Mostrando postagens com marcador Thornel Schwartz. Mostrar todas as postagens
Mostrando postagens com marcador Thornel Schwartz. Mostrar todas as postagens

21.6.21

JIMMY SMITH - The Incredible Jimmy Smith at Club Baby Grand, Vol. 1 (1956-2008) MONO / RVG Edition / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

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 he was still the next big thing on the block when he recorded two LP volumes live over the course of two afternoon sets and three evening sets on August 4, 1956, at Club Baby Grand in Wilmington, DE. Smith had already tracked three successful studio LPs for Blue Note Records at sessions held earlier in the year in February, March, and June, and the time seemed right to present him in a concert setting where the full whirlwind force of his speedy playing could be best appreciated. Working with guitarist Thornel Schwartz and his longtime drummer Donald Bailey (who worked with Smith throughout his Blue Note years), Smith is 90 percent of the show here, bursting out with amazing rapid runs on the B-3, filling the air from one end of the room to the other as only he could. This first volume is drawn from the three evening sets, opening with what was actually the last selection of the night, a zippy, headlong version of "Sweet Georgia Brown" and highlighted by a nearly 12-minute version of Horace Silver's "The Preacher," a piece Smith has already made his own. It's all Jimmy Smith in full flight, bubbling over with cascading notes and breathless detours, and if his studio work is generally more structured and considered (but only a little more so), this set shows him in what was his natural habitat, astounding an audience in a small club. Bailey keeps up with things and Schwartz gets a word in now and then, but this is Smith's show all the way. by Steve Leggett  
Tracklist :
1    Introduction by Mitch Thomas    0:59
2    Sweet Georgia Brown 9:33
Ben Bernie / Kenneth Casey / Maceo Pinkard
3    Where or When 9:17
Lorenz Hart / Richard Rodgers
4    The Preacher 11:55
Horace Silver
5    Rosetta 10:08
Earl Hines / Henri Woode
Credits :
Drums – Donald Bailey
Guitar – Thornel Schwartz
Organ – Jimmy Smith
Remastered By – Rudy Van Gelder

JIMMY SMITH - The Incredible Jimmy Smith at Club Baby Grand, Vol. 2 (1956-2008) MONO / RVG Edition / FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

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 he was still the next big thing on the block when he recorded two LP volumes live over the course of two afternoon sets and three evening sets on August 4, 1956, at Club Baby Grand in Wilmington, DE. Smith had already tracked three successful studio LPs for Blue Note Records at sessions held earlier in the year in February, March, and June, and the time seemed right to present him in a concert setting where the full whirlwind force of his speedy playing could be best appreciated. Working with guitarist Thornel Schwartz and his longtime drummer Donald Bailey (who worked with Smith throughout his Blue Note years), Smith is 90 percent of the show here, bursting out with amazing rapid runs on the B-3, filling the air from one end of the room to the other as only he could. This second volume draws three of its four tracks from the second afternoon set ("Get Happy" is from the last set of the evening show) and is highlighted by the opening track, a ten-plus-minute version of Duke Ellington's "Caravan" that turns on Schwartz's fine guitar leads. Otherwise, it's all Jimmy Smith, who careens, bolts, stutters, glides, and flashes notes all over the place at a frequently breathless pace, and if Smith's studio work is generally more structured, arranged, and considered (but only a little more so), this set shows him in what was his natural habitat, astounding an audience in a small club. by Steve Leggett  
Tracklist :
1    Caravan 10:18
Duke Ellington / Irving Mills / Juan Tizol
2    Love Is a Many Splendored Thing 10:46
Sammy Fain / Paul Francis Webster
3    Get Happy 7:27
Harold Arlen / Ted Koehler
4    It's Alright with Me 11:53
Cole Porter
Credits :
Drums – Donald Bailey
Guitar – Thornel Schwartz
Organ – Jimmy Smith

17.6.21

JIMMY SMITH - Respect + Livin' It Up (2010) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless

Jazz organist Jimmy Smith redefined the instrument with his classic recordings for Blue Note in the 1950s, working the drawbars and pedals of his Hammond B-3 like no one before him and bringing a pianist’s speed to his fills and runs, drawing the blues base out of bop and setting the stage for the later soul-jazz movement. Smith's records for Verve in the 1960s were quite different. His style as a player didn’t change so much as the personnel around him and the kind of material he tackled -- the two albums combined here, 1967’s Respect and 1968’s Livin’ It Up!, are a case in point. One could call it the pop Jimmy Smith, although his lightning-fast and sinewy organ runs aren’t all that removed from his Blue Note days. Respect features Smith in a funky soul mood, tackling Otis Redding's “Respect,” Allen Toussaint's “Get Out of My Life,” and Joe Zawinul's “Mercy, Mercy, Mercy” with characteristic verve and energy, and it’s pretty exciting stuff. Livin’ It Up! features Smith backed by Oliver Nelson's big band and sweeping cinematic string arrangements taking on Tinseltown movie themes like “Valley of the Dolls” and “Mission: Impossible,” pure pop fare like Gerry Goffin and Carole King's “Go Away Little Girl,” soothing ballads like Antonio Carlos Jobim's “The Gentle Rain,” and even gruffly singing on Willie Dixon's “Big Boss Man” (which Smith co-wrote). What’s most surprising here is the bonus track, a version of Smith singing the Mickey Mouse Club theme that was recorded at the Respect sessions. Do these two albums work together on a single disc? They do, and the reason they do is that Jimmy Smith was Jimmy Smith no matter what kind of ocean he sailed across -- yeah, he was a jazz organ player, but even more than that, he was an organ player like no other. by Steve Leggett  
Tracklist :
Respect (1967)

1     Mercy, Mercy, Mercy 6:39
Joe Zawinul
2     Respect 2:19
Otis Redding
3     Funky Broadway 6:40
Ariester Christian
4     T-Bone Steak 7:24
Jimmy Smith
5     Get Out of My Life 8:58
Allen Toussaint
6     Mickey Mouse 3:24
Jimmy Dodd
Livin`It Up (1968)
7     Mission: Impossible 3:37
Lalo Schifrin
8     Refractions 4:50
Oliver Nelson
9     The Gentle Rain 2:40
Luiz Bonfá / Matt Dubey
10     Burning Spear 3:56
Richard Evans
11     Go Away Little Girl 2:53
Gerry Goffin / Carole King
12     Livin' It Up 5:07
Jimmy Smith
13     This Nearly Was Mine 3:16
Oscar Hammerstein II / Richard Rodgers
14     Big Boss Man 6:27
Willie Dixon / Jimmy Smith
15     Valley of the Dolls 4:51
André Previn / Dory Previn
Credits :
Tracks 1-6
Bass – Bob Bushnell, Ron Carter
Drums – Bernard Purdie, Grady Tate
Engineer – Rudy Van Gelder
Guitar – Eric Gale, Thornel Schwartz
Organ – Jimmy Smith
Producer – Creed Taylor
Tracks 7-15
Arranged By, Conductor – Oliver Nelson
Bass – Ray Brown
Bass Guitar [Fender] – Carol Kaye
Guitar – Howard Roberts
Organ – Jimmy Smith
Percussion – Larry Bunker
Soloist, Tenor Saxophone – Plas Johnson (faixas: 9)
Vocals – Jimmy Smith (faixas: 9)

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...