Chuck Braman's Recommended Music, Movies & Humor Web Page
I've been listening to jazz since I was 12, and
Brazilian music since I was 16. I've been somewhat of a movie buff and a
"humor buff" since I was 11. For anyone who's interested, here
are some of my recommendations and/or favorites in each of these
categories. I like feedback, so feel free to write me at chuck@chuckbraman.com if you'd
like.
For anyone unfamiliar with modern jazz and interested in starting a
basic collection, I recommend joining the BMG Music Club Online or the Columbia House Music
Club, both of which offer new members 12 CDs for the price of one,
with no further commitment. Here are a few CDs to start with, most of
which should be easy to find: Miles Davis, "Milestones" and
"Porgy & Bess"; Bill Evans, "Sunday at the Village
Vanguard," or "Waltz for Debby"; John Coltrane, "A
Love Supreme"; Charles Mingus, "Mingus Ah Um"; Keith
Jarrett, "Survivors Suite"; Charlie Parker, "Now's The
Time"; Thelonious Monk, "Thelonious Monk Trio"; Dizzy
Gillespie, "The Complete RCA Victor Recordings"; Sonny
Rollins, "Saxophone Colossus." All of these are musically
brilliant, historically important, and should be (or become)
intelligible to any neophyte listener willing to take the time to become
familiar with them. (A very good guide for appreciating jazz is "A Concise
Guide To Jazz," by Mark Gridley.)
As for my personal preferences, they include Miles Davis and John
Coltrane as improvisers/bandleaders, and Paul Motian, Roy Haynes, Elvin
Jones, and 1960s Tony Williams as drummers (I'm a drummer myself). Among
my personal favorite jazz recordings are Miles Davis' "Miles Davis
Quintet 1965-'68" (6-CD set), and "Live-Evil" (in
addition to nearly every other recording that Davis made between 1949
and 1975); John Coltrane, "The Classic Quartet" (8-CD set);
Chick Corea, "Now He Sings, Now He Sobs"; Keith Jarrett,
"Life Between the Exit Signs"; and Bill Evans "Sunday at
the Village Vanguard," and "Waltz for Debby."
(Incidentally, another good strategy for becoming familiar with modern
jazz is to collect Miles Davis' almost uniformly excellent 1949-1975
recordings in chronological sequence, since Davis' groups were at the
forefront of modern jazz's evolution and included nearly all of the
era's greatest musicians as sidemen, and also because Davis himself was
an improviser who is extremely melodic and easily intelligible.)
As for Brazilian music, my favorite generation of
musicians came to prominence during the 1960s and 1970s, immediately
following the Bossa Nova era. The genre they pioneered, called "MPB" (for "m”sica popular
brasileira"), draws on all of Brazil's rich musical traditions, as
well as American jazz and popular music. The best MPB music makes nearly
all of the American popular music of the past several generations pale
by comparison. It has the melodic and harmonic sophistication of the
very best tin pan alley compositions combined with equally sophisticated
Afro-Brazilian rhythms, all in the service of a uniquely beautiful
esthetic that projects equal measures of melancholy and joy.
Obtaining a basic CD collection of MPB music is a slightly more
expensive proposition than obtaining a basic jazz collection, since most
of the best recordings must be imported from Brazil. (Tower
Records is probably one of the better North American sources for
Brazilian music.) Here are a few of my favorites, in no particular
order, one for each of my favorite artists: Joyce, "Ilha
Brasil"; Simone, "Bittencourt De Oliveira"; Gal Costa,
"Mina D'Âgua Do Meu Canto"; Milton Nascimento,
"Geraes"; Toninho
Horta, "Toninho Horta"; Ivan Lins,
"Anjo de mim"; Gilberto Gil, "Quanta"; Chico Buarque,
"As Cidades"; Marisa
Monte, "Mais"; Caetano Veloso, "Livro"; Djavan,
"Alumbramento & Djavan"; Maria Bethania, "Canto Do
Pat‰"; Hermento Pascoal, "Festa Dos Delises"; Egberto
Gismonte, "Âgua & Vinho." A good resource for
learning more about Brazilian music is the book "The Brazilian Sound," available from Amazon, as well as The Brazilian
Sound web site. Finally, although its selection of music is of
inconsistent quality compared to the selections above, you may enjoy the
web radio show Brazilian Beat.
(For modern American pop, I like The Beatles, Sly Stone, Steely Dan,
James Taylor, and The Police.)
As for movies, my tastes are eclectic. For comedy, when
I was 11, some of my favorites were (and still are) the films produced
in the 1920s and 1930s by ex-vaudeville comedians, such as Charlie
Chaplin's "The Gold Rush," W.C. Field's "It's A
Gift," and the Marx Brothers "Duck Soup." Recently I've
gone back to this era again by collecting the complete Little Rascals
series, which I enjoy just as much as an adult as I did as a 6 or 7
year-old kid. (The music from the Little Rascals comedies is also my
favorite music from this era. If you're curious, check out one of my
favorite recordings, "The Beau Hunks Play the Little Rascals Music.")
Some of my favorite modern comedies include Mel Brooks' "The
Producers," Woody Allen's "Play It Again Sam," and the
six- episode TV series "Police Squad," (collected on video as
"Police Squad: Help Wanted," and "More Police Squad.")
For movies in general, the pre-code era (1930 to mid 1934) is my
favorite period. Many of these movies have good plots, feature the
greatest Hollywood stars in their youth, and were shot in New York City
during its cultural prime. Following this era, I'm also a big fan of the
classic movies made during the 1930s, 40s, and 50s, especially those
directed by Alfred Hitchcock and Elia Kazan. As for modern movies, a few
of my recent favorites include "The Accidental Tourist"
(1987), "The Shawshank Redemption" (1994), "As Good As It
Gets" (1997), "Central Station" (1998), and
"American Beauty" (1999).
In addition to the comedies listed above, here are some
of my favorite sources of humor. In the early '70s I began reading a
satire magazine called National Lampoon. The magazine itself existed
until the early '90s, but only the issues from the early '70s are
consistently good. (To give you an idea how good, their 1964 High School
Yearbook Parody, which originally retailed for $2.50, regularly sells
for $70 to $100 on ebay, and it is not rare.) The sensibility of the
humor is similar to the first season of Saturday Night Live (which was
originally an outgrowth of the National Lampoon Radio Hour), only much funnier. If
you're curious, try punching in "National Lampoon" at ebay and bid on the
"Best of" anthologies numbers 3 or 4, which usually sell very
cheaply. A amazingly comprehensive site dedicated to National Lampoon
during is period can be accessed by clicking here.
R. Crumb is my favorite cartoonist; since I was 16, I've collected
everything I can find by him. His work is too diverse, multifaceted,
personal (and warped) to describe. If you've never heard of him, I
recommend checking out the documentary "Crumb."
For a sampling of some of his best comics, check out the "R. Crumb Coffee Table Art Book," or the
soon- to-be published "The Complete Crumb Comics Vol. 14,"
which covers the 1980s, my favorite period.
For stand-up comics, I only like the late Sam Kinison. Two of his CDs
are hilarious (the others, strangely, are not very good): his first,
"Louder Than Hell," and his last (and best),
"Live From Hell."
My favorite writers of humor are Woody Allen and P.J. O'Roark. In my
opinion, Allen's writing is even funnier than his funniest movies. All
of it is collected in "The Complete Prose of Woody Allen," an amazing
bargain at $9.99. P.J. O'Roark is a former writer and editor of National
Lampoon who is now a pro-free market political humorist. I like most of
his books, but my favorite is "Holidays In Hell."
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