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Joshua Redman - Wish -1993- -lossless Flac- !!link!! 〈TRUSTED〉

Released in September 1993, Wish is the second studio album by jazz saxophonist Joshua Redman, following his self-titled debut earlier that same year. The record is widely regarded as the moment Redman solidified his status as a leading voice in the "young lions" neo-bop revival of the 1990s. The All-Star Quartet

While the rhythm section of Haden and Higgins (frequent Ornette Coleman collaborators) suggests an avant-garde lean, the album is largely an "inside" post-bop affair that emphasizes lyricism and melody. Joshua Redman - Wish -1993- -Lossless FLAC-

Jazz is a genre of "air" and "space." In a standard MP3, the subtle decay of Pat Metheny’s hollow-body guitar or the delicate shimmer of Billy Higgins’ ride cymbal is often compressed into a flat, metallic hiss. Released in September 1993 , Wish is the

The Music

The album opens with the title track, “Wish” — a Redman original built on a deceptively simple bluesy head. The interplay between Redman’s tenor and Mehldau’s harmonically adventurous comping immediately signals that this is no nostalgic hard-bop retread. Jazz is a genre of "air" and "space

The Audiophile’s Grail: Joshua Redman’s “Wish” (1993) in Lossless FLAC

In the pantheon of 1990s jazz, few debut albums arrived with the weight of expectation—and delivered with such effortless grace—as Joshua Redman’s Wish.

Released in 1993, Wish serves as a pivotal second chapter in Joshua Redman's career, marking the moment the young "lion" of jazz stepped away from safe melodicism toward a more exploratory, "Ornette-thological" landscape. A Synthesis of Generations