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The Köln Concert : ウィキペディア英語版
The Köln Concert

''The ドイツ語:Köln Concert'' is a concert recording by the pianist Keith Jarrett of solo piano improvisations performed at the Opera House in Cologne ((ドイツ語:Köln)) on January 24, 1975. The double-vinyl album was released in the autumn of 1975 by the ECM Records label to critical acclaim, and went on to become the best-selling solo album in jazz history, and the all-time best-selling piano album,〔(Keith Jarrett Biography ) ''All About Jazz'' accessed April 6, 2010 〕 with sales of more than 3.5 million.〔
==The ドイツ語:Köln concert==
The concert was organized by 17-year-old , then Germany’s youngest concert promoter.〔BBC Radio 4 ''For One Night Only'' (), accessed December 30, 2011〕 At Jarrett's request, ドイツ語:Brandes had selected a Bösendorfer 290 Imperial concert grand piano for the performance. However, there was some confusion by the opera house staff and instead they found another Bösendorfer piano backstage – a much smaller baby grand – and, assuming it was the one requested, placed it on the stage. Unfortunately, the error was discovered too late for the correct Bösendorfer to be delivered to the venue in time for the evening's concert. The piano they had was intended for rehearsals only and was in poor condition and required several hours of tuning and adjusting to make it playable.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=The Köln Concert )〕 The instrument was tinny and thin in the upper registers and weak in the bass register, and the pedals did not work properly. Consequently, Jarrett often used ostinatos and rolling left-hand rhythmic figures during his Köln performance to give the effect of stronger bass notes, and concentrated his playing in the middle portion of the keyboard. ECM Records producer ドイツ語:Manfred Eicher later said: "Probably () played it the way he did because it was not a good piano. Because he could not fall in love with the sound of it, he found another way to get the most out of it."
Jarrett arrived at the opera house late in the afternoon and tired after an exhausting long drive from ドイツ語:Zürich, Switzerland, where he had performed a few days earlier. He had not slept well in several nights and was in pain from back problems and had to wear a brace. After trying out the substandard piano and learning a replacement instrument was not available, Jarrett nearly refused to play and ドイツ語:Brandes had to convince him to perform as the concert was scheduled to begin in just a few hours. The concert took place at the unusually late hour of 23:30, following an earlier opera performance. This late-night time slot was the only one the administration would make available to ドイツ語:Brandes for a jazz concert – the first ever at the ドイツ語:Köln Opera House. The show was completely sold out and the venue was filled to capacity with over 1,400 people at a ticket price of 4 DM ($1.72). Despite the obstacles, Jarrett's performance was enthusiastically received by the audience and the subsequent recording was acclaimed by critics. It remains his most popular recording and continues to sell well, decades after its initial release.

The performance was recorded by ECM Records engineer ドイツ語:Martin Wieland, using a pair of Neumann U-67 vacuum-tube powered condenser microphones and a Telefunken M-5 portable tape machine. The recording is in three parts: lasting about 26 minutes, 34 minutes and 7 minutes respectively. As it was originally programmed for vinyl LP, the second part was split into sections labelled "IIa" and "IIb". The third part, labelled "IIc", was actually the final piece, a separate encore.
A notable aspect of the concert was Jarrett's ability to produce very extensive improvised material over a vamp of one or two chords for prolonged periods of time. For instance, in Part I, he spends almost 12 minutes vamping over the chords Am7 (A minor 7) to G major, sometimes in a slow, rubato feel, and other times in a bluesy, gospel rock feel. For about the last 6 minutes of Part I, he vamps over an A major theme. Roughly the first 8 minutes of Part II A is a vamp over a D major groove with a repeated bass vamp in the left hand, and in Part IIb, Jarrett improvises over an F# minor vamp for about the first 6 minutes.
Subsequent to the release of ''The ドイツ語:Köln Concert'', Jarrett was asked by pianists, musicologists and others, to publish the music. For years he resisted such requests since, as he said, the music played was improvised "on a certain night and should go as quickly as it comes."〔Preface in Keith Jarrett: The ドイツ語:Köln Concert, Original Transcription. ISBN 978-3-7957-9519-1〕 In 1990, Jarrett finally agreed on publishing an authorized transcription but with the recommendation that every pianist intending to play the piece should use the recording itself as the final word. A new interpretation of ''The ドイツ語:Köln Concert'' was published in 2006 by Polish pianist Tomasz Trzcinski on his album ''Blue Mountains''.〔(Tomasz Trzcinski's ''Blue Mountains''. )〕 A transcription for classical guitar has also been published by Manuel Barrueco.
The album was included in Robert Dimery's 1001 Albums You Must Hear Before You Die.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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