Jazz is a theory. metal is a tone. mix both and you get a lot of neat stuff :D
I really like listening to pat martino when doing solder work or anything tech related, i find all that swingy feel with a lot of notes to be awfully relaxing when looking at a schematic or doing some PCB soldering :D
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1GcWqKWxg5Q
i just love ''CD skip'' tricks like he does at 1:08 ish. it's building tension, but with something else than just 'tense notes'... the actual lick becomes tense because it keeps going... going... going.... hellooo?...please! resolve?...pretty please?.... WHOO. there it goes.
I Liked your statement / as emphasised above ; nicely put . :)
The Pat Martino really appealed too ; and came in the wake of me reading a brief article on his way of seeing the fretboard, based on visualising /executing / altering everything he does around the 3 diminished chords by the single semi-tone required to make them Dominant, Major or Minor. I realise this basic idea may be 'old hat' when doing the same thing with any dominant 7 chord ( especially to you Keven ) but the beautiful diagrammatic form of the underlying relationships, revealed the philosophy wonderfully behind his ability to be scary fast , fluid - but essentially never run out of extended lines. As with your own appreciation of the tune presented there - and akin to Jimmy Bruno , he still manages to make it sound melodic and sweet. Not bad for a man who had an accident causing a degree of brain damage, and essentially had to start all over again. The 'cd skip' motif you pointed out at 1:08 made me grin too. Very clever Mr. Martino . :)
I had ( understandibly ) decided not to delve into his work / methods until I had first made amends for my lack of the basic scale and arppegio foundations . To re-learn to walk, before running.
I noticed that performance seemed to have ( as it's opening framework ) the evocation of Miles Davis's ' So what ' ; with that four chorus Dm, Dm , Ebm, Dm ( repeat ) modal pattern / riff. I did not check that on my guitar, but it certainly seemed at least similar. I look forward very much, to ( eventually ) having enough under my belt to study Pat's methods.
Thank you for posting that inspirational piece, it's combination of 'traditional' darker Jazz tone - and sublime , melodic flow, being right up my street. :)