Showing posts with label Beets Brothers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Beets Brothers. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 3, 2017

The Beets Brothers - A World Class Jazz-Act

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 59:07
Size: 135.3 MB
Styles: Contemporary jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[3:35] 1. Thirteen Ain't Too Much
[5:00] 2. Black Orpheus
[3:10] 3. I've Got The World On A String
[4:57] 4. 6,-6,5
[6:57] 5. Berliner Waltz
[4:33] 6. Blues For Stephanie
[5:03] 7. It Might As Well Be Spring
[4:56] 8. A Lovely Way To Spend An Evening
[6:20] 9. Moanin'
[4:46] 10. Tristity
[5:06] 11. Love For Sale
[4:38] 12. Whisper Not

Alexander Beets - tenor sax, Peter Beets - piano, Marius Beets - bass, Wim Holthaus - drums, Geja Griek - vocals. Recorded: 3 and 25 March 1990.

The Beets Brothers are from Groenlo, a small town east of The Netherlands. Their music is sixties style jazz, but it is all fresh and new in appeal. They gave their first performance in 1983 and in 1985, they were discovered at the Doetinchem Jazz Festival. During the same year, they appeared on many radio and jazz television programs throughout Europe gaining more and more popularity. Their success continued, winning the "Rein Gieling Trophy" for the most original and promising jazz band. They also won awards at N.O.S. Jazz Festival and the Polaroid Jazz Festival in Enschede and began playing at the North Sea Jazz Festival in The Hague in 1990.

Concert performances have taken the Beets Brothers throughout Europe, America, China, Finland and Curacao. More recently, they have been invited to give a concert tour in South Africa. They just celebrated their 15-year jubilee by re-releasing the sixth pressing of their first album. They presently have five CDs to their credit, The Beets Brothers 1990, School is Closed Now 1993 (dedicated to Art Blakey), In the New World 1993, Brotherwise 1995 and First Date in 1997 recorded with Jeff Hamilton. There's not a bad one in the lot!

A World Class Jazz-Act