Along with its fellow CD, Groove Blues, this reissue fully documents all of the music recorded by tenor saxophonist Gene Ammons on the busy day of January 3, 1958. Although there were many guest soloists, only one of the four songs on this half of the set (Mal Waldron's "The Real McCoy") has appearances by John Coltrane (on alto) and the tenor of Paul Quinichette. However, baritonist Pepper Adams is aboard for two of the performances, and flutist Jerome Richardson (along with pianist Mal Waldron, bassist George Joyner, and drummer Art Taylor) are on all four. Ammons is easily the main star (he really excelled in this setting) and is in generally fine form on the two standards ("That's All" and "Cheek to Cheek"), his own "Blue Hymn," and the Waldron original. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1 Blue Hymn 12:37
Written-By – Gene Ammons
2 The Real McCoy 8:33
Written-By – Mal Waldron
3 Cheek To Cheek 14:12
Written-By – Irving Berlin
4 That's All 13:58
Written-By – Bob Haymes
Credits :
Alto Saxophone – John Coltrane (tracks: 3)
Baritone Saxophone – Pepper Adams (tracks: 3, 4)
Bass – George Joyner
Drums – Art Taylor
Flute – Jerome Richardson
Piano – Mal Waldron
Tenor Saxophone – Gene Ammons, Paul Quinichette (tracks: 3)
26.6.24
GENE AMMONS' ALL STARS — The Big Sound (1958-1991) RM | APE (image+.cue), lossless
8.4.24
JOHN COLTRANE — The Prestige Recordings (1991) 16-CD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The 16 CDs in this compendium represent nearly everything that John Coltrane recorded for the Prestige label during a 32-month period between May 7, 1956, and December 26, 1958. What's missing are Coltrane's contributions to the mid-'50s Miles Davis band, which are on the equally exhaustive and highly recommended Davis Chronicle box set released in 1990. Otherwise, listeners are treated to the sessions that produced the seminal long-players Coltrane, Cattin' with Coltrane and Quinichette, Traneing In, Soultrane, Lush Life, Settin' the Pace, Standard Coltrane, Stardust, The Believer, Black Pearls, Bahia, and The Last Trane -- all of which highlight the artist as either a leader or co-leader. Not included in that list are an additional 19 albums that boast Coltrane's involvement as a support musician. The music is presented primarily in a chronological fashion -- commencing with a pair of May 1956 outings with pianist Elmo Hope and tenor saxophonist
Sonny Rollins. Wrapping things up are five tunes cut the day after Christmas of 1958 alongside trumpeter Freddie Hubbard. Coltrane's legend is ingrained in the grooves of such indispensable entries as "How Deep Is the Ocean?" flanked by tenor saxophonists Zoot Sims, Hank Mobley, and Al Cohn -- as originally heard on Tenor Conclave. There is also the Tadd Dameron-commanded "Soultrane" and the definitive "The Way You Look Tonight," during one of the many Mal Waldron confabs, plus "Undecided," sporting Red Garland at the helm. And who could forget the Great American Songbook selections "Lush Life," "Come Rain or Come Shine," "Lover," "Russian Lullaby," "Why Was I Born?," "Lover Come Back to Me," "Stardust," and "Time After Time"? Accompanying the music is a 32-page liner notes booklet. Inside are a historical essay from Doug Ramsey, a session-by-session breakdown by Carl Woideck (and the occasional notation from producer Orrin Keepnews), and several different cross-references of the contents. Overall, the audio quality is excellent throughout, especially considering that the original tapes were transferred during the infancy of digital audio technology. Since 1991, the majority of the music has been remastered and issued on the individual album titles with even more astonishing results. Lindsay PlanerAll Tracks & Credits :
22.11.23
CLIFFORD BROWN – Joy Spring (2005) 4xCD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Joy Spring is a four-CD, budget-priced box set from the folks at Proper in the United Kingdom. This is a pretty handsome overview that touches on all aspects of Clifford Brown's mighty but tragically brief career. Disc one, "Dial B Fr Beauty" contains sides he cut in 1952 as a member of Chris Powell and the Blue Flames; documents from his stint with Tadd Dameron; tracks from a short-lived quintet with Lou Donaldson, Elmo Hope, Percy Heath, and Philly Joe Jones in 1953, and sides recorded when he was part of J.J. Johnson's Septet -- all these sides virtually chronicle Brown's ascent into the jazz world and serve, so to speak, as a showcase for the first three sides he cut on his own, in a band that included Charlie Rouse, Art Blakey, John Lewis, Gigi Gryce, and Heath, with material arranged by Quincy Jones. Standout cuts are "Wail Bait," and "Hymn of the Orient," as well as Dameron's "Choose Now." Disc two, entitled "Conception," begins with Brown's own sextet and his versions of "Cherokee," and "Brownie Eyes." Later in '53, Brown played with Art Farmer in Sweden, and with a European orchestra that included a number of stalwarts like Walter Williams, Gryce, and Pierre Michelot, with Jones writing the charts. But the coolest stuff here are the sides cut with the Brown/Gryce sextet and octet, these also commence disc three, entitled "Clifford's Axe," which straddles September of 1953 to October of that same year. Disc three is rounded out with the first-ever-performances-on-record of the Clifford Brown-Max Roach quintet as they cut "All God's Chillun Got Rhythm" and "Sunset." The final CD in this package is devoted almost exclusively to this last group of musicians -- the Clifford Brown-Max Roach quintet -- documenting the various phases they went through in 1954. From "Dahoud" and "Delilah" to "Jor Du" and their stellar read of "Parisian Thoroughfare." The box set closes with a cut from Sarah Vaughan backed by Brown, Roy Haynes, Paul Quinichette, Herbie Mann, Jimmy Jones, Ernie Wilkins, and Joe Benjamin, on a lovely version of "You're Not the Kind" with a sweet and moving Brown solo. This is a fine introduction to Brown, nicely priced, with decent sound, and it makes a great companion to the excellent Emarcy LPs of the Brown-Roach bands.
-> This comment is posted on Allmusic by Thom Jurek, follower of our blog 'O Púbis da Rosa'<-
Tracklist :
CD1 Dial B For Beauty
CD2 Conception
CD3 Clifford's Axe
CD4 I Get A Kick Out Of You
All Tracks + Credits :
28.10.23
COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1952 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1281 (2003) FLAC (tracks), lossless
This solid entry in the Classics Chronological Series contains all of the titles recorded by Count Basie and his orchestra between January 17 and July 25, 1952, a period during which this band was signed to Norman Granz's Clef record label. Basie, who had been forced to scale his group down to septet and octet dimensions for more than a year beginning in 1950, had begun recording with a powerful new 16-piece unit in April of 1951. Nine months on, this ensemble was well on the way to virtually redefining the art of big-band jazz. Input from arranger/composers Sy Oliver, Buster Harding, and Neal Hefti add a luster to the proceedings that cannot be diminished by the passage of time. Key participants include trumpeters Joe Newman and Charlie Shavers, trombonist Jimmy Wilkins, and reedmen Marshall Royal, Ernie Wilkins, Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, and Paul Quinichette, whose Lester Young impersonations were positively uncanny. Small wonder that Pres suffered from an identity crisis on hearing his style replicated so deliberately right there in the reed section of an orchestra led by the same man in whose band he, Lester Young, had developed that style 15 years earlier. Quinichette sounds wonderful. He sounds like Lester Young. arwulf arwulf Tracklist :
3.9.23
HOT LIPS PAGE – 1950-1953 | The Chronogical Classics – 1342 (2004) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Hopping from label to label and from style to style, in July of 1950 Hot Lips Page found himself on a Columbia R&B date with Little Sylvia Vanderpool, who sounds just a bit like a young Dinah Washington. A smooth doo wop group called the Magichords harmonize neatly on cue, Seldon Powell and Haywood Henry blow beefy sax solos, and Page barks back at Vanderpool in a voice as corroded as hers is young and perky. Powell liked to squeal his tenor like Illinois Jacquet. Henry illustrates why the baritone sax became increasingly popular as a tool to be used for rocking and rolling. A burlesque duet with Mildred Anderson pales when compared with its flip side, the amazing "Let Me In," one of Page's best routines from this period. There's a party going on but they won't let him in, even as he pleads with someone named Zebedee to open up the door. Page's voice is crispy in its upper register and elephantine in the bass clef. That's Paul Quinichette back there with the tenor sax. None of this stuff is profound. It's straight up rowdy entertainment, and in 1951 that meant rocking and rolling, preferably with a singalong arrangement as in "I Want to Ride Like the Cowboys Do." Lips had a voice that could plunge as deep as Louis Armstrong's, but his middle range was more intact. When he dips to the bottom of his voice, as he does on "Strike While the Iron's Hot," the effect is bracing. Whereas after a certain point Armstrong pretty well stayed in the same octave for the rest of his life, Page's larynx was able to produce quite a range of sandblasted tonalities. This issue became more complex when he teamed up with a tin whistler! It's the most bizarre chapter in Page's entire career: not only is the tin whistle heavily featured, but the lyrics are about tin whistles exclusively.
There's no telling what Page will do to listeners next. Reverb makes his voice almost alarming on "The Devil's Kiss," while the horns scream like a noir B-movie soundtrack. Following in the tin whistle's footsteps, a weird "chirping" sound effect competes with Page's hoarse voice as he sings the tale of a cricket. Visiting Paris in the autumn of 1952, he howled and wailed in front of a band that rocked like a steam shovel. Every conceivable topic is up for grabs. There are novelties dealing with marital infidelity, fancy cars, and French vocabulary. A calypso singalong transforms the word "bongo" into a verb. "Jungle King" cuts Cab Calloway's version, hands down. "Ain't Nothin' Wrong With That, Baby" was almost certainly the inspiration for Al Hibbler's hit record of 1958. After this variety show spanning three labels, three years, and two continents, it's a treat to end up at a live gig in Fort Monmouth, NJ, with Marian McPartland holding down the piano. The audience eats up every note, thrilling to Page's neighing horn during "St. James Infirmary" and cracking up during "On the Sunny Side of the Street" when he makes a reference to "drinking beer for lemonade." After all of that R&B mingled with wildly novel notions, 18 minutes of solid traditional jazz really hits the spot. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist + Credits :
3.6.23
JAY McSHANN AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1941-1943 | The Classics Chronological Series – 740 (1994) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Twenty-one sides cut by Jay McShann and His Orchestra and the Jay McShann Quartet for Decca Records between 1941 and 1943, with Charlie Parker on about half of what's here, and stretching out on a handful of cuts. The highlight is the group's recording of "Confessin' the Blues," which was a huge hit and resulted in their recording of more than half a dozen similar vocal blues numbers, featuring Walter Brown (who wrote "Confessin'") on vocals. The material here is pretty much weighted to jump blues and boogie-woogie-style numbers, all of it hot and extraordinarily well-played. The pity is, between Decca's insistence on more songs like "Confessin' the Blues" (which was later covered by Chuck Berry and the Rolling Stones, among others) and the 1942 recordings band, not much of McShann's repertory or Parker's more outstanding material from the period was laid down. What is here, however, is extraordinary, some of the tightest, bluesiest jazz you'll ever here, all in excellent sound as well, and Parker does soar on a large handful of these tracks. Bruce Eder
Tracklist + Credits :
30.5.23
LUCKY MILLINDER AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1947-1950 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1173 (2001) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This third volume of Lucky Millinder's complete works in chronological order brings together for the first time three Deccas from October 1947, 12 sides recorded for Victor between January and November 1949, and 12 titles waxed for the King label during the year 1950. Millinder is remembered as a shrewd bandleader who accurately assessed the prevailing trends in popular entertainment during the late '40s. His strategy seems to have involved a wide range of musical styles, a spectrum reflected in this grab bag compilation. Millinder clearly tailored the material to fit each record label and its assumed audience. Of course, Victor was selling to a more generalized public while King's clientele was predominately Afro-American. Listening through all 25 tracks is quite an experience. There is coy, bluesy jazz and there is jazzy blues sung by saucy, soulful Annisteen Allen. There's a surprise appearance by rowdy Myra Johnson, famous for her work with Fats Waller during the early '40s. There are crooners who exude oily sentimental ballads. There are several jump tunes on which Millinder himself sings boisterously along with the band. And there are just three instrumentals, groovy as can be but only three. "Bersark [sic] Boogie" is a progressively structured, pleasantly manic woogie set in a minor mode. The rocking, rolling "D Natural Blues" is really "Do the Hucklebuck," itself a pilfering of Charlie Parker's "Now's the Time." By January of 1949 half of the white bands in the country were making money off of this tune, so Mr. Lucky decided to get himself a piece of the action. (Naturally, nobody was paying Bird any royalties.) "Awful Natural" is a very cool piece of blues featuring the elegant clarinet of Tony Scott. Lucky Millinder's orchestra, in fact, was peppered with outstanding players like trumpeter Lamar Wright, trombonist Tyree Glenn, guitarist Danny Barker, drummer Art Blakey, and a formidable team of saxophonists including Rudy Powell (Musheed Karween), Bull Moose Jackson, Ike Quebec, Frank Wess, Paul Quinichette, Seldon Powell, John Hardee, and Numa "Pee Wee" Moore. While more uniformly satisfying Millinder retrospectives surely exist, the Classics Chronological Series provides an overview that is necessary for an accurate appraisal of this amazing all-purpose jazz/pop/R&B orchestra and the individuals who kept it going during a transitional time when many other big bands fell apart at the seams. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist + Credits :
16.10.22
ZOOT SIMS | BOB BROOKMEYER - Stretching Out + Kansas City Revisited (1958-2007) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
"Stretching Out". Like many studio sessions recorded for United Artists, this 1958 session co-led by Zoot Sims and Bob Brookmeyer can be a bit tricky to find. Brookmeyer contributed most of the charts, including the easygoing blues which serves as the title track, as well as updated treatments of Jelly Roll Morton's "King Porter Stomp" and "Ain't Misbehavin'." Al Cohn is responsible for a swinging chart of "Pennies from Heaven" during which he switches to baritone sax, while Bill Potts wrote and arranged "Bee Kay." The rest of the superb band includes Harry "Sweets" Edison, Hank Jones, bassist Eddie Jones, guitarist Freddie Green, and drummer Charlie Persip. Aside from a few innocuous reed squeaks, the music is essentially flawless and has stood the test of time very well.
"Kansas City Revisited". Cool jazz meets swing on this valuable LP. Valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer, tenors Al Cohn and Paul Quinichette, pianist Nat Pierce, guitarist Jim Hall, bassist Addison Farmer and drummer Osie Johnson perform four songs associated with the late-'30s Count Basie Orchestra plus a couple of numbers ("A Blues" and "Travlin' Light") that are sung by the underrated vocalist Big Miller who was making his recording debut at the time. web
Stretching Out
1 Zoot Sims - Bob Brookmeyer Octet– Stretching Out 6:08
Written-By – Bob Brookmeyer
2 Zoot Sims - Bob Brookmeyer Octet– Now Will You Be Good 5:27
Written-By – Terke, Jentes, Pease
3 Zoot Sims - Bob Brookmeyer Octet– Pennies From Heaven 6:15
Written-By – Johnston, Burke
4 Zoot Sims - Bob Brookmeyer Octet– King Porter Stomp 4:38
Written-By – Morton, Robbins, Burke
5 Zoot Sims - Bob Brookmeyer Octet– Ain't Misbehavin' 6:54
Written-By – Razaf, Brooks, Waller
6 Zoot Sims - Bob Brookmeyer Octet– Bee Kay 6:42
Written-By – Bill Potts
Kansas City Revisited
7 Bob Brookmeyer's KC Seven– Jumpin' At The Woodside 8:00
8 Bob Brookmeyer's KC Seven– A Blues (What's On Your Mind) 5:05
9 Bob Brookmeyer's KC Seven– Blue And Sentimental 6:53
10 Bob Brookmeyer's KC Seven– Doggin' Around 8:40
11 Bob Brookmeyer's KC Seven– Moten Swing 10:12
12 Bob Brookmeyer's KC Seven– Trav'lin' Light 3:35
Credits :
1-6
Arranged By – Bill Potts
Arranged By, Baritone Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Al Cohn
Arranged By, Valve Trombone, Liner Notes – Bob Brookmeyer
Bass – Eddie Jones
Drums – Charlie Persip
Guitar – Freddie Green
Piano – Hank Jones
Tenor Saxophone – Zoot Sims
Trumpet – Harry Edison
7-12
Bass – Addison Farmer
Drums – Osie Johnson
Guitar – Jim Hall
Piano – Nat Pierce
Tenor Saxophone – Al Cohn, Paul Quinichette
Valve Trombone – Bob Brookmeyer
19.7.20
JOHN COLTRANE / FRANK WESS - Wheelin' & Dealin' (1957-1991) RM / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
This two-fer from the excellent Prestige series of two-LP sets features Coltrane at a pair of jam-session-type settings in 1957. He is heard along with fellow tenor Paul Quinichette and Frank Wess on flute and tenor on two long versions apiece of "Wheelin'" and "Dealin" in addition to a fine rendition of "Things Ain't What They Used to Be" and a 15-minute version of "Robbins' Nest." In addition, there are two numbers from a sextet session with trumpeter Bill Hardman and altoist Jackie McLean. Overall the music is not all that essential (since there are so many other Coltrane recordings available) but is quite enjoyable on its own terms and worth picking up. by Scott Yanow
Tracklist:
1 Things Ain't What They Used to Be 8:25
Mercer Ellington / Ted Persons
2 Wheelin' (Take 2) 11:22
Mal Waldron
3 Wheelin' (Take 1) 10:25
Mal Waldron
4 Robbin's Nest 15:32
Illinois Jacquet / Bob Russell / Sir Charles Thompson
5 Dealin' (Take 2) 10:15
Mal Waldron
6 Dealin' (Take 1) 10:00
Mal Waldron
Credits:
Bass – Doug Watkins
Drums – Art Taylor
Engineer – Rudy Van Gelder
Flute – Frank Wess
Piano – Mal Waldron
Tenor Saxophone – Frank Wess, John Coltrane, Paul Quinichette
18.7.20
JOHN COLTRANE AND PAUL QUINICHETTE - Cattin' with Coltrane and Quinichette (1957-1995) RM / MONO / FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
This mid-'90s DCC Jazz edition of the John Coltrane (tenor sax)/Paul Quinichette (tenor sax) title Cattin' with Coltrane and Quinichette (1958) contains the same excellent remastering and bonus tracks as its standard silver pressing -- without the superfluous expense of a 24-karat gold disc. Audiophile pressing or naught, what remains as the centerpiece are the selections that the co-leads cut during a mid-May 1957 session with Mal Waldron (piano), plus a rhythm section consisting of Julian Euell (bass) and Ed Thigpen (drums). Waldron -- who penned all the album's originals -- proves why he is one of the best composer/arrangers for Coltrane. His stylish tickling of the 88s sets the pace with a stealthy and sinister platform for Coltrane's bluesy blowing, followed by Quinichette's exceedingly soulful solo. "Sunday" exemplifies why Quinichette was considered as a sonic successor to Lester Young. Both of the primary constituents put forth much of their respective selves, with Quinichette's reserved and thoughtful input balancing Coltrane's inspired torrent of notes. Somewhat darker in tone, "Anatomy" is a springboard for indulging the development of singular and personable statements from Coltrane and company. Another key component to Cattin' is the unification of Quinichette and Coltrane on "Vodka." The pair is joined by Waldron for a few energetic and lyrical submissions before converging for a sublime conclusion that will make enthusiasts pine for more. In terms of the extras, "Green Is Blue," "You Belong to Me," and "Birdland Jump" are all credited to the Paul Quinichette Quintet and do not feature Coltrane. by Lindsay Planer
Tracklist:
1 Cattin' 7:20
Written-By – Mal Waldron
2 Sunday 7:00
Written-By – Cohn, Krueger, Stein, Miller
3 Exactly Like You 6:45
Written-By – Fields-McHugh
4 Anatomy 8:50
Written-By – Mal Waldron
5 Vodka 9:04
Written-By – Mal Waldron
- Special Bonus Tracks -
6 Tea For Two 8:04
Written-By – Caesar, Youmans
Paul Quinichette Quintet/ Unreleased Tracks From August 14, 1952
7 Studio Chatter & Green Is Blue 3:31
Written-By – Freddie Green
8 You Belong To Me 3:01
Written-By – King, Stewart
9 Birdland Jump 2:47
Written-By – Joe "King" Oliver, Walter Melrose
Credits:
Bass – Gene Ramey (tracks: 7 to 9), Julian Euell (tracks: 1 to 6)
Drums – Ed Thigpen (tracks: 1 to 6), Gus Johnson (tracks: 7 to 9)
Guitar – Freddie Green (tracks: 7 to 9)
Piano – Kenny Drew (tracks: 7 to 9), Mal Waldron (tracks: 1 to 6)
Tenor Saxophone – John Coltrane (tracks: 1, 2, 4, 5), Paul Quinichette
7.7.20
MEL POWELL - Four Classic Albums Plus : Borderline / Thigamagig / Mel Powell Out on a Limb / The Mel Powell Bandstand (2012) 2xCD / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist 1:
Album: Mel Powell Trio – Borderline (1954)
1. Borderline 3.28
2. Makin' Whoopie 4.45
3. What's New 8.36
4. Quin And Sonic 3.41
5. If Dreams Come True 3.37
6. Cross Your Heart 2.15
7. Avalon 3.33
Album: Mel Powell Trio – Thigamagig (1954)
8. Thigamagig 2.29
9. You're My Thrill 5.20
10. Button Up Your Overcoat 3.15
11. Don-Que-Dee 3.29
12. Bouquet 4.53
13. Ain't She Sweet 4.10
14. Take Me In Your Arms 4.05
15. California, Here I Come 3.07
Album: Mel Powell – Out On A Limb (1955)
16. Gone With The Wind 2.54
17. Bunny Hug 4.00
18. Pennies From Heaven 3.57
19. Stomping At The Savoy 3.42
20. When Your Lover Has Gone 3.52
Tracklist 2:
Album: Mel Powell – Out On A Limb (1955)
1. Cooch 3.00
2. Beale St. Blues 3.36
3. Three Little Words 3.12
4. You're Lucky To Me 3.45
5. Liza 3.44
6. The Best Thing For You Would Be Me 2.43
7. Rosetta 2.54
Album: Mel Powell And His Orchestra – The Mel Powell Bandstand (1954)
8. Ezz-May 4.32
9. My Last Millionaire 3.25
10. Everything I've Got 3.08
11. Firebug 1.47
12. Easy Swing 4.43
13. Soon 3.24
14. When Did You Leave Heaven 3.41
Album: Mel Powell Septet – Mel Powell Septet (1953)
15. 'S Wonderful 4.17
16. It's Been So Long 3.47
17. I Must Have That Man 7.07
18. You're Lucky To Me 4.58
EP: Mel Powell - Classics In Jazz (1947)
19. Anything Goes 2.40
20. Hallelujah 2.06
21. There's A Small Hotel 2.54
22. Way Down Yonder In New Orleans 2.10
Total playing time:
CD One 79.58
CD Two 78.58
Compilation & remastering: Dave Bennett
Noise processing & final masters: Ted Kendall
CD ONE
Mel Powell Trio – Borderline (1954)
New York, 17 August 1954
Tracks 1 to 7
Mel Powel TRIO
Paul Quinichette, tenor sax
Bobby Donaldson, drums
Mel Powel, piano
Mel Powell Trio – Thigamagig (1954)
New York, 24 August 1954
Tracks 8 to 15
Mel Powel TRIO
Ruby Braff, trumpet
Bobby Donaldson, drums
Mel Powel, piano
Mel Powell – Out On A Limb (1955)
New York. 19 October 1955
Tracks 16 to 20
Mel Powel, piano
Al Mattaliano, trumpet
Michael "Peanuts" Hucko, clarinet
Nick Caiazza, tenor sax
Tommy Kay, guitar
Arnold Fishkin, bass
Bobby Donaldson, drums
CD TWO
Mel Powell – Out On A Limb (1955)
New York. 19 October 1955
Tracks 1 to 7
Mel Powel, piano
Ruby Braff, trumpet
Oscar Pettiford, bass
Skeeter Best, guitar
Bobby Donaldson, drums
Mel Powell And His Orchestra – The Mel Powell Bandstand (1954)
New York, 1 December 1954
Tracks 8 to 14
John Glasel, trumpet
Chuck Russo, clarinet, alto and baritone sax
Mel Powel, piano
Joe Kay, bass
Jimmy Buffington, French horn
Boomie Richman, Tenor sax
Mundell Lowe, guitar
Eddie Phyfe, drums
Joan Wile, vocalist
Mel Powell Septet – Mel Powell Septet (1953)
New York, 30 December 1953
Tracks 15 to 18
Edmond Hall, clarinet
Buck Clayton, trumpet
Henderson Chambers, trombone
Steve Jordan, guitar
Walter Page, bass
Mel Powel, piano
Jimmy Crawford, drums
Mel Powell - Classics In Jazz (1947)
December 10, 1947, Hollywood, California
Tracks 19 to 22
Piano Mel Powell
Sax Bumps Myers
Trumpet Jake Porter
Drums lee Young
Bass Red Collender
18.4.20
BILLIE HOLIDAY – 1952 (2003) The Classics Chronological Series – 1285 | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1 East of the Sun (And West of the Moon) 2:57
Brooks Bowman
2 Blue Moon 3:32
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
3 You Go to My Head 2:58
J. Fred Coots / Haven Gillespie
4 You Turned the Tables On Me 3:29
Louis Alter / Sidney Mitchell
5 Easy to Love 3:02
Cole Porter
6 These Foolish Things 3:35
Harry Link / Holt Marvell / Jack Strachey
7 I Only Have Eyes for You 2:54
Al Dubin / Harry Warren
8 Solitude 3:32
Eddie DeLange / Duke Ellington / Irving Mills
9 Everything I Have Is Yours 3:46
Harold Adamson / Burton Lane
10 Love for Sale 2:58
Cole Porter
11 Moonglow 3:01
Eddie DeLange / Will Hudson / Irving Mills
12 Tenderly 3:25
Walter Gross / Jack Lawrence
13 If the Moon Turns Green 2:47
Paul Coates / Bernie Hanighen
14 Remember 2:37
Irving Berlin
15 Autumn in New York 3:53
Vernon Duke
16 My Man 2:39
Jacques Charles / Channing Pollack / Albert Willemetz / Maurice Yvain
17 Lover, Come Back to Me 3:37
Oscar Hammerstein II / Sigmund Romberg
18 Stormy Weather 3:43
Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler
19 Yesterdays 2:50
Otto Harbach / Jerome Kern
20 He's Funny That Way 3:13
Neil Moret (Chas. N. Daniels) / Richard A. Whiting
21 I Can't Face the Music 3:13
Rube Bloom / Ted Koehler
2.2.20
COUNT BASIE AND HIS ORCHESTRA – 1952-1953 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1387 (2005) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
+ last month
e.s.t. — Retrospective 'The Very Best Of e.s.t. (2009) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
"Retrospective - The Very Best Of e.s.t." is a retrospective of the unique work of e.s.t. and a tribute to the late mastermind Esb...