Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Herb Ellis - Softly... But With That Feeling / Thank You, Charlie Christian

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:13
Size: 172.2 MB
Styles: Guitar jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[5:46] 1. One Note Samba
[1:57] 2. Toni
[5:43] 3. Like Someone In Love
[5:53] 4. Jim's Blues
[3:36] 5. John Brown's Body
[4:12] 6. Detour Ahead
[5:38] 7. You Better Be Ready
[5:10] 8. Gravy Waltz
[3:18] 9. Pickly Wickly
[2:53] 10. I Told You I Loved You, Now Get Out
[4:44] 11. Cook One
[4:20] 12. Karin
[2:54] 13. Cherry Kijafa
[7:39] 14. Thank You Charlie Christian
[2:49] 15. Alexander's Ragtime Band
[2:57] 16. Lemon Twist
[3:35] 17. Everything's Pat
[2:01] 18. Workin' The Truth

Twofer: Tracks #1-8 from the Verve album "Softly... But With That Feeling" (V6-8448). Tracks #9-18 from the Verve album "Thank You, Charlie Christian" (MGV S 6164)

Guitarist Herb Ellis first became prominent as a member of the Oscar Peterson Trio from 1953 to 1958 in a musical and personal community of spirit rare in jazz history. It was during this period that, in addition to recording countless Verve LPs with Peterson, he began making albums as a leader, including the two excellent releases in this collection. Recorded with the pick of the crop of West Coast jazz musicians, these sessions confirm an assessment Ellis made in 1961 of his own evolution through the years: “As Oscar said to me, you can only develop what you are best capable of doing, I hope I can continue to develop in just that way.”

His personal roots, affirmed here on Thank You Charlie Christian, but also evident on Softly... But with That Feeling, go back to another great guitarist, Charlie Christian. “Before that I just played fast,” Ellis said. “In fact, the first time I heard Charlie I thought he really wasn’t so much, because I felt I could play faster than that. Then after a few more times he really hit me, and I realized that speed wasn’t everything. I got quite emotional—put my guitar away and said I’d never play again. But the next day I got it out and started to try to play like Charlie.” He succeeded but, as these recordings prove, he found his own distinctive and inimitable voice to become one of the greats of jazz guitar.

Herb Ellis (g), with Victor Feldman, Frank Strazzeri (p), Harry Babasin (cello), Leroy Vinnegar, Chuck Berghofer (b), Ronnie Zito, Kenny Hume (d).

Softly... But With That Feeling / Thank You, Charlie Christian

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