Ordered! I have to stop visiting your site, I just keep ordering. LOL!!! Thanks for this suggestion, can't wait to get it.
Oscar Peterson's Aptly Titled A Time For Love —The Oscar Peterson Quartet Live In Helsinki, 1987
The set opens with a crowd pleasing Peterson original "Cool Walk" that lets the group warm up by going round and round on the chord changes. Not much going on there that's not showing off, but give the concert a chance to unfold as it does over six sides and you will be treated to the same exhilarating evening the Fins enjoyed that night, which was the European tour's finale.
Following side 1's pleasing exhibitionism the group settles in for Peterson's Bach inspired "Love Ballade" with Peterson and Pass trading graceful lines anchored by Young's electric bass on which he also trades melodic ideas with the two P's. It's 10 minutes of beauty followed by "Cakewalk" a joyride that concludes with Peterson sounding like an out of control player piano having the time of its life. Pass takes all of the hairpin turns and stays on the road..
One side is a salute to Bach (Young switches to double bass), another holds a Duke Ellington medley, another covers standards like "How High the Moon", "A Time For Love" and Benny Goodman's "Soft Winds". On side "F" Peterson covers "Waltz For Debby", "When You Wish Upon a Star" and the concert concludes with Peterson's "Blues Etudes". Listening to Peterson and Pass trade licks and challenge each other is enjoyable every play.
The sound is spectacular: dynamic, timbrally honest with deep bass and honest extension on top. It's closely miked with just a kiss of hall sound. Even the audience applause is extremely well recorded. A guaranteed rousing evening musically and sonically. The credits are incomplete but probably recorded to tape, mixed to hi-rez digital with lacquers cut by Chris Muth. Pressed on transparent blue vinyl at RTI.
Great fun, much needed right now. The album is available directly from the Oscar Peterson Store.
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This is often overlooked given the golden age of jazz was the late 40s through the mid 60s. Also….for those who were questioning why I would use Michael Fremer’s reviews without paying particular attention to the subjective parts, THIS is a prime example of why! Thank you for the info that almost certainly would have otherwise missed.
The Finnish Broadcasting Company (Yle) has recorded quite a bit of jazz from the early 60s onwards and some of the stuff is available in digital form as a part of their "Jazzlegendat Suomessa" radio series ('Jazz Legends in Finland') at Yle Areena: https://areena.yle.fi/audio/1-4606845 (access might be geo-restricted, I haven't checked). Many tapes are still sitting in their archives due to rights issues.
Heard only the first side and love it, yes colored vinyl can be a bit crackly and noisy sometimes but this was very quiet and no need to turn on the Sugarcube. The music is fantastic, typical of Oscar Peterson. Highly recommended.
The sound is excellent. BTW, I'm pretty sure Dave Young only played double bass with the trio, not electric bass.