as its repertoire introducing compositions by his ex-wife, pianist and organist Carla Bley. The group's music moved towards free improvisation based on close empathy. During the same period Bley was touring and recording with tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins, which culminated with the RCA Victor album Sonny Meets Hawk! with tenor saxophonist Coleman Hawkins. In 1964 Bley was instrumental in the formation of the Jazz Composers Guild, a co-operative organization which brought together many free jazz musicians in New York: Roswell Rudd, Cecil Taylor, Archie Shepp, Carla Bley, Michael Mantler, Sun Ra, and others. The guild organized weekly concerts and created a forum for the "jazz revolution" of 1964. Bley had long been interested in expanding the palette of his music using unconventional sounds (such as playing directly on the piano-strings). It was therefore consistent that he took an interest in new electronic possibilities appearing in the late 1960s. He pioneered the use of Moog synthesizers, performing with them before an audience for the first time at Philharmonic Hall in New York City on December 26, 1969. This "Bley-Peacock Synthesizer Show" performance, a group with Annette Peacock, who had written much of Bley's personal repertoire since 1964, was followed by her playing on the recordings Dual Unity (released under the name "Annette & Paul Bley") and Improvisie, a French release of two extended improvisiational tracks with the trio of Paul on melodic electric piano and modulated synthesizer supporting Annette Peacock's remarkable tonal experiments singing through what sounds to be a Maestro (Tom Oberheim designed) Ring Modulator, and percussion by Dutch free jazz drummer Han Bennink, who had also appeared on part of Dual Unity. Subsequently Bley returned to a predominant focus on the piano itself. During the 1970s, Bley, in partnership with videographer Carol Goss, was responsible for an important multi-media initiative, Improvising Artists, which issued LPs and videos documenting the solo piano recordings by Sun Ra and other works of free jazz with Giuffre, Lee Konitz, Gary Peacock, Lester Bowie, John Gilmore, Jaco Pastorius, Pat Metheny, Steve Lacy and others. Bley and Goss are credited in a Billboard Magazine cover story with the first "music video" as a result of the recorded and live performance collaborations they produced with jazz musicians and video artists. Bley was featured in the 1981 documentary film Imagine the Sound, in which he performs and discusses the history of his music. In the 1990s, Bley joined the faculty of the New England Music Conservatory, however he no longer teaches there. Musicians of note Satoko Fujii and Yitzhak Yedid have studied with Bley at NEC. Bley continued to tour internationally and record prodigiously, with well over a hundred CDs released. In 1999 his autobiography, Stopping Time: Paul Bley and the Transformation of Jazz, was published. In 2003 Time Will Tell: Conversations with Paul Bley was published. In 2004 Paul Bley: la logica del caso (Paul Bley: The Logic of Chance) was published in Italian. In 2008, he was made a Member of the Order of Canada. Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.