This intriguing session matches three powerful tenor players: Oliver Nelson, King Curtis (in a rare jazz outing), and Jimmy Forrest. With fine backup work by pianist Gene Casey, bassist George Duvivier, and drummer Roy Haynes, the tenors battle to a draw on a set of blues and basic material (including a fine version of "Perdido"). Easily recommended to fans of big-toned tenors and straight-ahead swinging. Scott Yanow Tracklist & Credits :
Mostrando postagens com marcador King Curtis. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador King Curtis. Mostrar todas as postagens
28.12.23
OLIVER NELSON | KING CURTIS | JIMMY FORREST — Soul Battle (1962) RM | Serie Original Jazz Classics, 20 Bit Remastered | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
15.5.20
KING CURTIS - Soul Meeting (1960-1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
King Curtis, an influential and greatly in-demand R&B tenorman, made relatively few jazz dates in his career. This CD has two of the best, complete albums originally called The New Scene of King Curtis and Soul Meeting; the former is also available as a separate CD but should be skipped in favor of this one. Curtis teams up with the passionate cornetist Nat Adderley, pianist Wynton Kelly, either Paul Chambers or Sam Jones on bass and Oliver Jackson or Belton Evans on drums. The music is blues-based bop, with seven basic Curtis originals and four standards. Highly recommended, this set serves as proof that King Curtis could have been a viable jazz player. by Scott Yanow
9.12.19
KING CURTIS - The New Scene of King Curtis (1960-1992) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Adoring King Soul may be a de facto renunciation of the main part of the rhythm & blues tenor saxophonist's career -- his instrumental hits, indeed his very crucial role in the tenor saxophone remaining a viable voice on the hit parade. The album was recorded only a couple of years prior to a 1962 Curtis smash gyrating off the twist dance craze. A rock & roll backbeat helped establish the commercial potential of the latter item, yet for the 1960 recording, Curtis is accompanied by two-thirds of a famous Miles Davis rhythm section as well as a drummer who eventually became prominent on the Parisian swing scene. A reworking of the standard "Willow Weep for Me" is a highlight; this is hardly a "Soul Twist."
Even the names of the labels involved with these contrasting recordings bear out stylistic stereotypes. The funky party record for dancers came out on Enjoy. Previously it had been Prestige crowning King Soul as well as convening a subsequent Soul Meeting, the label's status amongst jazz listeners of all persuasions indicated in its very name. Much of King Curtis' later audience would not presumably prefer to hear the man backed by Wynton Kelly on piano and Paul Chambers on bass. Some listeners are prejudiced against the jazz genre itself, feeling it is too much about prestige with entirely too little enjoyment.
Davis' group with Chambers, Kelly, drummer Philly Joe Jones, and tenor saxophonist John Coltrane had been extremely popular in the early '50s. The music this group made is a good suggestion for anyone in doubt about jazz or in a fog about Davis' abilities beyond the merely provocative or intimidating. Chambers and Kelly can not be too strongly emphasized as components of this brilliant group, carrying over their assets to the Curtis session as if shifting boxes from one side of a garage to another.
"Little Brother Soul" and "In a Funky Groove" are self-descriptive ditties by the leader in which the pianist combines aspects of the filthy and pristine, the results bordering on the surrealistic. A typical chord voicing sets a buffed pearl on a bed of creamed goat cheese. For another, Kelly dips a silk handkerchief into a vat of melon juice, then pulls out the Texas state flag. This could be too rich a diet for the dancers, still it is hard to imagine the piano track on Parliament's "Chocolate City" existing without Wynton Kelly. The woody sound of Chambers' bass is again not something Curtis would stick with, his discography unfolding with the distinct presence of cables connecting electric basses to amps, some of them curly. His lines on "Da-Duh-Dah" and "Have You Heard?" represent study sessions for budding bassists, at least it can be hoped that the one who nicked the copy from a local college radio station is putting it to such good use. Brass soloist and section mate Nat Adderley is the quibble in the dibble, so to speak. He can cause dismay for playing as if backed into a corner, for abruptly quitting right in the middle of something interesting, for utilizing a tone that suggests the summoning of the hanging judge. Here he is at his best, however, Curtis turning out to be an even better foil than brother Cannonball Adderley would be over the course of a much longer-running relationship, perhaps even because of the spontaneity of the enterprise itself. The trumpeter emulates the likes of Art Farmer, lightly icing the edges as if serenading a pastry chef. by Eugene Chadbourne
Tracklist:
1 Da-Duh-Dah 5:11
King Curtis
2 Have You Heard? 10:23
King Curtis
3 Willow Weep for Me 5:24
Ann Ronell
4 Little Brother Soul 8:35
King Curtis
5 In a Funky Groove 10:49
King Curtis
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TAMPA RED — Complete Recorded Works In Chronological Order ★ Volume 9 • 1938-1939 | DOCD-5209 (1993) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
One of the greatest slide guitarists of the early blues era, and a man with an odd fascination with the kazoo, Tampa Red also fancied himsel...