Your record collection is not complete

There is a danger of blogging either in anger or grief: politics or the dearly beloved dead. It’s the nature of things, if we aren’t careful.

So here, by way of antidote, is something to celebrate. If you don’t have it (and I bet you don’t) then your record collection is incomplete.

Bregenz and Munchen

I love this set of improvised concerts (Munchen and Bregenz) by Keith Jarrett so much. It is Jarrett at his liberated, exuberant, joyous – but tuneful – best. Better even than the world’s best-selling solo piano album, the Koln Concert. This will have you singing, gleefully banging your fist on the nearest impromptu drum, smiling, dreaming, crying, thinking. When you know it well you will be able to relax into it and let it transport you, let it free up your mind and allow you to decide where to direct your focus. It is therapy in a pair of thirty-year-old Austro-German gigs.

I had the triple vinyl album in 1983 or so but somehow it ended up in my brother’s collection. It’s the nature of things, if we aren’t careful.

I made do with a cassette copy, and then when CDs emerged, I patiently waited for ECM to release it in scratch- and hiss-free glory. After an age, a single CD only came out. Infuriating. More than half the music missing. I waited for the full version. Nada. I even wrote to Manfred Eicher at ECM begging for a release – by now the vinyl was long out of print.

Finally, just a year ago, ECM released the full set on CD and digital download. You can even get it in ‘high definition’ from HDtracks.com and others.

Run, run to your computer and order it. The world is not all bad or sad.