Hymn to Freedom.

© 1964 Oscar Peterson Trio Live in Denmark.

© 1962 Oscar Peterson – composition.

© 1963 Night Train – Verve Records.

Piano: Oscar Peterson

Bass: Ray Brown

Drums: Ed Thigpen

Heals the very soul every time!  When in Winnipeg at the school of the Royal Winnipeg Ballet, I was the only student not included in the mounting of Romeo and Juliet, the company’s first full-scale ballet since David Peregrine and Evelyn Hart had won the bronze prize in Varna, Bulgaria.

This music, this giant of a genius, this album literally saved my life.

I felt such shame at having been excluded; having been properly isolated and rendered invisible, one then had to proceed as though one’s exclusion was not the most hurtful rejection.  The only thing that spirited me away from the abyss of self-implosion was this music.

A beautiful, male Jamaican-born nurse had given it to me on the second weekend of my stay in the city.  He had played the album after his truly elephantine cock had just ravaged my soul and I did nothing but stay there in bed flying-without-moving – and he was a damn good cook too!

Years later, after Merlin’s passing, I sat in the corner curled up with sage entity mate, Daryll Newcombe – now dead of AIDS, at every performance of Oscar Peterson at the Bermuda Onion Jazz Club on Bloor Street between Bay Street and Avenue Road.

The Bermuda Onion had great atmosphere.  More than that, it proved the only Jazz club in Toronto where one’s race did not preclude entry therein.

I was truly healed for being at those performances; I had survived Winnipeg and gone on to meet Merlin.  I had to have attended each performance, for Oscar’s sheer genius had not only enriched but it had literally saved my life.  So it was that, in later years, I was grossly disappointed by his glaring humanity.

His self-karmic issues notwithstanding, this was one genius of towering, staggering magnitude.  Much of the beauty of this giant’s genius is how pure, simple and warmly enveloping it ever was.

Indeed, one has much to be fiercely proud of in celebrating Black History, Black culture, Jazz, because of shamanic healers of the soul like Oscar Peterson.

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

The Mooche.

© 2011 Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra, leader Wynton Marsalis

1928 Duke Ellington and Irving Mills

http://www.jazz.org/JLCO/

This evening – Wednesday, February 11, 2015, I went to the hallowed temple, Massey Hall and got my soul good and besotted on the masterful soulfulness that is the Jazz At Lincoln Center Orchestra led by Wynton Marsalis.  Boy, did I come undone when the Cuban balladeer not only danced but scatted like it was nobody’s business.  Now if this concert does not prove the leap off point for some truly poetic dreams then lord help me…

Happy Black history month!  Sweet dreams as ever!

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

Epistrophy.

© 1942 Thelonius Monk and Kenny Clarke – composition

© 1957 Live at Carnegie Hall – Blue Note

Piano: Thelonius Monk

Tenor Saxophone: John Coltrane

Bass: Ahmed Abdul-Malik

Drums: Shadow Wilson

Genius is such a beautifully rare flower…  Genius always wears Black.

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

Going to Chicago.

© 1981 Count Basie Live Carnegie Hall featuring Joe Williams.

Vocals: Joe Williams

One of Merlin’s favourite singers, to say nothing of mine.

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

Django.

© 1955 John Lewis, Modern Jazz Quartet.

© 1956 Django: Modern Jazz Quartet (Album) – Prestige Records

Piano – John Lewis

Vibraphone – Milt Jackson

Bass – Percy Heath

Drums – Kenny Clarke

No better music for reflecting on awaking from a lucid flying dream.

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

I Put A Spell On You.

© 1965 Nina Simone, I Put A Spell On You.  Philips Records.

© 1956 Screamin’ Jay Hawkins

Vocals & Piano: Nina Simone

Lyrics: Screamin’ Jay Hawkins

Tickles the very soul every time!

Music is the release; it is the place we go to, to find and ground ourselves in our escape from the ugliness that is the racial predator and his big fat lies.  Sorry, can’t take away the music.  Not having it!

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

All or Nothing at All.

© 1993 Betty Carter (Live in Concert, Hamburg)

© 1994 Feed the Fire, Betty Carter (Live) Verve Records

Vocals: Betty Carter

Double Bass: Dave Holland

Piano: Geri Allen

Drums: Jack DeJohnette

Master linguist.  Griot.  Shaman.  The One.  The voice.

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.

Blue in Green.

© 1959 Miles Davis Blue in Green

© Kind of Blue, Miles Davis, Columbia Records

Trumpet: Miles Davis

Piano: Bill Evans

Alto Saxophone: Cannonball Adderley

Tenor Saxophone: John Coltrane

Double Bass: Paul Chambers

Drums: Jimmy Cobb

Smooth.  Elegant.  Exquisite.  Sophisticated.  Sublime.

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© 2013-2025 Arvin da Brgha.  All Rights Reserved.