Showing posts with label Complete Jazz Series. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Complete Jazz Series. Show all posts

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Leo Parker - Complete Jazz Series 1947-1950

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1947
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:42
Size: 162,1 MB
Art: Front

(3:15)  1. El Sino
(2:55)  2. Ineta
(2:58)  3. Wild Leo
(3:06)  4. Leapin Leo
(2:45)  5. Wee Dot
(2:53)  6. Solitude
(2:53)  7. Lion Roars
(2:46)  8. Mad Lad Boogie
(3:03)  9. On The House
(2:29) 10. Dunky
(2:40) 11. Senor Leo
(2:49) 12. Chase N The Lion
(2:26) 13. Leos Bells
(2:27) 14. Sweet Talkin Leo
(2:32) 15. Swinging For Love
(2:28) 16. The New Look
(3:18) 17. Mona Lisa
(3:08) 18. Whos Mad
(3:04) 19. Darn That Dream
(2:39) 20. I Cross My Fingers
(2:51) 21. Mad Lad Returns
(2:50) 22. Woody
(2:41) 23. Rolling With Parker
(2:13) 24. Leo Leaps In
(3:21) 25. Solitude

There's something about the purling, snarling and booting of a baritone sax that can create pleasant disturbances in the listener's spine and rib cage. Leo Parker came up during the simultaneous explosions of bebop and rhythm & blues. Everything he touched turned into a groove. Recording for Savoy in Detroit during the autumn of 1947, Leo was flanked by Howard McGhee and Gene Ammons, who at this point seems to have been operating under the influence of Lester Young. Leo does his own share of Prez-like one-note vamping, bringing to mind some of Lester's Aladdin recordings made during this same time period. Leo's Savoys originally appeared on 78 rpm platters, then on 10" long-playing records. Anyone who has ever heard one of these relics played on period equipment can testify to the sensation of hearing an old-fashioned phonograph wrestling with the extra fidelity contained in the voice of that king-sized sax. 

The next session happened in New York two months later. J.J. Johnson was on hand to supervise a smart recording of his own soon-to-be-famous "Wee Dot." Dexter Gordon is in fine form and it's nice to hear Joe Newman blowing so much gutsy bebop through his trumpet. Everything smoothes out for a gorgeous rendition of Duke Ellington's "Solitude," a lush feature for the baritone. The rhythm section of Curly Russell, Hank Jones and Shadow Wilson makes this particular session even more solid than usual. Leading his "Quintette" in Detroit on March 23rd, 1948, Leo races into "Dinky" with a run straight out of Herschel Evans' "Doggin' Around." Sir Charles Thompson tosses off some of his most fragmented playing, splattering the walls with abrupt block chords and tiny whirlpools of truncated riffs. "Señor Leo" cruises at a very cool, almost subterranean Latin tempo, a mood that brings to mind Bud Powell's hypnotic opus "Comin' Up." You get to hear the voices of Parker and Thompson at the beginning of "Chase 'n' the Lion," a fine bit of updated boogie-woogie. 

Apparently, Sir Charles was also known at that time as "Chase." A second session recorded on the same day adds Charlie Rouse to an already steaming band. Leo gnaws his way through four tunes of his own devising. Nothing brilliant here, just good hot jamming. The people at Prestige Records were smart enough to line up a date with the Leo Parker Quartet in July of 1950, resulting in what has got to be the hippest version of "Mona Lisa" ever put on record. The quartet hatched two other handsome ballads and a pair of kickers. "Who's Mad" is a sort of sequel to the famous "Mad Lad," made when Leo was recording for the Apollo label under Sir Charles' leadership. That makes "Mad Lad Returns" a sequel to the sequel. Unable or unwilling to shake this particular thematic, Leo called his next recording band "the Mad Lads." Two out of four sides were issued on the little Gotham label. Meet the all-but-forgotten Henri Durant, a bop tenor who made all the right moves and promptly split the scene. Good thing he at least made it on to this blowing session. Finally, get a load of Leo's creatively reconstituted "Solitude," rejected by Gotham but included by Classics at the tail-end of this mother lode of vintage recordings by the amazing Leo Parker. ~ Arwulf Arwulf   http://www.allmusic.com/album/1947-1950-mw0000658641

Personnel: Leo Parker (alto saxophone, baritone saxophone); Dexter Gordon (alto saxophone, tenor saxophone); Gene Ammons, Charlie Rouse (tenor saxophone); Howard McGhee, Joe Newman , James Robertson (trumpet); J.J. Johnson (trombone); Hank Jones , James Craig, Kenny Drew, Al Haig, Sir Charles Thompson (piano); Eddie Bourne, Charles "Hungry" Williams , Max Roach, Shadow Wilson (drums).

Recorded in Detroit, Michigan and New York, New York between 1947 & 1950

Complete Jazz Series 1947-1950

Monday, March 3, 2014

King Perry - Complete Jazz Series 1950-1954

Styles: Blues, R&B
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:35
Size: 141,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:31)  1. Everything's Gonna Be Alright Tonight
(2:34)  2. Mellow Gal Blues
(2:37)  3. Blues And Lonesome
(2:32)  4. Natural Born Lover
(2:26)  5. I Ain'T Got A Dime To My Name
(2:23)  6. Day & Night Blues
(2:29)  7. Duck'S Yas Yas Yas
(2:16)  8. The Animal Song
(2:55)  9. I Wonder Who'S Boogin My Boogie
(2:39) 10. I Must Have Been An Ugly Baby
(2:31) 11. Coquette
(2:11) 12. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
(2:40) 13. Everybody Jump
(2:37) 14. Vaccinate Me Baby
(2:28) 15. Card Playin' Blues
(2:10) 16. Welcome Home Baby
(2:43) 17. Christopher Columbus
(2:34) 18. Things Ain'T What They Used To Be
(3:05) 19. Pitching A Party
(2:32) 20. Back To Kansas City
(2:41) 21. Get Out Of My Face
(2:29) 22. Till You'Re In My Arms Again
(2:52) 23. Blues At Xmas
(2:29) 24. Hello Peach

The second of two volumes, this chronological collection resumes King Perry's recording career in 1950 and features the complete Specialty, Got, RPM, Lucky and Hollywood recordings, and ends with the December 1954 release which was waxed for Sherman Williams' Unique Records. By these 1950s dates, most of Perry's repertoire consisterd of blues, jumps and r&b, however he never entirely forgot his jazz background.  http://www.worldsrecords.com/pages/artists/k/king_perry/king_perry_56299.html

The Chronological Blues & Rhythm Classics 5129 - King Perry 1950-1954