Showing posts with label Benny Golson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Benny Golson. Show all posts

Monday, July 17, 2023

Conte Candoli & Lee Morgan - Double Or Nothin'

Styles: Post Bop, Cool Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:56
Size: 108,8 MB
Art: Front

(4:38) 1. Reggie Of Chester
(5:11) 2. Stablemates
(4:43) 3. Celedia
(5:44) 4. Moto
(4:43) 5. The Champ
(7:49) 6. Blues After Dark
(5:55) 7. Wildwood
(4:00) 8. Quicksilver
(4:09) 9. Bye Bye Blues

Rare recordings produced by Howard Rumsey with his incredible Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All Stars and Charles Persip's Jazz Statesmen.

"There was only a short week in which to record, so we made a date for a double session at Liberty's fabulous new studios... Lee Morgan and Frank Rosolino flipped into some original dance steps at the sound of the playbacks. It was a happy date."
https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/conte-candoli-lee-morgan-albums/2427-double-or-nothin-.html

Personnel: Lee Morgan, Conte Candoli (tp), Frank Rosolino (tb), Benny Golson, Bob Cooper (ts), Wynton Kelly, Dick Shreve (p), Red Mitchell, Wilfred Middlebrooks (b), Charles Persip, Stan Levey (d)

Double Or Nothin'

Sunday, January 29, 2023

Benny Golson - One Day, Forever

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2022
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:35
Size: 144,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:08) 1. One Day, Forever
( 6:18) 2. Blue Walk
( 7:54) 3. Killer Joe
( 6:59) 4. Are You Real?
( 4:46) 5. Sad To Say
( 9:18) 6. Out Of The Past
( 4:13) 7. Blues Alley
( 7:36) 8. Along Came Betty
(10:20) 9. On Gossamer Wings

Benny Golson’s latest Arkadia release, One Day, Forever, arose from a taping of some of Golson’s previous band members from the Jazztet: Art Farmer and Curtis Fuller. At the end of a European tour, they were so rushed they that they didn’t record long enough to fill an entire CD. Arkadia owner Bob Karcy kept the tape in the can, and he and Golson kept that recording in mind, in the intervening five years, during which Farmer passed. After Golson wrote some new original music, it was agreed that the tapes from the “Whisper Not 40 Years Of Benny Golson” European tour would finally be heard by the public.

The result is a CD in three mentalities, all of which are contained by Golson’s imagination: the famous sextet sound that produced numbers like “Killer Joe,” a string orchestra backing Shirley Horn as she sings the words to Golson’s new music, and a piano piece introducing Golson’s first classical composition. While not consistent in theme, One Day, Forever does reveal in startling contrast the creative curiosity of Benny Golson.

Joined by Geoff Keezer, Dwayne Burno and Joe Farnsworth, the Jazzteters recall the longevity of Golson’s contributions to the jazz vocabulary. Not confined just to the famous Jazztet works, the group entertained European audiences with some of Golson’s compositions for Art Blakey, like “Along Came Betty” and “Are You Real?”

Golson and Farmer never worked together again, although they remained close friends, so much so that Golson wrote “One Day, Forever” as a reminiscence of Farmer’s wife, who passed a few years before he did. As Horn sings it, sadly and tentatively with lots of space as always, “One Day, Forever” could allude to the abstract concept of loss of intimacy which, of course, it does. By broadening the idea, Golson has expanded the sense of aloneness to apply to anyone who experiences loss. “Sad To Say,” again, is, well, sad, and the cellos reinforce the sense of guardedness and hurt. The melancholy of Golson’s new music has found a perfect outlet in the delicacy and woundedness of Shirley Horn’s style.

The surprise, even for those who expect it, is Lara Downes’ ten-minute premier of Golson’s piano étude, which would be expected in a recital hall rather than on a jazz CD. Certainly, one could say that One Day, Forever contains something for everyone.

The interesting aspect of the CD, though, is the darkening of Golson’s musical interests, with their melancholy themes and their veering away from the brightness, bustling energy and optimism that marked his work in the fifties.By AAJ Staff https://www.allaboutjazz.com/one-day-forever-benny-golson-arkadia-jazz-review-by-aaj-staff

Personnel: Benny Golson, tenor sax; Shirley Horn, vocals; Art Farmer, trumpet; Curtis Fuller, trombone; Mulgrew Miller, Geoff Keezer, Lara Downes, piano; Ron Carter, Dwayne Burno, bass; Carl Allen, Joe Farnsworth, drums.

One Day, Forever

Monday, January 9, 2023

Benny Golson - Gettin' With It

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1995
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:20
Size: 86,1 MB
Art: Front

( 6:15)  1. Baubles, Bangles And Beads
( 5:11)  2. April In Paris
( 6:55)  3. Blue Streak
( 6:40)  4. Tippin' On Thru
(12:16)  5. Bob Hurd's Blues

Benny Golson leads a potent quintet in this 1959 studio date; the tenor saxophonist is joined by pianist Tommy Flanagan, trombonist Curtis Fuller, bassist Doug Watkins, and drummer Art Taylor. Golson's snappy arrangement of "Baubles, Bangle and Beads" features Fuller's fine mute work and Flanagan's upbeat inventive solo before he introduces his big-toned tenor into the mix. Golson's slight vibrato and Taylor's swirling brushwork are highlights of his interpretation of "April in Paris." The remaining three tracks are all originals by the leader: the up-tempo hard bop cooker "Blue Streak," the jaunty strut "Tippin' on Thru," and the extended blues "Bob Hurd's Blues," which will get anyone's feet tapping. This is one of Benny Golson's best dates as a leader because one not only gets to enjoy his always strong arrangements, but his consistently first-rate tenor sax solos. Highly recommended. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/gettin-with-it-mw0000180765

Personnel: Benny Golson - tenor saxophone; Curtis Fuller - trombone; Tommy Flanagan - piano; Doug Watkins - bass; Art Taylor - drums

Gettin' With It

Friday, February 11, 2022

Benny Golson - The Complete 1957-1958 Quintet & Sextet Sessions (Disc 1), (Disc 2)

Album: The Complete 1957-1958 Quintet & Sextet Sessions (Disc 1)
Styles: Contemporary Jazz
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:09
Size: 177,5 MB
Art: Front

( 6:01) 1. Whisper Not
( 4:12) 2. Just By Myself
( 3:58) 3. Capri
( 6:51) 4. Step Lightly
( 6:00) 5. Something In B Flat
( 6:47) 6. Blues It
( 4:18) 7. You're Mine, You
( 5:33) 8. B.G.'s Holiday
( 4:10) 9. Hymn To The Orient
(11:36) 10. Blues On Down
( 4:44) 11. Namely You
( 7:16) 12. Reunion
( 5:38) 13. Venetian Breeze

Album: The Complete 1957-1958 Quintet & Sextet Sessions (Disc 2)
Time: 79:03
Size: 181,8 MB

(6:23) 1. Out Of The Past
(6:02) 2. Strut Time
(6:20) 3. Jubilation
(5:36) 4. Are You Real
(5:19) 5. Cry A Blue Tear
(6:01) 6. Symptoms
(7:50) 7. This Night
(5:44) 8. Stablemates
(7:35) 9. Thursday's Theme
(4:17) 10. You're Not The Kind
(7:26) 11. Blues On My Mind
(6:50) 12. Afternoon In Paris
(3:35) 13. Calgary

Benny Golson was just 17 when he fell under the spell of composer/arranger Tadd Damerons writing. Tadds music really ignited the spark for me, he said. After hearing things like Our Delight and Lady Bird, I had more of a definite goal. I wanted to do more than play tenor sax. I wanted to write.

By 28 he was playing and writing for the Dizzy Gillespie band. Most arrangers in those days had an adequate facility on one instrument or another, but those who excelled as writers and instrumentalists were very few. Benny was one of them. Since then, his skills as a writer have been so acclaimed that sometimes critics forget that he was also a very swinging tenor man, as these 1957-1958 recordings, his first as a leader, demonstrate: a fusion of thinking and blowing that represents modern jazz at its skillful, provocative, imaginative best.https://www.freshsoundrecords.com/benny-golson-albums/5251-complete-1957-1958-quintet-sextet-sessions-2-cd-set.html

Personnel: Benny Golson (ts, arr), Art Farmer, Kenny Dorham, Lee Morgan (tp), Jimmy Cleveland, J.J. Johnson, Curtis Fuller (tb), Julius Watkins (Frh), Gigi Gryce (as), Sahib Shihab (bs), Wynton Kelly, Barry Harris, Ray Bryant (p), Paul Chambers, Jymie Merritt, Percy Heath (b), Charles Persip, Max Roach, Philly Joe Jones (d)

The Complete 1957-1958 Quintet & Sextet Sessions (Disc 2)

Monday, December 2, 2019

The Jazz Messengers - The Legacy Of Art Blakey: Live At The Iridium

Styles: Straight-ahead/Mainstream 
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:04
Size: 152,0 MB
Art: Front

(10:21)  1. One By One
(11:41)  2. A La Mode
(11:08)  3. Whisper Not
(10:51)  4. Oh, By The Way
(10:04)  5. Plexus
(11:58)  6. Blues March

Seven years after drummer Art Blakey's death, a Jazz Messengers reunion group was formed for a tour and this recording. Led by tenor saxophonist Benny Golson (who acts as the band's musical director), the sextet also includes trumpeter Terence Blanchard, trombonist Curtis Fuller, pianist Geoff Keezer, bassist Peter Washington and drummer Lewis Nash (in Blakey's spot). Together they perform Wayne Shorter's "One By One," and Cedar Walton's "Plexus," and compositions by Blanchard and Fuller, plus a pair (including "Blues March") by Golson. The overall results are predictable and very much in the hard bop tradition but full of spirit, not so much adding on to Art Blakey's legacy as much as simply revisiting it. ~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-legacy-of-art-blakey-mw0000597768

Personnel: Benny Golson (saxophone); Terence Blanchard (trumpet); Curtis Fuller (trombone); Geoff Keezer (piano); Peter Washington (bass); Lewis Nash (drums).

The Legacy Of Art Blakey:  Live At The Iridium

Wednesday, July 17, 2019

Hank Jones - One More - The Music of Thad Jones

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2005
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:22
Size: 159,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:37)  1. Subtle Rebuttal
(4:54)  2. Thad's Pad
(6:40)  3. Kids Are Pretty People
(5:49)  4. One More
(7:05)  5. Mean What You Say
(8:02)  6. A Child Is Born
(5:12)  7. Bossa Nova Ova
(7:02)  8. The Waltz You Swang for Me
(5:37)  9. H & T Blues
(5:23) 10. Consummation
(5:27) 11. The Farewell
(2:31) 12. Monk's Mood

Great jazz things have been happening at IPO Recordings, and they have been for a while. One More: Music of Thad Jones is the sixth CD from Executive Producer Bill Sorin, and it continues the generous spirit of tribute that has informed each of its predecessors. Three of the six recordings so far have been among the final recordings of the late piano maestro, Sir Roland Hanna, with another Hanna album on the way later this year. Listeners familiar with the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Band should know that Hanna held the piano chair in the band from its beginning in '66 through '74, and that he often performed Thad's compositions on his own recordings. Hanna is present posthumously on One More, in a recreation of one his classic unaccompanied introductions to "A Child Is Born, arguably Jones' most famous composition. One More indeed pays homage to Jones the composer with stellar performances of 11 of his tunes. The aggregation that performs Michael Patterson's distinctive arrangements is an octet made up of a Who's Who of straight-ahead blowing jazz. James Moody, Benny Golson and Frank Wess appear on tenor and other saxophones, with Wess tripling on flute; Bob Brookmeyer on trombone and Jimmy Owens on trumpet and fluegelhorn comprise the brass section. The superb rhythm section is anchored by Richard Davis on bass and Mickey Roker on drums. One might wonder if Hanna were still alive, he would be on piano. But here we have the redoubtable Hank Jones, Thad's brother, on piano. It is hard to ask for more. Ira Gitler points out in his liner notes, "What Patterson has done is write for this ensemble (and what an ensemble) without losing the spirit of the big band. That's the way Thad wrote, very translatable. With musicians who have no doubt known one another and played together often over many years, there is the feeling here of a reunion, a celebration not only of Thad Jones' talents as a composer but perhaps of the rare chance to play together again. 

For a one-time project, the group is surprisingly tight and polished; everyone really seems to have come to play his best, together. Without slighting any of the other masters, one can't miss the contributions of Hank Jones on piano and Jimmy Owens on trumpet, which are consistently brilliant on this album, on virtually every cut. What an honor for jazz lovers to still have Hank in our midst; here and on his new Great Jazz Trio recordings of late he sounds better than ever. Perhaps Owens' highlight is his solo on "Consummation. Poetic justice: Thad Jones wrote the song for a concert performance by Owens in '69. One More concludes on a rather special note. The final track is an unaccompanied solo performance by Hank Jones of "Monk's Mood, the only tune on the album not by Thad. He is playing an arrangement that he learned, note-for-note, directly from the composer himself, Thelonious Monk, in the mid-'40s, which was a favorite of Thad's. IPO seems headed in a good direction. One More: Music of Thad Jones follows With Malice Toward None: The Music of Tom McIntosh, another great composer, which features some of the same musicians. Who knows? Maybe someday we will see a tribute to the compositional talents of Sir Roland Hanna, another match surely to be made in heaven. ~ Wayne Zade https://www.allaboutjazz.com/one-more-music-of-thad-jones-by-wayne-zade.php

Personnel: Benny Golson (tenor saxophone); James Moody (tenor and soprano saxophone); Frank Wess (tenor and alto saxophone, flute); Jimmy Owens (trumpet and fluegelhorn); Bob Brookmeyer (trombone); Hank Jones (piano); Richard Davis (bass); Mickey Roker (drums) 

One More - The Music of Thad Jones

Sunday, June 30, 2019

Lem Winchester, Benny Golson - Winchester Special

Styles: Vibraphone And Saxophone Jazz 
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:28
Size: 91,2 MB
Art: Front

(10:02)  1. Down Fuzz
( 4:01)  2. If I Were A Bell
( 7:00)  3. Will You Still Be Mine
( 7:31)  4. Mysticism
( 4:11)  5. How Are Things In Glocca Morra
( 6:42)  6. The Dude

This excellent CD reissue features the ill-fated vibraphonist Lem Winchester teamed up with tenor saxophonist Benny Golson, pianist Tommy Flanagan, bassist Wendell Marshall and drummer Art Taylor for three standards, an obscurity and two of the leader's originals. The music falls between bop and hard bop with consistently swinging solos that are generally fairly inventive. This was one of Winchester's three recordings for the New Jazz label; all are easily recommended to straightahead jazz fans. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/winchester-special-mw0000271817

Personnel: Vibraphone – Lem Winchester; Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson;  Bass – Wendell Marshall; Drums – Arthur Taylor; Piano – Tommy Flanagan

Winchester Special

Sunday, January 20, 2019

Benny Golson, Freddie Hubbard - Benny Golson With Freddie Hubbard

Styles: Saxophone And Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:05
Size: 153,8 MB
Art: Front

( 9:10)  1. Stardust
( 9:22)  2. Double Bass
( 4:42)  3. Gypsy Jingle Jangle
(12:14)  4. Povo
( 7:30)  5. Love is a Many Splendored Thing
(10:17)  6. Sad To Say
(13:47)  7. Far Away

Benny Golson is a talented composer/arranger whose tenor playing has continued to evolve with time. After attending Howard University (1947-1950) he worked in Philadelphia with Bull Moose Jackson's R&B band (1951) at a time when it included one of his writing influences, Tadd Dameron on piano. Golson played with Dameron for a period in 1953, followed by stints with Lionel Hampton (1953-1954), and Johnny Hodges and Earl Bostic (1954-1956). He came to prominence while with Dizzy Gillespie's globetrotting big band (1956-1958), as much for his writing as for his tenor playing (the latter was most influenced by Don Byas and Lucky Thompson). Golson wrote such standards as "I Remember Clifford" (for the late Clifford Brown), "Killer Joe," "Stablemates," "Whisper Not," "Along Came Betty," and "Blues March" during 1956-1960. His stay with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1958-1959) was significant, and during 1959-1962 he co-led the Jazztet with Art Farmer. From that point on Golson gradually drifted away from jazz and concentrated more on working in the studios and with orchestras including spending a couple of years in Europe (1964-1966). When Golson returned to active playing in 1977, his tone had hardened and sounded much closer to Archie Shepp than to Don Byas. Other than an unfortunate commercial effort for Columbia in 1977, Golson has recorded consistently rewarding albums (many for Japanese labels) since that time including a reunion with Art Farmer and Curtis Fuller in a new Jazztet. Through the years he has recorded as a leader for Contemporary, Riverside, United Artists, New Jazz, Argo, Mercury, and Dreyfus among others. Returning once again to the spirit of the original Jazztet, Golson released New Time, New 'Tet on Concord Records in 2009. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/benny-golson-mn0000135391/biography

One of the great jazz trumpeters of all time, Freddie Hubbard formed his sound out of the Clifford Brown/Lee Morgan tradition, and by the early '70s was immediately distinctive and the pacesetter in jazz. However, a string of blatantly commercial albums later in the decade damaged his reputation and, just when Hubbard, in the early '90s (with the deaths of Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis), seemed perfectly suited for the role of veteran master, his chops started causing him serious troubles. Born and raised in Indianapolis, Hubbard played early on with Wes and Monk Montgomery. He moved to New York in 1958, roomed with Eric Dolphy (with whom he recorded in 1960), and was in the groups of Philly Joe Jones (1958-1959), Sonny Rollins, Slide Hampton, and J.J. Johnson, before touring Europe with Quincy Jones (1960-1961). He recorded with John Coltrane, participated in Ornette Coleman's Free Jazz (1960), was on Oliver Nelson's classic Blues and the Abstract Truth album (highlighted by "Stolen Moments"), and started recording as a leader for Blue Note that same year. Hubbard gained fame playing with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1961-1964) next to Wayne Shorter and Curtis Fuller. He recorded Ascension with Coltrane (1965), Out to Lunch (1964) with Eric Dolphy, and Maiden Voyage with Herbie Hancock, and, after a period with Max Roach (1965-1966), he led his own quintet, which at the time usually featured altoist James Spaulding. A blazing trumpeter with a beautiful tone on flügelhorn, Hubbard fared well in freer settings but was always essentially a hard bop stylist. In 1970, Freddie Hubbard recorded two of his finest albums (Red Clay and Straight Life) for CTI. 

The follow-up, First Light (1971), was actually his most popular date, featuring Don Sebesky arrangements. But after the glory of the CTI years (during which producer Creed Taylor did an expert job of balancing the artistic with the accessible), Hubbard made the mistake of signing with Columbia and recording one dud after another; Windjammer (1976) and Splash (a slightly later effort for Fantasy) are low points. However, in 1977, he toured with Herbie Hancock's acoustic V.S.O.P. Quintet and, in the 1980s, on recordings for Pablo, Blue Note, and Atlantic, he showed that he could reach his former heights (even if much of the jazz world had given up on him). But by the late '80s, Hubbard's "personal problems" and increasing unreliability (not showing up for gigs) started to really hurt him, and a few years later his once mighty technique started to seriously falter. In late 2008, Hubbard suffered a heart attack that left him hospitalized until his death at age 70 on December 29 of that year.Freddie Hubbard's fans can still certainly enjoy his many recordings for Blue Note, Impulse, Atlantic, CTI, Pablo, and his first Music Masters sets. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/freddie-hubbard-mn0000798326/biography

Personnel:  Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson; Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard; Bass – Ron Carter; Drums – Smitty; Piano – Mulgrew Miller

Benny Golson With Freddie Hubbard

Tuesday, June 5, 2018

Jimmy Cleveland - Crazy Rhythm (Remastered)

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 30:47
Size: 70.5 MB
Styles: Bop
Year: 1959/2012
Art: Front

[4:28] 1. Our Delight
[7:56] 2. Tricotism
[4:13] 3. Old Reliable
[3:44] 4. We Never Kissed
[3:31] 5. Tom-Kattin
[3:52] 6. Crazy Rhythm
[3:00] 7. Reminiscing

Bass – Milt Hinton; Drums – Osie Johnson; Piano – Hank Jones; Reeds – Benny Golson, Jerome Richardson; Trombone – Jimmy Cleveland; Trumpet – Art Farmer.

Trombonist Jimmy Cleveland was a heavily in-demand session player, yet he led only a handful of record dates of his own, none after 1959. Leading an all-star septet with arrangements by either Benny Golson or Gigi Gryce, Cleveland primarily focuses on compositions by his peers, with the exception of Gryce's bop arrangement of "Crazy Rhythm," which showcases the leader's fluid yet mellow style. The band includes Jerome Richardson, Art Farmer, Benny Golson, Hank Jones, Milt Hinton and Osie Johnson. Golson's charts of two Oscar Pettiford tunes, the obscure blues "Old Reliable" (featuring Richardson on flute) and the well known "Tricrotism" (which surprisingly has no bass solo, instead featuring Richardson's baritone sax and the arranger's tenor sax), are very stimulating. Gryce scored Melba Liston's ballad "We Never Kissed" and his own "Reminiscing" to feature the leader to good effect. Long out of print, this Emarcy LP was long overdue to be reissued on CD. ~Ken Dryden

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Sunday, April 22, 2018

Various - The J.J. Johnson Memorial Album

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 77:02
Size: 176.3 MB
Styles: Bop, Trombone jazz
Year: 2003
Art: Front

[3:02] 1. Coleman Hawkins - I Mean You
[3:06] 2. J.J. Johnson - Elysee
[3:43] 3. J.J. Johnson's Boppers - Blue Mode (Take 1)
[4:57] 4. J.J. Johnson - Chazzanova
[8:14] 5. Miles Davis Sextet - Blue 'n' Boogie
[3:10] 6. J.J. Johnson - Bags' Groove
[4:32] 7. Coleman Hawkins - Laura
[4:10] 8. Benny Golson Sextet - Hymn To The Orient
[7:05] 9. J.J. Johnson - Horace
[6:39] 10. J.J. Johnson - Pinnacles
[7:13] 11. Count Basie - Jaylock
[7:56] 12. J.J. Johnson - Concepts In Blue
[3:13] 13. J.J. Johnson - Misty
[3:01] 14. J.J. Johnson - What's New
[2:29] 15. J.J. Johnson - Nature Boy
[4:23] 16. J.J. Johnson - Soft Winds

When J.J. Johnson passed away in 2001, he left a legacy as simply the greatest technically gifted and most admired jazz trombonist in history without much valid argument to the contrary. This compilation features some very good tracks with Johnson as a sideman in or leader from the late '40s up to 1957, as a full-blown frontman in the '70s and '80s, and in small duos or trios up to 1983. Discographical sleuths will note this is not an all-time greatest-"hits" package, due to the absence of his great Savoy, Blue Note, Bethlehem, RCA Bluebird, Columbia, Impulse or 1990s Verve label efforts. These tracks are collected from the family of Prestige, Riverside, Milestone, and Pablo recordings, and while all selections here are quite good, they are not his definitive works. Still, everything here is well rendered, and a few pieces are indeed definitive. The pre-1957 tracks include the Coleman Hawkins deeply rich, horn-saturated septet from 1946 tackling Thelonious Monk's "I Mean You" with Johnson, Fats Navarro, Hank Jones, Max Roach, and the completely obscure alto saxophonist Porter Kilbert. Johnson is teamed with Sonny Rollins and Kenny Dorham in the swirling lines of "Elysee," and Sonny Stitt in the slow "Blue Note" both featuring John Lewis. The Charles Mingus film noir style obscurity "Chazzanova," with four trombonists, the true bop classic "Blue 'n' Boogie" with Miles Davis, Lucky Thompson, and Horace Silver, Johnson, and Kai Winding's take of "Bags Groove," and Benny Golson's unusual harmonics during "Hymn to the Orient" with Dorham and Roach -- all have to be considered standouts. The compilation leaps to 1977 as "Horace" is a soul-jazz bopper with Nat Adderley on trumpet and Billy Childs playing Fender Rhodes electric piano. The memorable post-bop "Pinnacles" has what must be an all-time great configuration with Joe Henderson, Tommy Flanagan on piano and clavinet, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Billy Higgins in tow. The CD ends with "Concepts in Blue," marred by a synthesizer add-on, three intimate sessions, two of them duets with Joe Pass and a trio featuring Pass and Oscar Peterson, plus the finale "Soft Winds" in a sextet featuring tinkling percussion, a great contribution from Kenny Barron, and Johnson alongside fellow 'bonist Al Grey. Though the first half of this collection is pretty solid, the second is hit or miss. Though all cuts remain credible, the uneven nature of this collection, and its lack of a comprehensive focus, makes this an incomplete but still tasteful look at the mighty career of the great J.J. Johnson. ~Michael G.Nastos

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Saturday, March 10, 2018

Benny Golson - Up Jumped Benny

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1997
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:32
Size: 164,8 MB
Art: Front

( 8:48)  1. Up Jumped Spring
( 8:47)  2. Stablemates
( 0:23)  3. Talk Intro
(10:45)  4. Tiny Capers
( 0:24)  5. Talk Intro
(15:22)  6. I Remember Clifford
( 6:32)  7. For Old Time Sake
(10:02)  8. Whisper Not
(10:25)  9. Gypsy Jingle Jangle

Benny Golson had not appeared on an American jazz label in a long time, so Bob Karcy of Arkadia Jazz stepped in where others feared to tread, issuing this live gig from a jazz club somewhere in Switzerland on the last day of a tour. Armed with a rhythm section of competent young players (Kevin Hays, piano; Dwayne Burno, bass; Carl Allen, drums), Golson takes his dusky tenor sax tone frequently into Coltrane extended harmonic country when the tempos are up, his head figuratively in the clouds above the occasionally combustible trio. Yet he also ruminates in an almost withdrawn manner at ballad tempo on a lengthy treatment of his jazz standard "I Remember Clifford," concluding with a quiet solo elegy for Brownie based on a tenor (the vocal species) aria from Puccini's Tosca. Stanley Crouch's liner notes are full of his usual respect-your-elders blather and the sound quality is boxy, but Golson's fans will feel fortunate to have this. ~ Richard S.Ginell https://www.allmusic.com/album/up-jumped-benny-mw0000595037

Personnel: Benny Golson (tenor saxophone); Kevin Hays (piano); Dwayne Burno (bass); Carl Allen (drums).

Up Jumped Benny

Wednesday, March 7, 2018

Benny Golson - Gone With Golson

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:35
Size: 92.9 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1960/1994
Art: Front

[4:49] 1. Stacatto Swing
[6:48] 2. Autumn Leaves
[6:37] 3. Soul Me
[8:35] 4. Blues After Dark
[9:22] 5. Jam For Bobbie
[4:21] 6. A Bit Of Heaven

Bass – Tom Bryant; Drums – Al Harewood; Piano – Ray Bryant; Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson; Trombone – Curtis Fuller. Recorded in Hackensack, NJ; June 20, 1959.

Shortly before the formation of The Jazztet, tenor-saxophonist Benny Golson and trombonist Curtis Fuller teamed up for this quintet set with pianist Ray Bryant, bassist Tommy Bryant and drummer Al Harewood. Although Golson contributed three of the six songs ("Blues After Dark" is the best-known one), the emphasis is on his playing; the tenor is quite heated on the uptempo blues "Jam for Bobbie." The CD reissue adds "A Bit of Heaven" (originally on a sampler but part of the same session) to the original program, a fine example of hard bop of the late '50s. ~Scott Yanow

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Sunday, December 17, 2017

George Russell - New York, New York

Styles: Big Band, Bop
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:26
Size: 104,3 MB
Art: Front

(10:33)  1. Manhatten
(11:41)  2. Big City Blues
(10:10)  3. Manhatten - Rico
( 8:00)  4. East Side Medley
( 5:00)  5. A Helluva town

George Russell was one of the most forward-thinking composers and arrangers on the jazz scene during the 1950s, but his work was generally more appreciated by musicians than the jazz-buying public. New York, New York represents one of many high points in his career. He assembled an all-star orchestra, including pianist Bill Evans (a frequent participant on Russell's recordings), Art Farmer, Bob Brookmeyer, John Coltrane, and Milt Hinton, among others.

In Rodgers & Hart's "Manhattan," Russell has the soloists playing over the orchestra's vamp, while he also creates an imaginative "East Side Medley" combining the standards "Autumn in New York" and "How About You." His original material is just as striking as his arrangements, while vocalist Jon Hendricks serves as narrator between orchestra segments. While this release has been reissued several times, it rarely remains in print for long, so don't miss the opportunity to acquire this elusive CD. ~ Ken Dryden https://www.allmusic.com/album/new-york-ny-mw0000309054 

Personnel: George Russell (leader, arranger, chromatic drums); Jon Hendricks (spoken vocals); Hal McKusick, Phil Woods (alto saxophone, flute, clarinet); John Coltrane, Benny Golson, Al Cohn (tenor saxophone); Gene Allen, Sol Schlinger (baritone saxophone); Art Farmer, Doc Severinsen, Ernie Royal, Joe Wilder, Joe Ferrante (trumpet); Bob Brookmeyer, Frank Rehak, Tom Mitchell, Jimmy Cleveland (trombone); Bill Evans (piano); Barry Galbraith (guitar); Milt Hinton, George Duvivier (bass); Charlie Persip, Max Roach, Don Lamond (drums); Al Epstein (bongos).             

New York, New York

Friday, October 13, 2017

Ernie Henry - Last Chorus

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:20
Size: 104,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. Autumn Leaves
(6:28)  2. Beauty And The Blues
(7:49)  3. All The Things You Are
(2:41)  4. Melba's Tune
(4:54)  5. S'Posin'
(6:58)  6. Ba-Lue Bolivar Ba-Lues-Are
(4:40)  7. Like Someone In Love
(8:31)  8. Cleo's Chant

Ernie Henry was a promising alto saxophonist who passed away prematurely on December 29, 1957, when he was only 31. He had recorded his album Seven Standards and a Blues on September 30, and four songs for an uncompleted octet date on September 23. This CD reissue has the latter tunes (which feature trumpeter Lee Morgan; trombonist Melba Liston, who contributed "Melba's Tune"; tenor saxophonist Benny Golson; and pianist Wynton Kelly), an alternate take from the Seven Standards set ("Like Someone in Love"), a leftover track from the preceding year ("Cleo's Chant"), the solos of Thelonious Monk and Henry (from the lengthy "Ba-Lue Bolivar Ba-Lues-Are"), and an alternate version of "S'posin'" taken from the altoist's final recording (a quartet outing with trumpeter Kenny Dorham). Overall, the music is fine and, surprisingly, does not have an unfinished air about it. It does make one wish that Ernie Henry had taken better care of his health, as he was just beginning to develop a sound of his own. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/last-chorus-mw0000036951

Personnel:  Ernie Henry - alto saxophone;  Kenny Dorham,  Lee Morgan – trumpet;  Melba Liston – trombone;  Benny Golson, Sonny Rollins - tenor saxophone;  Cecil Payne - baritone saxophone;  Kenny Drew, Wynton Kelly, Thelonious Monk – piano;  Paul Chambers, Eddie Mathias, Oscar Pettiford, Wilbur Ware – bass;  G. T. Hogan, Philly Joe Jones, Max Roach , Art Taylor - drums

Last Chorus

Sunday, April 9, 2017

Benny Golson Quartet - Free

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:58
Size: 86.9 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 1962/2011
Art: Front

[7:00] 1. Sock Cha Cha
[7:16] 2. Mad About The Boy
[5:47] 3. Just By Myself
[4:30] 4. Shades Of Stein
[7:27] 5. My Romance
[5:55] 6. Just In Time

Bass – Ron Carter; Drums – Arthur Taylor; Piano – Tommy Flanagan; Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson. Recorded December 26, 1962 - Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.

The "Free" in the title of this album is not the Ornette Coleman type of free, but merely Golson's feeling that on this recording he had the "freedom" to do what he wanted without anyone else calling the shots. That is still very much in the mainstream tradition of modern jazz - hard bop style. Golson is especially fond of the lower register of the tenor and has a rolling style not unlike thunderclouds, albeit small sized ones. SOCK CHA CHA is an interesting tune: 43 bars long played with a latin rhythm except for the bridge, which is 16 bars long and played in straight 4/4. JUST IN TIME and JUST BY MYSELF are taken up tempo and they swing very nicely. The real standout on this album to these ears is pianist Tommy Flanagan who plays beautifully with quiet assurance. Ron Carter (b) and Arthur Taylor (d) round out the personnel; Taylor's drumming is ever-present but not the least bit intrusive. One or two tracks are below the others (SHADES OF STEIN is one), but a very good CD nonetheless. ~Bomojazz

Free

Thursday, April 6, 2017

Benny Golson - The Modern Touch

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:11
Size: 92,3 MB
Art: Front

( 6:28)  1. Out of the Past
( 7:20)  2. Reunion
( 5:41)  3. Venetian Breeze
( 4:14)  4. Hymn to the Orient
( 4:48)  5. Namely You
(11:37)  6. Blues on Down

Benny Golson's second album as a leader (reissued on CD in the OJC series) is a solid hard bop date featuring the tenorman in a quintet with trumpeter Kenny Dorham, pianist Wynton Kelly, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Max Roach. The all-star group performs three Golson originals (none of which really caught on), a pair of Gigi Gryce tunes (best known is "Hymn to the Orient") and the standard "Namely You." Excellent playing on an above-average set that defines the modern mainstream of 1957 jazz. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/the-modern-touch-mw0000099791

Personnel:  Benny Golson (tenor saxophone);  Kenny Dorham (trumpet);  J.J. Johnson (trombone);  Wynton Kelly (piano);  Paul Chambers (bass);  Max Roach (drums).

The Modern Touch

Wednesday, March 22, 2017

Lee Morgan - The Best Of Lee Morgan

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 72:46
Size: 166.6 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1988
Art: Front

[ 6:25] 1. Ceora
[10:24] 2. The Sidewinder
[ 5:32] 3. Speedball
[ 9:26] 4. A Night In Tunisia
[ 5:36] 5. Since I Fell For You
[10:28] 6. The Rumproller
[ 7:06] 7. I Remember Clifford
[ 8:46] 8. Mr. Kenyatta
[ 8:59] 9. Cornbread

Alto Saxophone – Gigi Gryce (tracks: 7), Jackie McLean (tracks: 9); Baritone Saxophone – Pepper Adams (tracks: 4); Bass – Bob Cranshaw (tracks: 2, 3), Butch Warren (tracks: 8), Doug Watkins (tracks: 5), Larry Ridley (tracks: 1, 9), Paul Chambers (3) (tracks: 4, 7), Victor Sproles (tracks: 6); Drums – "Philly" Joe Jones (tracks: 4), Art Taylor (tracks: 5), Billy Higgins (tracks: 1 to 3, 6, 8, 9), Charlie Persip (tracks: 7); Guitar – Grant Green (tracks: 8); Piano – Barry Harris (2) (tracks: 2), Bobby Timmons (tracks: 4), Harold Mabern Jr. (tracks: 3), Herbie Hancock (tracks: 1, 8, 9), Ronnie Mathews (tracks: 6), Sonny Clark (tracks: 5), Wynton Kelly (tracks: 7); Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson (tracks: 7), Hank Mobley (tracks: 1, 9), Joe Henderson (tracks: 2, 6), Wayne Shorter (tracks: 3, 8); Trumpet – Lee Morgan.

Curious listeners who encounter Lee Morgan for the first time through this single-disc anthology will come away mightily impressed, even inspired, but they will be hearing only the first part of the story. The album picks up on his teenage whiz kid days circa 1957, then jumps ahead to his renaissance in 1963-1965 as the high priest of hard bop boogaloo. Besides showcasing Morgan's brash, crackling, infinitely expressive trumpet playing, the album does a good job of emphasizing his abundant, still-underrated gifts as a composer -- with "The Sidewinder," of course, but also the strikingly lovely bossa nova "Ceora" and the near standard "Speedball." With its three bonus tracks, "I Remember Clifford," "Cornbread," and especially "Mr. Kenyatta," the CD version adds compelling corroborating evidence of Morgan's originality. The major hang-up, alas, is that the album cuts off the time line at 1965, thus leaving out Morgan's gradual move away from boilerplate hard bop toward modal, progressive explorations that reached an exciting peak on 1970's Live at the Lighthouse. The selections included here will no doubt satisfy those who would want to keep this tremendous talent locked into a single airtight box -- and frankly, it would be difficult to dispute any of the choices on their own terms. But the rest of Morgan's tragically aborted evolution deserves representation on a set like this. ~Richard S. Ginnell

The Best Of Lee Morgan

Saturday, March 4, 2017

Blue Mitchell - Out Of The Blue

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:10
Size: 105.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1959/1991
Art: Front

[9:06] 1. Blues On My Mind
[5:53] 2. It Could Happen To You
[5:01] 3. Boomerang
[6:10] 4. Sweet-Cakes
[5:39] 5. Missing You
[7:01] 6. When The Saints Go Marching In
[7:18] 7. Studio B

Bass – Paul Chambers (3) (tracks: 2, 5 to 7), Sam Jones (tracks: 1, 3, 4); Drums – Art Blakey; Piano – Cedar Walton (tracks: 7), Wynton Kelly (tracks: 1 to 6); Tenor Saxophone – Benny Golson; Trumpet – Blue Mitchell. Recorded at Reeves Sound Studios, New York; January 5, 1959.

This early recording by Blue Mitchell finds the distinctive trumpeter in excellent form in a quintet also featuring tenor saxophonist Benny Golson (who contributed "Blues on My Mind"), either Wynton Kelly or Cedar Walton on piano, Paul Chambers or Sam Jones on bass and drummer Art Blakey. The consistently swinging repertoire includes a surprisingly effective version of "When the Saints Go Marching In." "Studio B," recorded in the same period but formerly available only in a sampler, has been added to the program. It's an enjoyable date of high-quality hard bop. ~Scott Yanow

Out Of The Blue

Saturday, February 25, 2017

Art Farmer & Benny Golson - Meet the Jazztet

Styles: Trumpet And Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:26
Size: 95,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. Serenata
(4:29)  2. It Ain't Necessarily So
(3:32)  3. Avalon
(3:13)  4. I Remember Clifford
(5:18)  5. Blues March
(3:56)  6. It's All Right with Me
(3:44)  7. Park Avenue Petite
(4:04)  8. Mox Nix
(3:36)  9. Easy Living
(4:57) 10. Killer Joe

One of the top hard bop contingents of the '50s and '60s, the Art Farmer and Benny Golson co-led group known as the Jazztet featured some of the best original charts and soloing of the entire era. While the group was only in existence between 1959-1962, its excellent reputation could rest on this stunning disc alone. Cut in 1960, the ten-track date features four of Golson's classic originals ("I Remember Clifford," "Blues March," "Park Avenue Petite," and "Killer Joe") and one very fetching Farmer-penned cut ("Mox Nix"). The rest of the standards-heavy mix is given the golden touch by the sextet. And what a combo this is besides Farmer's svelte trumpet lines and Golson's frenetically vaporous tenor solos, one gets a chance to hear a young but already very accomplished McCoy Tyner, the tart and mercurial trombonist Curtis Fuller, and the streamlined rhythm tandem of Addison Farmer and Lex Humphries. An essential hard bop title. ~ Stephen Cook http://www.allmusic.com/album/meet-the-jazztet-mw0000689979

Personnel:  Art Farmer (trumpet); Benny Golson (tenor saxophone); Curtis Fuller (trombone); McCoy Tyner (piano); Addison Farmer (bass); Lex Humphries (drums).

Meet the Jazztet

Thursday, June 9, 2016

Various - Bad Ass Jazz

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:09
Size: 158.3 MB
Styles: Assorted jazz styles
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[4:04] 1. Herbie Hancock - Rockit
[3:58] 2. Roy Ayers Ubiquity - Stranded In The Jungle
[4:28] 3. Woody Herman - Aquarius
[5:06] 4. Sarah Vaughan - Peter Gunn
[4:26] 5. Jimmy Smith - Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf
[2:34] 6. Louis Jordan - Ain't Nobody Here But Us Chickens [dj Premier Remix]
[2:33] 7. Benny Golson - Cool Whip
[7:20] 8. Don Byron - There It Is
[5:33] 9. George Howard - Thank You For Talkin' To Me Africa
[6:14] 10. Gary Bartz - Funked Up
[5:50] 11. Mel Brown - Greasy Spoon
[2:48] 12. Oliver Nelson - These Boots Are Made For Walkin'
[3:28] 13. Ronnie Laws - Fever
[3:52] 14. Chick Corea's Elektric Band - Light Years
[3:25] 15. Return To Forever - Dayride
[3:24] 16. Fred Wesley - Watermelon Man

Bad Ass Jazz