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==Composition==
==Composition==
The tune is 16 bars in the form of AABA. It is in 4/4 meter but is often played with a 2-feel.<ref>''The Thelonious Monk Fake Book,'' Steve Cardenas (transcriber), Don Sickler (editor). Hal Leonard, 2002, p. 9.</ref> The 4-bar melody is essentially in C major but borrows tones from the parallel C minor scale, and is transposed up a fourth to create the B section of the form. Thelonious Monk and Denzil Best wrote “Bemsha Swing” in 1952, with the copyright application showing the title as “Bimsha Swing”. The word Bemsha comes from the word “Bimshire” or “little Bimshire”, a nickname for Barbados, Denzil Best’s family home. <ref>'' Bemsha Swing: Stories of Standards'', LInda Hillshafer, http://kuvo.org/post/bemsha-swing-stories-standards#stream/0, accessed 22 Nov 2017 </ref>
The tune is 16 bars in the form of AABA. It is in 4/4 meter but is often played with a 2-feel.<ref>''The Thelonious Monk Fake Book,'' Steve Cardenas (transcriber), Don Sickler (editor). Hal Leonard, 2002, p. 9.</ref> The 4-bar melody is essentially in C major but borrows tones from the parallel C minor scale, and is transposed up a fourth to create the B section of the form. Thelonious Monk and Denzil Best wrote “Bemsha Swing” in 1952, with the copyright application showing the title as “Bimsha Swing”. The word Bemsha comes from the word “Bimshire” or “little Bimshire”, a nickname for Barbados, Denzil Best’s family home. <ref>{{cite web |url=http://kuvo.org/post/bemsha-swing-stories-standards#stream/0 |title=Bemsha Swing: Stories of Standards |last=Hillshafer |first=Linda |date=15 Aug 2016 |website=kuvo.org |access-date=22 Nov 2017}}
</ref>


==Recording history==
==Recording history==

Revision as of 06:31, 24 November 2017

"Bemsha Swing" (also known as "Bimsha Swing") is a jazz standard co-written by Thelonious Monk and Denzil Best.

Composition

The tune is 16 bars in the form of AABA. It is in 4/4 meter but is often played with a 2-feel.[1] The 4-bar melody is essentially in C major but borrows tones from the parallel C minor scale, and is transposed up a fourth to create the B section of the form. Thelonious Monk and Denzil Best wrote “Bemsha Swing” in 1952, with the copyright application showing the title as “Bimsha Swing”. The word Bemsha comes from the word “Bimshire” or “little Bimshire”, a nickname for Barbados, Denzil Best’s family home. [2]

Recording history

The song was first recorded by Monk on the sessions for the album Thelonious Monk Trio in 1952. Soon after, in 1954, it was later recorded with Monk as a sideman on the Miles Davis album Miles Davis and the Modern Jazz Giants, which was released in 1959. Monk himself revisited the song on his acclaimed 1957 LP Brilliant Corners.

Besides Davis the tune became favoured by many others. After its initial publication free Jazz pianist Cecil Taylor covered the tune on his 1956 album Jazz Advance. Four years later, in 1960, sax player John Coltrane recorded a version with Don Cherry on their The Avant-Garde (released 1966). Ed Blackwell was on drums at that session with whom Cherry revisited the track on their duo record El Corazón in 1982. Cherry recalled the tune again on his 1989 Art Deco.

In 1963 Bill Evans released a piano solo interpretation on his acclaimed record Conversations with Myself. Slightly more than two decades later Geri Allen recorded another piano solo version on her Home Grown in 1985. The year after trumpeter Woody Shaw put the tune on record and released it in 1997 on his album of the same name.

The funk rock band Red Hot Chili Peppers covered the song during their 1989-90 Mother's Milk Tour, renaming their version "F.U." and adding some lyrics. A live version can be found on their Out In L.A. album. Their bassist, Flea, is a huge fan of Thelonious Monk. Bass fellow Charlie Haden, who was included in Coltrane's record, played the tune with guitarist Jim Hall in 1990, which appeared on their duo record Charlie Haden/Jim Hall in 2014.

Keith Jarrett played the composition in 1991 together with his "Standard Trio" on their live record The Cure. Two years later, in 1993, American jazz trio Medeski Martin & Wood covered the song with “Lively Up Yourself” by Bob Marley in one track, “Bemsha Swing-Lively Up Yourself,” for their album It's a Jungle in Here. Swedish jazz pianist Esbjörn Svensson released it on a tribute album to Monk in 1996 called EST plays Monk. They also issued a live version in their DVD of a Concert at Stockholm in 2002.

Later on, in 2002, jazz fusion guitarist Larry Coryell covered the song on his album Cedars of Avalon.[3][4]

References

  1. ^ The Thelonious Monk Fake Book, Steve Cardenas (transcriber), Don Sickler (editor). Hal Leonard, 2002, p. 9.
  2. ^ Hillshafer, Linda (15 Aug 2016). "Bemsha Swing: Stories of Standards". kuvo.org. Retrieved 22 Nov 2017.
  3. ^ "Cedars of Avalon overview". Allmusic.com.
  4. ^ "Cedars of Avalon". All About Jazz. Archived from the original on 2004-11-06. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)