Kind of Blue drummer Jimmy Cobb has died

The Kind of Blue drummer Jimmy Cobb has died. He was 91. Born Wilbur James Cobb in Washington DC, the drummer was the last surviving member of the group, who recorded the classic album in 1959. Cobb also played on Sketches of Spain, Someday My …

Published: 25 May 2020. Updated: 3 years.

The Kind of Blue drummer Jimmy Cobb has died. He was 91. Born Wilbur James Cobb in Washington DC, the drummer was the last surviving member of the group, who recorded the classic album in 1959. Cobb also played on Sketches of Spain, Someday My Prince will Come, Live at Carnegie Hall, Live at the Blackhawk and Porgy and Bess with Miles. In 2008, Cobb received the NEA Jazz Masters Award, the highest award for jazz musicians in the United States.

Jimmy Cobb photo: Wikipedia

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Various artists, I Still Play

A feast of solo piano music spanning several genres and forming a formidable statement by issuing label Nonesuch of the quality of the artists on the label. Jazz fans will mainly gravitate towards the Brad Mehldau tracks and both are very good. …

Published: 25 May 2020. Updated: 3 years.

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A feast of solo piano music spanning several genres and forming a formidable statement by issuing label Nonesuch of the quality of the artists on the label. Jazz fans will mainly gravitate towards the Brad Mehldau tracks and both are very good. However, and this is one of the joys of compilations such as this, it is easy to quickly grasp how tracks from different backgrounds or genres actually sit quite comfortably with one another. You might argue that this is a case of having your cake and eating it. And why not with such treasures. The Timo Andres tracks are beautiful iridescent openers and as we move on to the Jeremy Denk rendition of a John Adams piece the interiors that the album steer us towards so well weave a certain quiet magic. Andres playing Philip Glass is a lullaby-like landmark that then brightens again to the strains of Andres playing Laurie Anderson. I Still Play certainly avoids dour misery. Mehldau's 'LA Pastorale' is quite superb in the latter part of the album as to is Steve Reich's 'For Bob,' once again performed by Andres. The Metheny piece '42 Years' is a complex tangle that unfolds into a handsome almost naive melody that Mehldau does well to interpret leaving the serene Donnacha Dennehy piece and oddity in the Randy Newman recessional at the end to draw a generous compilation to an accessible close.