Play the Blues: Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center Eric Clapton, Wynton Marsalis

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CD

Average Customer Rating:

( 16 customer ratings )

  • Release Date: 09/13/2011
  • Sales Rank: 2,727
  • Label: Warner Bros / Wea
  • UPC: 081227975913
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CD - Bonus DVD$22.35
CD - Bonus Tracks$49.39

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  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Details & Credits

Overview -

Play the Blues: Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center

Track List
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Play the Blues: Live from Jazz at Lincoln Center

1LISTENIce Cream / Wynton Marsalis 7:38
2LISTENForty-Four / Wynton Marsalis 7:12
3LISTENJoe Turner's Blues / Wynton Marsalis 7:47
4LISTENThe Last Time / Wynton Marsalis 4:18
5LISTENCareless Love / Wynton Marsalis 7:43
6LISTENKidman Blues / Wynton Marsalis 4:20
7LISTENLayla / Wynton Marsalis 9:08
8LISTENJoliet Bound / Wynton Marsalis 3:50
9LISTENJust a Closer Walk with Thee / Wynton Marsalis 12:20
10LISTENCorrine, Corrina / Wynton Marsalis 10:21

About Eric Clapton

About Wynton Marsalis

Editorial Reviews

United by dalliances with purism as young men and an abiding love of classic blues and jazz, Eric Clapton and Wynton Marsalis are a more comfortable fit than it may initially seem. Both musicians are synthesists, not innovators, stitching together elements from their idols in an attempt to preserve the past while bringing it into the present, so their sensibilities are aligned and, in 2011, they're amenable to a partnership that explores their common ground. So, Clapton and Marsalis held a series of concerts at New York City's Jazz at Lincoln Center in April of 2011, the guitarist selecting the songs (apart from 'Layla,' performed upon the request of bassist Carlos Henriquez), the trumpeter picking the band and working up the arrangements, using King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band as his template yet finding room for piano and, of course, guitar. Clapton's choice of songs leans heavily toward the '20s -- so much so that the dip into postwar electric blues via Howlin' Wolf's 'Forty Four' feels a bit of a shock -- and the arrangements are faithful to classic New Orleans jazz yet loose, never quite hidebound to tradition and finding plenty of space for every one of the players to roam; Clapton and Marsalis surely solo plenty, but so do trombonist Chris Crenshaw, clarinetist Victor Goines, and pianist Dan Nimmer. There's not much ego on display -- even the inclusion of 'Layla' doesn't feel forced, thanks to Marsalis' inventive New Orleans funeral arrangement of this overly familiar tune -- but the joy is palpable and the chemistry natural. Compared to Wynton's duet albums with Willie Nelson, this is both more traditional and riskier, and compared to Clapton's latter-day duets with B.B. King and J.J. Cale, this finds the guitarist none too deferential. These are consummate musicians united by playing music they love, and their passion resonates so strongly it's hard not to enjoy Clapton and Marsalis playing the blues. Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Customer Rating:
  • Ratings: 16Reviews: 1

Great performance captured on a great recordingby Anonymous

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April 25, 2012: Virtuoso musicians, playing music they love, captured with a phenomenal recording. One of the best live recordings I've heard. You will hear every instrument in perfect balance. Tight band and tight arrangements.