Friday, November 5, 2010

Terence Blanchard: Jazz In Film (1999)

Terence Blanchard covers classic motion picture scores with an expressive jazz trumpet and approach to straight-ahead jazz on the 1998 Sony Classical release Jazz In Film. Scores by Duke Ellington (Anatomy of a Murder), Quincy Jones (The Pawn Broker) and Jerry Goldsmith (Chinatown) are immersed in the world of jazz and resurface complete with Blanchard's imprint and eloquent style that is reminiscent of mid-'60s Miles Davis. Accompanied by contemporary jazz masters such as Kenny Kirkland, Joe Henderson and Donald Harrison, the set features the precision and emotional flair Blanchard is known for. His interpretations of Goldsmith's score from Chinatown and Martin Scorsese's Taxi Driver remain true to the original compositions. However, Blanchard's jazz execution develops and adds another dimension to the psychological turmoil their themes explore. His masterful use of a jazz ensemble with an orchestra to exemplify the music of such great composers as Elmer Bernstein (Man with the Golden Arm) exudes maturity and surpasses the excellence of his previous scoring efforts on the jazz-flavored score for Eve's Bayou. ~ Paula Edelstein, All Music Guide
Tracklist
1 A Streetcar Named Desire 7:55
2 Chinatown 8:23
3 The Subterraneans 9:08
4 Anatomy Of A Murder 8:25
5 The Pawnbroker 7:03
6 Taxi Driver 7:13
7 Degas' Racing World 7:57
8 Man With The Golden Arm 4:14
9 Clockers 8:01
Jazz In Film (Film Score Anthology)
Hotfile / Depositfiles @ 320K