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A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: John Coltrane. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése
A következő címkéjű bejegyzések mutatása: John Coltrane. Összes bejegyzés megjelenítése

2020. november 8., vasárnap

08-11-2020 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1963-1975

 

08-11-2020 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1963-1975 Johnny Hartman, Jimmy Smith, Sonny Rollins, Dexter Gordon, Stan Getz, Gábor Szabó, Lalo Schifrin, John Coltrane, Donald Byrd, Les McCann, Joe Henderson, Milt Jackson, Harry Beckett

J A Z Z   M U S I C

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1963-1975


A superior ballad singer with a warm baritone, best known for his classic full-length collaboration with John Coltrane.
Johnny Hartman
Stairway to the Stars (Matty Malneck / Mitchell Parish / Frank Signorelli)
Charade (Henry Mancini / Johnny Mercer)
In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning (Bob Hilliard / David Mann)
from I Just Dropped By to Say Hello 1963
The second Impulse! session for ballad singer Johnny Hartman followed his classic collaboration with John Coltrane. Hartman is heard in peak form throughout these 11 pieces, which include "In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning," "Stairway to the Stars," and even "Charade." Tenor saxophonist Illinois Jacquet is on five of the songs, guitarists Kenny Burrell and Jim Hall help out on a few tunes, and Hartman is consistently accompanied by pianist Hank Jones, bassist Milt Hinton, and drummer Elvin Jones. This is one of his finest recordings.

A pioneer of soul-jazz who revolutionized the Hammond organ, turning it into one of the most incisive, dynamic jazz instruments of its time.
Jimmy Smith
Prayer Meeting (Jimmy Smith)
I Almost Lost My Mind (Ivory Joe Hunter)
Lonesome Road (Gene Austin / Nat Shilkret)
from Prayer Meetin' 1964
Playing piano-style single-note lines on his Hammond B-3 organ, Jimmy Smith revolutionized the use of the instrument in a jazz combo setting in the mid-'50s and early '60s, and arguably his best albums for Blue Note during this period were the ones he did with tenor sax player Stanley Turrentine. Recorded on February 8, 1963, at Van Gelder Studio in New Jersey, and featuring Quentin Warren on guitar and Donald Bailey on drums in addition to Smith and Turrentine, Prayer Meetin' is a delight from start to finish... The blues roots are obvious here, and the Smith-penned title track might even be called jazz-gospel, but the single most striking cut is a version of Ivory Joe Hunter's "I Almost Lost My Mind," with both Smith and Turrentine building wonderful solos, suggesting new pathways for organ and sax as complementary instruments.

Voted by Miles Davis as the greatest tenor ever, an inventive saxophonist and an astonishing soloist.
Sonny Rollins
On Green Dolphin Street (Bronislaw Kaper / Ned Washington)
Hold 'Em Joe (Harry Thomas)
Three Little Words (Bert Kalmar / Harry Ruby)
from On Impulse! 1965
In 1965 and 1966 tenor giant Sonny Rollins issued three albums for the Impulse label. They would be his last until 1972 when he re-emerged on the scene from a self-imposed retirement. This date is significant for the manner in which Rollins attacks five standards with a quartet that included pianist Ray Bryant, bassist Walter Booker and drummer Mickey Roker. Rollins, who's been recording for RCA and its Bluebird subsidiary, had spent the previous three years (after emerging from his first retirement) concentrating on standards and focusing deeply on intimate, intricate aspects of melody and harmony. He inverts the approach here, and digs deeply into pulse and rhythm and leaving melody to take care of itself...


One of the outstanding tenor saxophonists in jazz history, and a major figure in bop known for his heavy doses of swing.
Dexter Gordon
Manha de Carnaval (Luiz Bonfá / Antônio Maria)
Heartaches (Al Hoffman / John Klenner)
Everybody's Somebody's Fool (Howard Greenfield / Jack Keller)
from Gettin' Around 1966
Dexter Gordon's mid-'60s period living in Europe also meant coming back to the U.S. for the occasional recording session. His teaming with Bobby Hutcherson was intriguing in that the vibraphonist was marking his territory as a maverick and challenging improviser. Here the two principals prove compatible in that they have a shared sense of how to create sheer beauty in a post-bop world. Add the brilliant Barry Harris to this mix, and that world is fortunate enough to hear these grand masters at their creative peak, stoked by equally extraordinary sidemen like bassist Bob Cranshaw and drummer Billy Higgins, all on loan from Lee Morgan's hitmaking combo. The subtle manner in which Gordon plays melodies or caresses the most recognizable standard has always superseded his ability to ramble through rough-and-tumble bebop...

2020. július 5., vasárnap

05-07-2020 > PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959 (1h 53m)

Otis Rush
05-07-2020 PREHiSTORiC:MiX ~ 33 pieces excavation finds from ancient sounds / before 1959   >>Otis Rush, Herbie Mann, Tadd Dameron & John Coltrane, Elvis Presley, Amos Milburn, Benny Carter, Oscar Peterson, Paula Watson, Big Jay McNeely, The Dominos, Elmore James, Tony Bennett, Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gillespie<<

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before 1959


An architect of Chicago blues' West Side sound, whose style combined broodingly intense vocals and sweet, stinging guitar solos.
Otis Rush
I Can't Quit You Baby  (Willie Dixon)
Groaning the Blues (Willie Dixon)
Love That Woman (Lafayette Leake)
Double Trouble (Otis Rush)
from The Complete Classic Cobra Recordings 1956-1958
The title says it all. This is the essential Otis Rush, the singles recorded for Eli Toscano's Cobra label between 1956 and 1958. If Rush had never recorded another note, his legendary status would remain intact based solely on these recordings. Backed by players like Willie Dixon and Little Walter, it's Rush's impassioned vocals and stinging guitar lines that make "I Can't Quit You Baby," "All Your Love (I Miss Loving)," and "Double Trouble" the classics they are. In addition to the A- and B-sides of all eight singles released by Cobra, eight alternate takes are included, four more than the Paula edition of this material released in 1991. Along with a slightly better transfer from the original tapes, this is not only one of the best places to start for someone getting interested in the blues, but a vital part of any blues collection. Outstanding.

Prolific and widely known flutist, beloved in jazz circles, has covered many world music styles.
Herbie Mann
Minor Groove
Blue Dip
Jumpin' With Symphony Sid (Lester Young)
from Just Wailin' 1958
This recording emphasizes (although does not stick exclusively to) the blues. The sextet has impressive players (flutist Herbie Mann, Charlie Rouse on tenor, guitarist Kenny Burrell, pianist Mal Waldron, bassist George Joyner and drummer Art Taylor) and the material (originals by Waldron, Burrell and Calvin Massey in addition to a brief "Jumpin' With Symphony Sid") is reasonably challenging but the musicians never really come together as a group. The straightahead jam session has its strong moments and, as long as one keeps their expectations low, the music will be enjoyable despite the lack of major sparks.

2020. június 30., kedd

30-06-2020 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1970-1959


Joe Henderson

30-06-2020 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1970-1959 Joe Henderson, Bobby Hutcherson, Big John Patton, Larry Young, Grant Green, John Coltrane, Kenny Burrell / Jimmy Smith, Dexter Gordon, Paul Chambers, The Joe Newman Quintet, The Curtis Fuller Sextette, Charlie Byrd Trio & Woodwinds

J A Z Z   M U S I C

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1970-1959


Remarkable tenor saxophonist whose passionate ballad playing and often fiery solos made him one of the most influential tenors in jazz.
Joe Henderson
Black Narcissus (Joe Henderson)
Isotope (Joe Henderson)
from Power to the People 1970
This album (which has been included in Joe Henderson's complete, eight-CD Milestone Years box set) has quite a few classic moments. At that point in time, tenor saxophonist Henderson was a sideman with Herbie Hancock's Sextet, so Hancock was happy to perform as a sideman, doubling on piano and electric piano, with the all-star group, which also includes trumpeter Mike Lawrence, bassist Ron Carter and drummer Jack DeJohnette...



Daring jazz vibraphonist who expanded the instrument's role with speedy tempos and often dazzling harmonic maneuvers using four mallets. Easily one of jazz's greatest vibraphonists, Bobby Hutcherson epitomized his instrument in relation to the era in which he came of age the way Lionel Hampton did with swing or Milt Jackson with bop. He wasn't as well-known as those two forebears, perhaps because he started out in less accessible territory when he emerged in the '60s playing cerebral, challenging modern jazz that often bordered on avant-garde.
Bobby Hutcherson
Una Muy Bonita (Ornette Coleman)
Summer Nights (Bobby Hutcherson)
from Stick-Up! 1968
Hutcherson's originals (five out of six selections) show him at the top of his game as a composer, and the ensemble's playing is tight and focused throughout, but what really lifts Stick-Up! to the top tier of Hutcherson's discography is its crackling energy. It's quite possibly the hardest-swinging album he ever cut, and part of the credit has to go to the stellar rhythm section of McCoy Tyner on piano, Herbie Lewis on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums, who lay down a driving, pulsating foundation that really pushes Hutcherson and tenorist Joe Henderson... The lone non-Hutcherson piece, Ornette Coleman's sometimes overlooked "Una Muy Bonita," is given a fantastic, rollicking treatment as catchy as it is progressive, proving that the piece is a classic regardless of whether it's interpreted freely or with a steady groove and tonal center. Hutcherson's originals are uniformly strong and memorable enough to sit very well next to it, and that -- coupled with the energetic performances -- ranks Stick-Up! with Dialogue and Components as the finest work of Hutcherson's tenure at Blue Note.

John Patton, often known as Big John Patton, was one of Blue Note's busiest soul-jazz organists during the golden age of the Hammond B-3s. Between 1963 and 1970 Patton cooked up 11 albums' worth of material as a leader and sat in with a dizzying procession of skilled improvisers, and his best work has since been compared with that of tragically short-lived innovator Larry Young.
Big John Patton
Let 'Em Roll )Big John Patton)
Latona (Big John Patton)
The Turnaround (Hank Mobley)
from Let 'Em Roll 1967
In an unusual setting for a groove/soul jazz setting, B3 organist extraordinaire big John Patton creates a band around himself that includes Grant Green, drummer Otis Finch, and vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson. It's truly weird to think of vibes on a groove date, but the way Patton's understated playing works, and the way Green is literally all things to all players, Hutcherson's role is not only a clearly defined one, but adds immeasurably to both depth and texture on this date. What also makes this possible is the symbiotic relationship between Patton and Green. There is a double groove conscious swing happening on every track here, from the bluesed-out slip and slide of the title track which opens the record to a killer version of Hank Mobley's "The Turnaround," which expands the blues vibe into solid soul territory because of Hutcherson's ability to play pianistically and slip into the funk groove whenever necessary. Green's deadly in his solo on the track, shimmering arpeggios through Patton's big fat chords and chunky hammering runs... Also notable are Patton's own tunes, the most beautiful of which is "Latona," a floating Latin number with a killer salsa rhythm in 6/8. As Patton vamps through the chorus, Green slips in one of his gnarliest solos ever. It begins with a groove like run in the hard bop blues and then shoves itself into overdrive, capturing the cold sweat of a Bola Sete or Wes Montgomery in his groove years. But when Green goes for the harmonic edges, all bets are off: Hutcherson lays out, and he and Patton go running to the bridge and bring the melody back just in time to take it out. This is one of the least appreciated of Patton's records, and there's no reason for it; it is great.

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<<

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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...

2018. december 13., csütörtök

MiXTAPE: other 100 from bestofs / #1960 PnM.MiX

Annie Ross

1 9 6 0
OTHER HUNDRED SONGS




Henry Mancini - The Beat from The Blues and the Beat
Henry Mancini - The Blues from The Blues and the Beat

Annie Ross - Invitation to the Blues from A Gasser!

Memphis Slim - Whiskey Drinking Blues from Memphis Slim and the Real Honky Tonk

Jackie Wilson - Nothing But The Blues from Jackie Sings the Blues

Black Ace - Little Augie from I'm the Boss Card in Your Hand

Horace Parlan - C Jam Blues from Movin' & Groovin'

Jim Hall and The Modest Jazz Trio - Good Friday Blues from Good Friday Blues

The John Wright Trio - South Side Soul from South Side Soul

Curtis Jones - Fool Blues from Trouble Blues

The Mose Allison Trio - Night Ride from I Love the Life I Live

B.B. King - Whole Lotta' Love from The Great B.B. King

Muddy Waters - Lonesome Road Blues from Sings Big Bill Broonzy

Sonny Red - Blues in the Pocket from Out of the Blue

John Lee Hooker - I Wanna Walk from Travelin'

B.B. King - Be Careful with a Fool from The Great B.B. King

Muddy Waters - Double Trouble from Sings Big Bill Broonzy

Wes Montgomery - D-Natural Blues from The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery

Sonny Stitt - Two Bad Days Blues from Saxophone Supremacy

Mundell Lowe and His All Stars - Naked City from TV Action Jazz!

Jimmy Rushing - Pink Champagne from Rushing Lullabies

Memphis Slim - Good Bye Blues from Travelling With The Blues
Lightnin' Slim - I'm a Rollin Stone from from Rooster Blues
Muddy Waters - Just a Dream on my Mind from Sings Big Bill Bronzy
Lonnie Johnson - Blues Round My Door from Blues by Lonnie Johnson
Memphis Slim - Boogie Woogie from Travelling With The Blues
Muddy Waters - Southbound Train from Sings Big Bill Bronzy
Lonnie Johnson - Big Leg Woman from Blues by Lonnie Johnson
Josh White - One for My Baby from Josh White Sings Ballads And Blues
Lightnin' Hopkins - Get Off My Toe from Autobiography in Blues
John Lee Hooker - Solid Sender from Travelin'
Etta James with Harvey Fuqua - Spoonful from At Last!
Lightnin' Slim - Rooster Blues from Rooster Blues
Roosevelt Sykes - Night Time is the Riht Time from The Return of Roosevelt Sykes
Billy Boyd - Bolero Boogie from Twangy Guitars
The Coasters - Don't Get Around Much Anymore from One by One
Johnny and the Hurricanes - Beating Fly from The Big Sound of Johnny and the Hurricanes
The Fireballs - Vaquéro from Vaquéro
Ricky Nelson - Here I Go Again from More Songs by Ricky
The Crickets - Great Balls of Fire from In Style With The Crickets
Chuck Berry - Worried Life Blues from Rockin' at the Hops
James Brown - Think! from Think!
Link Wray & The Wraymen - Studio Blues from Link Wray & The Wraymen
Jackie Davis - Ain't She Sweet from Hammond Gone Cha-Cha
Bill Haley and His Comets - The Catwalk from Strictly Instrumental
Skeeter Davis - Devil's Doll from I'll Sing You a Song and Harmonize Too
Hank Ballard & the Midnighters -  Sugaree from The One and Only
Brenda Lee - Jambalaya from Miss Dynamite
Bo Diddley - Gun Slinger from Bo Diddley Is A Gunslinger
Elvis Presley - Fever from Elvis is Back!
Ventures - Sleep Walk from Morgen
Johnny And The Hurricanes - Rockin' T from Stormsville
Link Wray & The Wraymen - Rumble from Link Wray & The Wraymen
Bo Diddley - No More Lovin' from Bo Diddley Is A Gunslinger
The Swan Silvertones - I'll Be Satisfied from Singin' in My Soul
Johnny And The Hurricanes - James Bond Theme from Stormsville
Peter Appleyard - Peter Gunn from Per-cus-sive Jazz
Preston Epps - Bongo In The Congo from Bongo Bongo Bongo
Terry Snyder and the All Stars - Rocka Bongo Boogie from Persuasive Percussion: Volume 2
Les Baxter -  Acapulco from The Sacred Idol
The Surfmen - Taboo from The Sounds of Exotic Island
Joe Meek - Love Dance of the Saroos from I Hear a New World
Bobby Scott - A Taste of Honey from A Taste of Honey OST
George Russell - Waltz from Outer Space from Jazz in the Space Age
Felix Slatkin - Blues in the Night from Fantastic Percussion
Barney Kessel - Little Susie from The Poll Winners Exploring the Scene!
Wes Montgomery - Four on Six from The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery
Lorez Alexandria & Ramsey Lewis - I'm Just Lucky So and So from Early in the Morning
The Joe Newman Quintet - Don't Worry 'Bout Me from Jive at Five
Shirley Scott, The Latin Jazz Quintet - The Lady is a Tramp from Mucho, mucho
Benny Carter - All Or Nothing At All from Sax ala Carter
Rita Reys, The Pim Jacobs Trio - How Deep Is the Ocean from Marriage in Modern Jazz
Johnny "Hammond" Smith & Lem Winchester - Gettin' The Message from Talk That Talk
Sam Lazar - Dig a Little Deeper from Space Flight
Paul Horn - Something Blue from Something Blue
Bill Jennings, Jack McDuff - Azure-Te from Glide On
Lou Donaldson - Crosstown Shuffle from The Time Is Right
Kay Starr - My Man from Kay Starr: Jazz Singer
Sarah Vaughan - Can't Get Out This Mood from Sarah Vaughan Quintessence 1950-1960: New York Paris Chicago
Bill Jennings - Fiddlin' from Glide On
Irving Joseph - Prison Break from Murder, Inc.
Chet Atkins - Lullaby of Birdland from Workshop
Charlie Byrd - The House of The Risin Sun from The Guitar Artistry of Charlie Byrd
Donald Byrd - Bo from Byrd in Flight
Anita O'Day - I've Got You Under My Skin from Cool Heat: Anita O'Day Sings Jimmy Giuffre Arrangements
Blue Mitchell - I Wish I Knew from Blue's Moods
Bud Shank - Surf Pipes from Slippery When Wet
Cal Tjader - September Song from Demasiado caliente
Doug Watkins, Yusef Lateef - Imagination from Soulnik
John Coltrane  - Giant Steps from Giant Steps
The Cannonball Adderley Quintet -  Them Dirty Blues from Them Dirty Blues
Nat Adderley - Work Song from Work Song
The Modern Jazz Quartet - Pyramid from European Concert
Yusef Lateef - From Within from The Three Faces of Yusef Lateef
Stanley Turrentine - Little Sheri from Look Out!
Duke Ellington - Arabesque Cookie from Three Suites
The Modern Jazz Quartet - How High the Moon from Pyramid
Louis Prima & Keely Smith - Cheek to Cheek from Louis and Keely!
Etta Jones - Bye Bye Blackbird from Don't Go to Strangers



2018. október 12., péntek

12-10-2018 # JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1960-1971

Yusef Lateef
12-10-2018 # JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1960-1971 # Yusef Lateef, John Coltrane, The Horace Silver Quintet, Andrew Hill, Charles Lloyd, Zbigniew Namyslowski Quartet, Jackie McLean, Dennis Coffey, Tal Farlow, Miles Davis, Keith Jarrett, Jean-Luc Ponty Experience

J A Z Z   M U S I C



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JAZZ_line  The player always plays the latest playlist tracks. / A lejátszó mindig a legújabb playlist számait játssza.
1960-1971



Hard-blowing tenor who greatly expanded his stylistic menu by exploring Asian and Middle Eastern rhythms, instruments, and concepts.  Yusef Lateef long had an inquisitive spirit and he was never just a bop or hard bop soloist. Lateef, who did not care much for the term "jazz," consistently created music that stretched (and even broke through) boundaries. A superior tenor saxophonist with a soulful sound and impressive technique, by the 1950s Lateef was one of the top flutists around. He also developed into the best jazz soloist to date on oboe, was an occasional bassoonist, and introduced such instruments as the argol (a double clarinet that resembles a bassoon), shanai (a type of oboe), and different types of flutes. Lateef played "world music" before it had a name and his output was much more creative than much of the pop and folk music that passed under that label in the '90s.
Yusef Lateef
Salt Water Blues (Yusef Lateef) 6:47
Goin' Home (Antonin Dvorák / Mark Fisher) 5:02
Lateef Minor 7th (Joe Zawinul) 4:59
from The Three Faces of Yusef Lateef 1960
On The Three Faces of Yusef Lateef, Riverside seems eager to present Yusef Lateef, technical virtuoso, on a series of songs that step closer to jazz tradition than any of his work in the recent past. Largely absent are Lateef's experiments with Eastern modes, rhythms, and instrumentation, and in their place is a collection of largely upbeat, accessible songs, with a balanced mix of standards and originals. Much of the introspective, personal quality of his previous albums seems lost in the effort, but Lateef's playing still remains stellar, especially on oboe. That instrument, which is by nature soft and muted, is given enough power by Lateef to lead on several songs, most beautifully on "Salt Water Blues," where its naturally melancholy sound seems perfectly matched with the low, rounded tones of Lateef's rhythm section, especially Ron Carter's bowed cello. The quintet also shines on the following track, Joe Zawinul's "Lateef Minor 7th," where they provide a gentle counterpoint to Lateef's sweet flute line. Not quite as expansive or daring as much of Lateef's other recordings, The Three Faces of Yusef Lateef still documents a fine musician at work during the peak of his career.


The most influential jazz musician of the late 20th century, one of the greatest saxophonists of all time, and the pioneer of jazz without limits. Despite a relatively brief career (he first came to notice as a sideman at age 29 in 1955, formally launched a solo career at 33 in 1960, and was dead at 40 in 1967), saxophonist John Coltrane was among the most important, and most controversial, figures in jazz.
John Coltrane
Blues to Elvin (Elvin Jones) 7:50
Blues to You (John Coltrane) 6:27
Mr. Syms (John Coltrane) 5:19
from Coltrane Plays the Blues 1962
Coltrane's sessions for Atlantic in late October 1960 were prolific, yielding the material for My Favorite Things, Coltrane Plays the Blues, and Coltrane's Sound. My Favorite Things was destined to be the most remembered and influential of these, and while Coltrane Plays the Blues is not as renowned or daring in material, it is still a powerful session. As for the phrase "plays the blues" in the title, that's not an indicator that the tunes are conventional blues (they aren't)...
John Coltrane - saxophone   McCoy Tyner - piano   Steve Davis - bass   Elvin Jones - drums


The leading composer and pioneer of hard bop, plus a pianist who blended vintage R&B, gospel, blues, and Caribbean elements into jazz.  From the perspective of the 21st century, it is clear that few jazz musicians had a greater impact on the contemporary mainstream than Horace Silver. The hard bop style that Silver pioneered in the '50s is now dominant, played not only by holdovers from an earlier generation, but also by fuzzy-cheeked musicians who had yet to be born when the music fell out of critical favor in the '60s and '70s.
The Horace Silver Quintet
Silver's Serenade (Horace Silver) 9:22
Sweet Sweetie Dee (Horace Silver) 7:35
Nineteen Bars (Horace Silver) 6:21
from Silver's Serenade 1963
Horace Silver's LP Silver's Serenade is a swan song; it was the final recording with his most famous quintet, which included drummer Roy Brooks, bassist Gene Taylor, saxophonist Junior Cook, and trumpeter Blue Mitchell. The band had made five previous recordings for the label, all of them successful. The program here is comprised of Silver compositions. The blowing is a meld of relaxed, soulful, and swinging hard bop, as evidenced in the title track... "Sweetie Sweetie Dee" moves from hard bop to funky bop... The knotty turn-on-a-dime changes in "Nineteen Bars," the final track, are pure instrumental and compositional virtuosity. Cook's blowing on his solo is matched by Silver's comping, moving through octaves and key changes. The tune smokes from start to finish as the album comes to a close. This is another excellent recording by the greatest Silver quintet...

2018. szeptember 25., kedd

25-09-2018 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1959-1965


25-09-2018 JAZZ:MiX # 33 jazz tracks on the the JAZZ_line 1959-1965 # Bill Jennings, Herbie Mann, Milt Buckner, Joe Castro, Sonny Stitt,Larry Young, Yusef Lateef, John Coltrane, The Horace Silver Quintet, Andrew Hill, Charles Lloyd

J A Z Z   M U S I C



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1959-1965


Jenning's sound has been compared to Tiny Grimes with a hint of early Charlie Christian. A peer of Billy Butler, Jennings played with Louis Jordan in the late '40s and early '50s. He also recorded R&B sides with Leo Parker and Bill Doggett.
Bill Jennings
Dark Eyes 4:44
Dig Uncle Will (Jack McDuff) 3:32
Enough Said (Alvin Johnson) 6:45
from Enough Said 1959
Jennings leads a relaxed quartet which includes Jack McDuff (organ), Wendell Marshall (bass), and Alvin Johnson (drums) on this 1959 session. Jennings shows off the bluesy tone that made him a favorite of B.B. King on his composition "Tough Gain" and the group-penned "Blue Jam," but aside from these, most of the tracks are slow-to-midtempo shuffles -- edifying yet not exciting...

Prolific and widely known flutist, beloved in jazz circles, has covered many world music styles. Herbie Mann played a wide variety of music throughout his career. He became quite popular in the 1960s, but in the '70s became so immersed in pop and various types of world music that he seemed lost to jazz. However, Mann never lost his ability to improvise creatively as his later recordings attest.
Herbie Mann
Johnny Rae's Afro-Jazz Septet
St. Thomas (Sonny Rollins) 8:04
Jungle Fantasy (Esy Morales) 7:56
Sudan 3:50
from Herbie Mann's African Suite 1959
Herbie Mann's African Suite (also released as St. Thomas) is an album by American jazz flautist Herbie Mann recorded in 1959 and first released on the United Artists label. The album was originally released under Johnny Rae's leadership due to Mann's contractual relationship with Verve Records.
Herbie Mann - flute, bass clarinet
Johnny Rae - vibraphone
Bob Corwin - piano
Jack Six - bass
Philly Joe Jones - drums
Carlos "Patato" Valdes, Victor Pantoja - congas
José Mangual - bongos