Jim Pepper - Witchi Tia To скачать видео бесплатно


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Jim Pepper was an American jazz saxophonist, composer, and singer of Native American ancestry.

Beginning in the late 1960s, Pepper became a pioneer of fusion jazz, his band The Free Spirits (active between 1965 and 1968, with guitarist Larry Coryell) being credited as the first to combine elements of jazz and rock. His primary instrument was the tenor saxophone (he also played flute and soprano saxophone), and his characteristic incisive, penetrating tone and soulful delivery was unique for its time. A similar timbre was taken up by later players such as Jan Garbarek, Michael Brecker, and David Sanborn.

Of Kaw and Creek heritage, Pepper also achieved notoriety for his compositions combining elements of jazz and Native American music. Don Cherry and Ornette Coleman encouraged Pepper to reflect his roots and heritage and incorporate it into his jazz playing and composition. His "Witchi Tai To" (derived from a peyote healing chant of the Native American Church which he had learned from his grandfather) is the most famous example of this hybrid style; the song has been covered by many other artists including Harper's Bizarre, Ralph Towner (with and without Oregon), Jan Garbarek, and Brewer & Shipley. Pepper supported the American Indian Movement. He served as musical director for Night of the First Americans, a Native American self-awareness benefit concert at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. in 1980 and played also on pow-wows.

Pepper was a member of the short-lived band Everything Is Everything with Chris Hills, Lee Reinoehl, Chip Baker, John Waller and Jim Zitro. Their sole album spawned the near-hit single "Witchi Tai To" (which got lots of airplay). It was issued on Vanguard Apostolic and UK Vanguard in England.

In his own projects, he recorded with Cherry, Naná Vasconcelos, Collin Walcott, Kenny Werner, John Scofield, Ed Schuller, Hamid Drake, and others. His CD Comin' and Goin' (1983) is the definitive statement of Pepper's unique "American Indian jazz" with nine songs played by four different line-ups. He worked also with the Liberation Music Orchestra, Paul Motian' s quintet, Bob Moses, Marty Cook, Mal Waldron, David Friesen, and Amina Claudine Myers, and toured Europe intensively.

Pepper died in 1992, of lymphoma.

(copied from wikipedia)

Комментарии

8 years назад

Gene arbogast

this song fixes me every time i hear it

8 years назад

MUTATIS MUTANDIS

BUSCANDO A GARBAREK & BOBO STENSON

9 years назад

Sun Ra

can the lyrics be found anywhere?

9 years назад

troedlman

still good to hear this again after decades

9 years назад

kristopher kohl Miner

RIGHT ON JIM! I am so glad to call you friend!!! Your TREMENDOUS spirit lives on Jim!!!

9 years назад

Kurt Lercher

Jim Pepper - Witchi Tia To

9 years назад

Joanne Donatelli

love this song - can't help but smile and sing and dance to it!!

9 years назад

Jessica Diskant

thank you jeff. my last band did this the jim pepper w larry coryell, and the brewer and shipley version memories... its jay, i just signed in and got my partners name.thx

9 years назад

Randy Baker

I haven't heard this for two decades. I'd forgotten how often this album got me through really rough times.What a spirit spring is bringing round my headMakes me feel glad that I’m not dead.Thank you Perma Frost. Epic of you to drop this here.

9 years назад

2WILDFLOWER

FLOWS So Beautifully.....

9 years назад

Susun Hawkes

~jim pepper...

10 years назад

Violet Rose

i am trying to find robbie roberts version.. i am sure that is the one i heard the most.. and of course it was when i was living in Hollywood and was in the middle of the studios.... there was a rock version.. i really do not like jazz.. how ever the version with the words> holy spirit running around my head<< is a nice one... he was a really great guy .. I met him at Ravenwood in the 60s...

10 years назад

oded fried-gaon

Turn up the volume, peeps... it's Today's Classic Jazz Corner, and one of my favorite tracks/albums ever. Hope you like it too.RIP, Native American legend Jim Pepper! you did a lot for us humans.from Wikipedia: "Witchi Tai To" is derived from a peyote song of the Native American Church. Pepper learned it from his grandfather, and is the most famous example of this hybrid musical style. The song has been covered by many other artists including Harper's Bizarre, Ralph Towner (with and without Oregon), Jan Garbarek, Pete Wyoming Bender, Brewer & Shipley, Larry Smith with members of The Bonzo Dog Band, Yes and Keith Moon under the pseudonym of Topo D. Bill, an unreleased version recorded by The Supremes in 1969, and also covered in 1973 by Quebec singer-songwriter Robert Charlebois, himself of partly American-Indian descent.

10 years назад

Jerome Dineen

It was one of the really unique, great experiences of my life to be Jim (and his wife Caren's) next door neighbor with my brother Joseph in 1982-983 in a three-story walk-up in Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn while this album was being made, get to to know Jim and Caren, have them over, go out for take-out beer (to Farrell's Pub) together, go to his shows with Dewey Redmon, Charlie Hayden, and others around town, and hear (on the rooftop of our tenement) and even attend the daily recording sessions of this recording mostly with his back-up group, Gordon Lee (piano) .Bobby Moses (percussion) etc. while he was making this recording, hear about all the travails that led into to selling the song rights in the 60s, getting them back for this album, hear Jim's philosophizing on many subjects and story-telling about growing up on the Okla. reservation, college at BYU (including basketball), and playing in the SF jazz scene with Archie Shepp etc. while Rock 'n Roll took over. He was one of the very few "great spirits" I have met in this life, and it is so sad he is not around any more. This song is his magnum opus.Matt

10 years назад

Eric Swan

Endless beauty above me, below me, in front of and behind me and to either side of me. This song is eternal inexpresible and endless. Had our species accomplished nothing more we would be worth our keep!

10 years назад

Erik Schmidtsson

+Christina Moodie +Rob Bonewitz You were discussing treatment of natives at festival remembered this.Used to listen to it with mates when introducing ourselves to nature and its fungal bounty when should have been studying A levels .Still know the chant by heart Can't find longer chant version.

10 years назад

Joanne Lloyd

Thank you thank you for this post

10 years назад

steve orth

sending LOVE to you all........

10 years назад

Grazia Agostini

Un pezzo straordinario, un nativo americano, un canto peyote,tra tradizione e jazz:

10 years назад

Zoren Raidan

Feel good song :)

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