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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bull Moose Jackson. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: Bull Moose Jackson. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. szeptember 19., szombat

19-09-2020 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959

Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gillespie

19-09-2020 - PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959 
  >>Charlie Parker & Dizzy GillespieThe Dominos, Elmore James, Tony Bennett, Bull Moose Jackson,Charlie Parker,Lowell Fulson,T-Bone Walker,Frank Sinatra,Hazel Scott, Art Tatum,Django Reinhardt<<

Z E N E  /  M U S I C

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http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971

preHiSTORY:MiX tag A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. / The player always plays the latest playlist tracks.

before 1959


One of a handful of musicians who can be said to have permanently changed jazz, Charlie Parker was arguably the greatest saxophonist of all time. He could play remarkably fast lines that, if slowed down to half speed, would reveal that every note made sense. "Bird," along with his contemporaries Dizzy Gillespie and Bud Powell, is considered a founder of bebop; in reality he was an intuitive player who simply was expressing himself. 
Dizzy Gillespie's contributions to jazz were huge. One of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time (some would say the best), Gillespie was such a complex player that his contemporaries ended up copying Miles Davis and Fats Navarro instead, and it was not until Jon Faddis' emergence in the 1970s that Dizzy's style was successfully recreated.
My Melancholy Baby (Ernie Burnett / George Norton)
Mohawk (Charlie Parker)
Bloomdido (Charlie Parker)
Relaxin' with Lee (Charlie Parker)
from Bird and Diz / Rec. June 6, 1950
This collection of 78 rpm singles, all recorded on June 6, 1950, was released in 1956. Several things distinguish this from numerous other quintet recordings featuring these two bebop pioneers. It was recorded during the period that Parker was working under the aegis of producer Norman Granz, whose preference for large and unusual ensembles was notorious. The end result in this case is a date that sounds very much like those that Parker and Gillespie recorded for Savoy and Dial, except with top-of-the-line production quality. Even more interesting, though, is Parker's choice of Thelonious Monk as pianist. Unfortunately, Monk is buried in the mix and gets very little solo space, so his highly idiosyncratic genius doesn't get much exposure here...


The Dominos - Sixty Minute Man
Elmore James - Dust My Broom
Tony Bennett - Cold, Cold Heart
1950S MUSIC
The decade of the Fifties gave birth to Rock and Roll. When Bill Haley’s Rock Around the Clock became popular in 1955, the nation learned to swing to a whole new sound. Prior to that the Big Band Era from the 40’s was still the the driving force in music.

A talented American saxophonist who was also responsible for some of the hottest, most suggestive R&B ever recorded.
We Can Talk Some Trash (Henry Glover / Lucky Millinder)
Sometimes I Wonder (Terry Thomas)
While touring through Texas in 1945 with the Lucky Millinder Orchestra, Benjamin Clarence Jackson, Jr. was dubbed Bull Moose Jackson by drummer Panama Francis, who apparently exclaimed: "You look like a moose coming over the hill." Tall and powerful with a friendly expressive face, the bespectacled saxophonist was riding a tide of popular success by the time these recordings were cut for the King label between September 1947 and September 1950 in New York, NY; Linden, NJ; St. Louis, MO; and Cincinnati, OH. Bull Moose Jackson & His Buffalo Bearcats (the "Buffalo" was dropped beginning in 1950) were an all-purpose R&B jump band balancing upbeat novelty cookers with remarkably handsome ballads. The Bull Moose discography glistens occasionally with the names of jazz heroes like Count Basie's flute and saxman Frank Wess and Ellington trumpeter Harold "Money" Johnson. It's obvious why these records were popular in their day...

2020. június 16., kedd

16-06-2020 PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959

Hal Singer
16-06-2020 PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959   >>Hal Singer, Xavier Cugat & His Orchestra, Ruth Brown, Ellis 'Slow' Walsh, Guitar Slim, Tommy Ridgley, Pee Wee Crayton, Bull Moose Jackson, Lee Hazlewood, Tadd Dameron with John Coltrane, Mongo Santamaria, Otis Rush, Herbie Mann<<

Z E N E  /  M U S I C

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LISTEN THE PLAYLIST ON DEEZER.COM
http://www.deezer.com/playlist/1681171971

preHiSTORY:MiX tag A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza. / The player always plays the latest playlist tracks.

before 1959



Equally at home blowing scorching R&B or tasty jazz, Hal "Cornbread" Singer has played and recorded both over a career spanning more than half a century. 
Hal Singer
Swing Shift (Hal Singer)
Swanee River (Traditional)
Cornbread (Lee Morgan / Teddy Reig / Hal Singer)
from Hal Singer 1948-1951
Blues & Rhythm CLASSICS
Tenor sax player Hal "Cornbread" Singer spent his career moving with ease between jazz, R&B and early rock & roll, and his hard, muscular sax sound is unmistakable, practically defining the words "searing" and "scorching" on key instrumentals like "Cornbread" (his first big solo hit) and its follow-up, "Beef Stew." Both tracks are included here in this collection of his earliest solo sides for Savoy Records...


Remembered for his highly commercial approach to pop music, Xavier Cugat (born Francisco de Asis Javier Cugat Mingall de Cru y Deulofeo) made an even greater mark as one of the pioneers of Latin American dance music. During his eight-decade-long career, Cugat helped to popularize the tango, the cha-cha, the mambo, and the rhumba.
Xavier Cugat & His Orchestra
Maracaibo
Mambo No. 5
Anything Can Happen Mambo feat. Abbe Lane
from Maracaibo (Original Recordings 1950 -1952)
A native of Girona, Spain, Cugat emigrated with his family to Cuba in 1905. Trained as a classical violinist, he played with the Orchestra of the Teatro Nacional in Havana at the age of 12. Emigrating to the United States, sometime between 1915 and 1918, he quickly found work accompanying an opera singer. At the height of the tango craze, in 1918, Cugat joined a popular dance band, the Gigolos. His involvement with the group, however, was brief. As the popularity of the tango faded, he took a job as a cartoonist for The Los Angeles Times. Cugat returned to music in 1920, forming his own group, the Latin American Band....
Xavier Cugat & Abbe Lane


They called Atlantic Records "the house that Ruth built" during the 1950s, and they weren't referring to the Sultan of Swat. Ruth Brown's regal hitmaking reign from 1949 to the close of the '50s helped tremendously to establish the New York label's predominance in the R&B field.
Ruth Brown
Don't Cry
Shine On
Mend Your Ways (Lincoln Chase / Leroy Kirkland) 2:48
from Ruth Brown 1951-1953
Blues & Rhythm CLASSICS
Later, the business all but forgot her -- she was forced to toil as domestic help for a time -- but she returned to the top, her status as a postwar R&B pioneer (and tireless advocate for the rights and royalties of her peers) recognized worldwide.
Young Ruth Weston was inspired initially by jazz chanteuses Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, and Dinah Washington. She ran away from her Portsmouth home in 1945 to hit the road with trumpeter Jimmy Brown, whom she soon married...