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  1. Unspeakable is a 2004 album by American jazz guitarist Bill Frisell, his 22nd album overall and his 17th to be released on the Elektra Nonesuch label. Background [ edit ] Unspeakable represented a stylistic shift by exploring R&B/funk rhythm and extensive sampling from obscure vinyl records, in contrast to Frisell's previous few ...

  2. 9. Mai 2024 · By Sarah “Flake” Grosser. The pulse of doof-doof resonates throughout the contemporary church, psyching up the Berlin punters for a night with the gentile American guitar legend, Bill Frisell. Soon after, the beat is switched up to a kind of Sunday chill-out groove, contemporary soul; the volume, slightly lowered.

  3. William Richard „BillFrisell (* 18. März 1951 in Baltimore, Maryland) ist ein US-amerikanischer Gitarrist. Er wird meist als Jazz -Musiker kategorisiert, hat aber auch in anderen musikalischen Genres von Pop und Filmmusik bis zur Neuen Musik gearbeitet.

  4. 27. Nov. 2023 · Der dissonante Träumer Jazzgitarrist Bill Frisell in der Elbphilharmonie. Vier Konzerte in zwei Tagen: Die Reihe „Reflektor“ präsentiert den eigensinnigen Musiker mit unterschiedlichen...

  5. Guitarist Bill Frisell’s new double LP Orchestras documents two inspired concert-hall engagements arranged by Michael Gibbs for Frisell’s long-standing trio with bassist Thomas Morgan and drummer Rudy Royston: one featuring the nearly 60-piece Brussels Philharmonic, conducted by Alexander Hanson; and one with the 11-piece Umbria Jazz Orchestra, under the musical direction of Manuele Morbidini.

  6. 1987: Stefan F. Winter – The Little Trumpet (JMT) 1987: Marc Johnson’s Bass Desires – Second Sight (ECM) 1987: Paul Bley Quartet – The Paul Bley Quartet (ECM) 1987: Wayne Horvitz – The President (Dossier) 1987: Hank Roberts – Black Pastels (JMT) 1987: Tim Berne – Fulton Street Maul (CBS)

  7. The New Yorker notes: "Bill Frisell plays the guitar like Miles Davis played the trumpet: in the hands of such radical thinkers, their instruments simply become different animals. And, like Davis, Frisell loves to have a lot of legroom when he improvises--the space that terrifies others quickens his blood."