Bach Fugue in G Minor - George Barnes and the Jazz Renaissance Quintet video free download


49,643
Duration: 05:28
Uploaded: 2013/04/25

[ This track is the final mono edit and mix by George Barnes and Phil Ramone. You may purchase the CD containing the entire recording session here: http://www.theartofsoundgallery.com/site/gallery/bach-fugue-in-gm/ ]

Jazz guitar great George Barnes often cleansed his musical palate with Brahms, Beethoven, Mozart, Respighi, Ravel, Moussorsky, Tchaikovsky, Wagner — and Bach. It was the Bach Fugue in G Minor, played by organist Virgil Fox under the baton of Eugene Ormandy that inspired him to explore its joy (a hallmark of George's playing) and complexity (a reflection of his musical genius) in the context of his Jazz Renaissance Quintet.

The six men who participated in this recording — all close friends, masters of their art, and highly-respected in the New York studio scene — were guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli (a longtime friend and studio colleague of GB, Bucky's classical training made him a natural for this piece), clarinetist Hank D'Amico (who honed his craft with Benny Goodman and Tommy Dorsey, among others), bassist Jack Lesberg (well-known for his work with Louis Armstrong, but just as much at home under the baton of Leonard Bernstein), and drummer Cliff Leeman (invaluable to such diverse bandleaders as Glenn Miller and Raymond Scott, and a key member of The World's Greatest Jazz Band). The original session, which took place on 25 February 1962 at A&R Recording in New York City, was recorded and remixed by engineer Phil Ramone, who began as a classically-trained violinist and became the world-renowned producer of such iconic recording artists as Paul Simon, Billy Joel, Ray Charles and Frank Sinatra.

In 1957, George -- an influential master of all musical genres -- recorded COUNTRY JAZZ, still heralded as an innovation of musical convergence. 9 years later, Barnes signed with Mercury Records, where he recorded three albums. One of the three, MOVIN' EASY, was a collection of standards and Barnes originals recorded with the Jazz Renaissance Quintet. It was during those sessions that Barnes proposed the idea of recording an album of classical jazz with the quintet. After hearing Barnes' Bach Fugue demo, Mercury loved the music, but deemed the project too esoteric, and the recording was shelved. The only remaining material from the one-day session were two acetate discs — reference lacquers created in 1962 (the mono edit) and 1972 (the outtakes and full unedited performance in stereo). The discs, intended only for limited use, had been played many times over the years. Most of the considerable damage to the discs has been digitally removed, while preserving the dynamics of the music and the voices of the participants.

The inclusion of the musicians' conversations between "takes" affords the listener a rare opportunity to join the players in the unique creative process that occurs in the rarefied environment of a recording studio.

Comments

9 years ago

tinian33

Wow! Thanks for sharing this gem. I studied both baroque/classical guitar and jazz, but this is how you put it all together! nice.

9 years ago

Frank David

I listen several times. I like this version of Bach´s Gminor fugue. Thanks for sharing!

9 years ago

TheApostleofRock

Wooowww

9 years ago

Jordan R.

Does anyone know where the score for this version can be found?

9 years ago

Ian Date

superb, love everything GB did. Maestro

9 years ago

Leo W

Oh. I found myself in a once again in a fit of obsession over a piece of music, trawling the ether for every possible version of it (the composer tends to be Bach, because his works transcend orchestration and lend themselves more readily to variation in the first place, and in fact, the piece tends to be this one, a long-time favorite) - and stumbled in here. I am not a jazz connoisseur, but this sounds great to me. If I had to describe it in one word, I guess that word would be: Nifty!

9 years ago

elisabeth steltzlen

J'adoooore !! Superbe !!!Un vrai Bach bien en rythme .....

9 years ago

MrJimmienoone

Thank you for uploading this!!!

9 years ago

Albert Nemiroff

A treasure that could not be swung more. Thank you.

9 years ago

Patrick Ginnaty

Wow! Thank you!

10 years ago

Roy Willis

Excellent. A joy to listen to.

10 years ago

Bruno Angeretti

Wonderful!! Thank you very much Mr Barnes.

10 years ago

Andrew Homzy

Where can we get the scores?

10 years ago

Antonio Bola Harres

Amazing!

10 years ago

funkyfingazzz

Phenomenal.....Thank you for posting this rare treat !!

10 years ago

Alexandra Leh

thank you so much, johnzaq1! my father would be happy to know this has inspired you...

10 years ago

johnzaq1

The way electric guitar should be played. Inspired

10 years ago

Alexandra Leh

thank you so much for your appreciation, bob!

10 years ago

Bob Russell

Beautiful! Thank you!

11 years ago

Alexandra Barnes Leh

For those fine Friends of Barnes who didn't know GB had longtime plans to release an entire classical jazz album, here's a video of his only classical recording: The Bach Fugue in G Minor with GB's Jazz Renaissance Quintet. Created with scans of the original score and photos of GB with guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, engineer Phil Ramone, clarinetist Hank D'Amico, bassist Jack Lesberg and drummer Cliff Leeman, this is the final mono edit and mix. The entire session is available on The Art of Sound label, and allows you the rare opportunity to take a seat in the studio among six legendary masters.

Related Videos