Product Details
My Favorite Songs

My Favorite Songs
Philippe Saisse Acoustique Trio

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Average customer review:

Track Listing

  1. Poem for, No. 15
  2. Michelle
  3. Once
  4. Summer Breeze
  5. I'm Not in Love
  6. Alone Again (Naturally)
  7. Sorry Seems to Be the Hardest Word
  8. Song for Jun
  9. Laura
  10. Valse des Lilas (Once Upon a Summertime)
  11. About Time
  12. Song for Saisse
  13. Como la Lluvia (Just Like Rain)

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #127187 in Music
  • Released on: 2003-10-14
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .21 pounds

Customer Reviews

Entirely enjoyable5
A contemporary keyboardist with credits encompassing the Rolling Stones, David Bowie, and Chaka Kahn mainly playing acoustic piano; a brilliant bassist who's graced uncounted jazz sessions who "can play an acoustic bass and make it sound like an electric bass" (according to the liner notes--this is a virtue??); and a Hip-Hop drummer "who can also play jazz" (again, from the liner notes).

Can this possibly work?

Yes. And very satisfactorily, thank you.

It may offend the jazz police (too groove-oriented). It may resonate with the smooth jazz crowd (check out the "Customers who shopped for this item also shopped for these items" list: Wayman Tisdale, David Benoit, Voodoo Village, Richard Smith--'nuff said!).

So what?

Music categories are mainly a crock anyway.

Listen. I'm a "jazz guy" and I LOVE this disc (OK, my jazz credibility--such as it is--is now almost certainly thoroughly down the toilet with my fellow Amazon jazz reviewers; again, so what?).

Personally, I'm struggling to figure out how this resonates with the David Benoit crowd; there's simply way too much of an authentic jazz esthetic happening here: Saisse over and over again demonstrates entirely respectible jazz bona fides (esp. a sly but deeply delved blues sensibility); David Fink (acoustic bass) needs no introduction to the serious jazz fan--his credits read like a Who's Who of jazz; and Skoota Warner on drums plays a David King (of the Bad Plus) type role in this setting, creating rockish, hip-hoppy grooves that lend this music a smart contemporary feel that too many post-bop sessions to name desperately lack.

OK, it occasionally sidles up too close to jazz lite (esp., I'd say, "Once" and "About Time," featuring striking but quite pop-oriented vocals by Nneka Morton), but that's all right. I'm of a mind to think that's less a sin than unnecessarily alienating potential listeners by excessive esotericism, a criticism of Jason Moran's (to these ears nevertheless fine) disc, Black Stars.

As I listen to this disc over and over (really--I can't get it out of my player), I'm convinced they're some really fine renditions of (unlikely, for jazz treatments) pop songs: "Summer Breeze," "Alone Again (Naturally)," "Laura," and "I'm Not in Love," the 10CC monster hit. Besides imbuing these chestnuts with a genuine jazz sensibility, Saisse uncovers hidden melodic, harmonic, rhythmic, and blooze treasures hidden in them. And isn't that what jazz is all about? I'd say so.

And that's why I'm so high on this disc, a real surprise, even a sleeper, for me.

If you love Jazz...5
I wish I was a prolific writer because my words cannot discribe how great this CD is. I listen to it over and over again and I never tire of it. Trust me, you will love it too. I cannot go into the technical aspects like some people can, I just know good music when I hear it, and this is GREAT music!

Music can be one of life's simple pleasures5
I am a recent convert to the music of Philippe Saisse but will be buying more of his product. An accomplished musician and interpreter as well. I was hooked on his cover of Steely Dan's Do IT Again and after hearing more thought that I have been missing some fine tunes all of these years. Very good and worth a listen.