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Jazz

You are currently browsing the archive for the Jazz category.

Lady bird

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Vi Redd “Bird Call” Vi Redd is a passionate bop-based altoist and an exciting singer. She made this album for United Artists (1962) and another for Atco (1962-63).

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (19 votes, average: 4.32 out of 5)
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Droppin’ and shoppin’

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The Ruby Braff (Trumpet)/ Marshall Brown (Trombone) Sextet on United Artists Records. (1961)

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (16 votes, average: 4.19 out of 5)
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Jaxson heights

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“Hop On the Skyliner!!!” with Charlie Barnet and his Orchestra.   This one includes the indelible “Oh! Miss Jaxson” (“…you sure make some FINE Bar-Bee-Q!”)

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (15 votes, average: 3.67 out of 5)
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“They’ve come for the guitar”

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Illustration by Arnold Roth. Fantasy Records.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (21 votes, average: 4.14 out of 5)
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Major league

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“Basie Plays Hefti” Roulette Records (1958)

Thoughout the 50’s, Count Basie and composer/arranger Neal Hefti were an incredible team together.   This album is one of their best and it’s overflowing with Hefti gems that include “Cute”, “Pensive Miss”, “Sloo Foot”, “Scoot”, “A Little Tempo Please”, “Count Down”, and “Pony Tail”.   Of course, Hefti later gave us other classics like the themes to “Batman” and “The Odd Couple”.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (15 votes, average: 3.13 out of 5)
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Counter intelligence

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Freedom Now Suite on Candid. Recorded in 1960.

Track listing: Driva’ Man; Freedom Day; Triptych (Prayer, Protest, Peace); All Africa; Tears For Johannesburg.

Personnel: Max Roach: drums; Booker Little: trumpet; Julian Priester: trombone; Coleman Hawkins: tenor saxophone (1); Walter Benton: tenor saxophone; James Schenck: bass; Michael Olatunji: congas; Ray Mantilla: percussion; Tomas DuVall: percussion; Abbey Lincoln: vocals.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (21 votes, average: 4.05 out of 5)
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Blue Mance group

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The Junior Mance Trio “In a Superb Performance”   “That’s Where It is!” Capitol Records (1964)

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (15 votes, average: 3.07 out of 5)
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East side story

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Clifford Coulter “East Side San Jose” on Impulse ABC Records (1971)   Check out these cats!: Mel Brown, Guitar; Cornelious Bumpus (that’s right!), Saxophone; Jimmy Calhaun, Bass; Billy Ingram, Drums; etc.   Side One opens with a funky, jazzy take on Steely Dan’s “Do It Again,” then the title cut “East Side San Jose” which is great.   For me the stand out track though is “Big Fat Funky Shirley” on side two.

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (19 votes, average: 3.32 out of 5)
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Saxophone colossus

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1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (15 votes, average: 2.73 out of 5)
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Tenor Madness

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Sonny Rollins Quartet – “Tenor Madness” – Prestige 30044- 22, 34:57 1956

Sonny Rollins, tenor sax; John Coltrane, tenor sax (#1 only); Red Garland, piano; Paul Chambers, bass; Philly Joe Jones, drums

Tracklist: Tenor Madness, When Your Lover Has Gone, Paul’s Pal, My Reverie, The Most Beautiful Girl in the World.

Sonny Rollins’ Tenor Madness is famous for, among other things, featuring the only recorded encounter between Rollins and John Coltrane. This encounter, on the title track, is most fascinating because it is in no way a battle of the saxes meeting. The two men compliment each other nicely to the point where it is sometimes difficult to tell them apart. Sure, Coltrane sounds boisterous at the beginning of the track, while Rollins sounds smooth and bluesy, but both men are legendary for their lyricism, and when they trade eight bars in the middle of the song, the melody is played like a friendly game of hot potato (or more accurately, comfortably warm potato).

But Tenor Madness is Rollins’ show. On When Your Lover Has Gone, Rollins is endlessly inventive, playing sad lines, slow lines, swinging lines, and gentle lines, all of them sounding almost impossibly organic to the track.   Paul’s Pal has a wonderfully simple and jaunty melody that Rollins explores in all its permutations. At one point, Rollins dips into the lowest register of his tenor to play a syrupy, baritone-sounding line. Paul Chambers, who the track is named for, wonderfully anchors the song’s swing, and even more extraordinarily, always seems to intuit Rollins next move.

On My Reverie, Rollins plays the kind of breathy, wet-reed lines that remind me of Coltrane on Lush Life. As usual, these lines have a wonderful way of seeming to have always been part of the song; it always amazes me the way Rollins can so often fit his solos within the beat, causing very little to spill over and bring attention to itself.

– Dan Krow

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars (23 votes, average: 4.48 out of 5)
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