Showing posts with label Dizzy Reece. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dizzy Reece. Show all posts

Friday, December 8, 2023

Dizzy Reece Quintet - On The Scene

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1957
Time: 63:50
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 146,1 MB
Art: Front

(6:36) 1. Yardbird Suite
(6:38) 2. Eboo
(6:14) 3. On The Scene
(3:41) 4. How Deep Is The Ocean
(7:37) 5. Blubird (Take 1)
(5:45) 6. Blubird (Take 2)
(2:56) 7. Stomp
(8:17) 8. Get Up
(4:05) 9. The Gypsy (Take 2)
(5:22) 10. A Variations On Monk
(6:34) 11. Sweet And Lovely

Alphonso Son "Dizzy" Reece is a hard bop jazz trumpeter with a distinctive sound and compositional style.

Reece was born January 5, 1931 in Kingston, Jamaica, the son of a silent film pianist. He attended the Alpha Boys School (famed in Jamaica for its musical alumni), switching from baritone to trumpet at 14. A full-time musician from age 16, he moved to London in 1948 and spent the 1950s working in Europe, much of that time in Paris. He played with Don Byas, Kenny Clarke, Frank Foster and Thad Jones, among others.

Winning praise from the likes of Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins, he emigrated to New York City in 1959, but found New York in the 1960s a struggle. Too little heard-from in the intervening years, he had a reissue on Mosaic in 2004 that gave fans hope of a comeback.

On The Scene

Saturday, November 26, 2022

Dizzy Reece - Blues In Trinity (Remastered)

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:33
Size: 109,3 MB
Art: Front

( 6:47)  1. Blues In Trinity
( 3:04)  2. I Had The Craziest Dream
(10:39)  3. Close Up
( 6:37)  4. Shepherd's Serenade
( 6:02)  5. Color Blind
( 4:46)  6. 'Round About Midnight
( 4:03)  7. Eboo
( 5:31)  8. Just A Penny

One of the few American releases cut by the legendary British trumpeter Dizzy Reece and a great one! The album was strange for Blue Note, in that it was a joint US/UK session featuring American players Donald Byrd and Art Taylor, along with great Brit players Reece, Tubby Hayes, Terry Shannon, and Lloyd Thompson. Hayes is especially excellent here, and the record captures him at the peak of his young imaginative powers. With a two-trumpet frontline held down by Byrd and Reece, Hayes' tenor solos cut through hard and clean, with a deep soulful sound that makes him the most sparkling player on the session. Titles include "Close Up", "Blues In Trinity", "Color Blind", and "Round Midnight". © 1996-2019, Dusty Groove, Inc. https://www.dustygroove.com/item/515086/Dizzy-Reece:Blues-In-Trinity

Personnel: Dizzy Reece - trumpet; Donald Byrd - trumpet; Tubby Hayes - tenor saxophone; Terry Shannon - piano; Lloyd Thompson - bass; Art Taylor - drums

Blues In Trinity

Thursday, November 24, 2022

Dizzy Reece - Nirvana: The Zen of the Jazz Trumpet

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2006
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:26
Size: 102,0 MB
Art: Front

( 1:06) 1. Introduction
( 6:41) 2. Ananda's Heart
(11:49) 3. Samadhi Junction
(10:23) 4. Maya's Dance
( 1:23) 5. Text
(13:01) 6. Nirvana

Alphonso Son "Dizzy" Reece is a hard bop jazz trumpeter with a distinctive sound and compositional style.

Reece was born January 5, 1931 in Kingston, Jamaica, the son of a silent film pianist. He attended the Alpha Boys School (famed in Jamaica for its musical alumni), switching from baritone to trumpet at 14. A full-time musician from age 16, he moved to London in 1948 and spent the 1950s working in Europe, much of that time in Paris.

He played with Don Byas, Kenny Clarke, Frank Foster and Thad Jones, among others. Winning praise from the likes of Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins, he emigrated to New York City in 1959, but found New York in the 1960s a struggle. Too little heard-from in the intervening years, he had a reissue on Mosaic in 2004 that gave fans hope of a comeback.https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/dizzy-reece

Personnel: Trumpet – Dizzy Reece; Piano – Mike Longo; Bass – Lee Hudson; Drums – James Worth

Nirvana: The Zen of the Jazz Trumpet

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Dizzy Reece & Ted Curson - Blowin' Away

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:40
Size: 95,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:23) 1. Stella By Starlight
(6:27) 2. All The Things You Are
(5:37) 3. Bass Conclave
(5:02) 4. Moose the Mooche
(7:04) 5. Marjo
(9:04) 6. Walkin'

Trumpeters Dizzy Reece and Ted Curson team up with a top-notch trio (pianist Claude Williamson, bassist Sam Jones and drummer Roy Haynes) on three of the six numbers on this bebop-oriented LP, originally recorded for Interplay and then soon reissued by Discovery.

In addition to those pieces ("Walkin'" and a basic original apiece by each trumpeter), Reece is showcased on "Stella By Starlight," Curson gets the spotlight on "All the Things You Are," and the rhythm section romps on "Moose the Mooche." It is a pity that Reece and Curson do not get to tangle on all of the numbers, but they do shoot off some fireworks (most notably on "Walkin'"); the playing by all of the veterans is up to par. By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/blowin-away-mw0000910495

Personnel: Dizzy Reece - trumpet (tracks 1, 3, 5 & 6); Ted Curson - trumpet, flugelhorn (tracks 2, 3, 5 & 6); Claude Williamson - piano; Sam Jones - bass; Roy Haynes - drums

Blowin' Away

Friday, August 7, 2020

Dizzy Reece - Dizzy Reece: Only the Best

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 2013
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:22
Size: 134,3 MB
Art: Front

(10:11)  1. The Story of Love
( 6:42)  2. Sands
( 6:18)  3. The Things We Did Last Summer
( 5:44)  4. The Case of the Frightened Lover
( 9:05)  5. Tenderly
( 6:50)  6. Goose Dance
( 6:42)  7. Ye Olde Blues
( 6:47)  8. Comin' On

To grasp the art and life's work of trumpeter-composer-philosopher (not necessarily in that order) Alphonso Son "Dizzy Reece, a short biographical sketch and recording data, though not thrown completely out the window in terms of relevance, are only relevant insofar as one gets an idea of the artist as a whole. Facts of his birthplace (Kingston, Jamaica, 1931) and relocations to London (1948) and New York (1959) and the collection of recordings for Tempo, Savoy, Blue Note, Prestige, Futura, Beehive and other labels throughout the past fifty years are surely crucial sonic tools that one can use to discover certain aspects of Reece's work and the time and place in which they occurred, but grasping a few nuggets of Reece's knowledge and experience requires a grander query than what motivates one to assemble a record date or lead a large orchestra through a series of charts.

In the course of learning who Reece is and what the sum of his interests and experiences are, his approach calls for an understanding of those close to him not only musically or proximally, but even (or perhaps especially) those interested in his work. Instead of this interviewer asking Reece how he came to study music, Reece asked how I came to him what my interests are musically and how his work fits in to my own studies, and how I got interested in jazz. Delving into what attracts one about a certain approach to music, Reece contends that interconnectedness is a primary facet of what imbues the jazz idiom with its massive emotional, tonal and rhythmic possibility "everybody plays the blues; Indians have it, the Chinese, every nationality has the blues. The Portuguese have the Fado, reflected in most of the Brazilian music that you hear. The soul is the Fado and we call it the blues. This is a common thread for everybody, and every music has it  I've studied every music. North Africa I used to listen to the UNESCO recordings of drummers from all over... East African drummers, Czechoslovakia, Chinese drummers, I listened to everybody. It is a sound that is endemic not only to the horn player (or the vocal 'cry' of the blues), but also something in the rhythms of the music, and by virtue the body, something that girds every system of life  it is no wonder that rhythms and their juxtapositions infuse Reece's recordings like Asia Minor (New Jazz, 1962), the perversely pan-tempo "Blues in Trinity (from the 1959 Blue Note session of the same name) or the cutting minor themes of From In to Out (Futura, 1970).

Reece firmly states his interest as "beginning in modern jazz, [as] it tells the story of everything that has been before in the blues idiom, a sort-of 'jumping in the middle' where one's formative dabblings are not long past but one's being is fully ensconced in one's art  not coincidentally, in interview Reece preferred to start with the beginning of his New York sojourn in 1959-60. "It came down through Louis Armstrong and Lester Young, but here comes Charlie Parker you know, he was a summation of everything that came before, he loved the blues, but [with Bird] we get to the level of intelligence now, we take it to the next level. That's what the modern jazz era is about, and that's what I've been dealing with... Charlie Parker [and by default, modern jazz] was already a finished product. Yet, for Reece, it certainly comes back not only to what is vertical in the music (harmonics), but to what spans the temporal experience of the music rhythm. "That started with Charlie Parker and Max Roach; sure, of course the rhythm aspect is the whole thing. He plays drums on the saxophone. It goes into intelligence in the '40s, we covered Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, the skyscrapers were going up, the political scene was changing, and [other music] would not suffice to express it... Hemingway, Picasso, it's all related. Reece's most regular partner in rhythm was drummer Art Taylor, who appeared on three of his Blue Note leader dates (a fourth, unissued until recently, had Art Blakey in the drum chair) and From In to Out; Reece even encouraged Taylor to compile Notes and Tones, a book of musician-to-musician interviews (Da Capo, 1977). Reece has also penned several volumes, by instrument, of his own musician-to-musician research, much of which centers on organizing and analyzing players with respect to personality psychology being just one of the sciences Reece has found his interdisciplinary calling in.

Reece acknowledges what he calls the "diffuse nature of the musical and cultural climate we have today, and the difficulty in making a scene in what this writer calls a "blasé cultural sensibility. "I used to be on Broadway  Broadway was my beat; you had Birdland and so much music that was great. You could walk up Broadway and meet people from Hollywood, arrangers, everybody. Music all over the streets  it was a different thing, it was alive and that's what's missing. You didn't have that period, and you can feel that it's missing. I had it and I know what it is... I was one of the last figures on Broadway; I used to hold up on 52nd Street and Broadway, some of that energy and its residue is still there. Coming to New York in the late 50s, Reece was certainly on the tail end of that scene, for 1959 was the year that Ornette Coleman brought his group to New York for a several-months run at the Five Spot, a move which history tells us turned modern jazz on its head. Yet Reece maintains that the negativity attached by some critics to Bird and the lingering animosity felt toward this music carries on even today: "A lot of people are still resisting it, because it's intelligence and it's on another level. We can play as much free jazz and as much technical some of the cats are very technical but nobody plays as fast as Charlie Parker... all the fruits of technology, that was already expressed in the music. That was an expression of what's to come. This is not to say that the sensory overload that has girded much of our 20th Century experience is the only thing mirrored by Bird and Picasso; "there is the soul  that's why we always talk about soul, the other side of it of course, something else supports the material. It's called spirit, it's called soul, whatever, and I call it the essence... [modern experience] really doesn't add anything to your soul. It's still not comfortable, and people are still not comfortable with technology. But it's a part of nature, so there it is and you work with it, and you still have to deal with your soul. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/dizzy-reece-dizzy-reece-by-clifford-allen.php

Dizzy Reece: Only the Best

Sunday, November 24, 2019

The Dizzy Gillespie Reunion Big Band - 20th And 30th Anniversary

Styles: Trumpet Jazz, Big Band
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:21
Size: 99,8 MB
Art: Front

( 7:29)  1. Things To Come
( 7:07)  2. One Bass Hit
( 8:17)  3. Frisco
(10:33)  4. Con Alma
( 8:01)  5. Things Are Here
( 1:51)  6. Theme (Birks Works)

Highlights radiate through the history of the Berlin Jazz Days, and November 7, 1968 was a particularly memorable one. On that evening Dizzy Gillespie visited the city on the Spree river; that alone would be enough for every jazz fan to jump for joy, since by that time the incomparable trumpeter was one of the few remaining constants in modern jazz. And he hadn’t brought just any orchestra with him – Dizzie’s combo included outstanding soloists from every phase of his career: saxophonist Cecil Payne and trombonist Ted Kelly from the Forties, colleague Curtis Fuller out of Dizzie’s Fifties groups, and from the younger generation representing the Sixties, Gillespie protégé trumpeter Jimmy Owens. These are only a few of the creative heads in Dizzie’s star-studded “Reunion Big Band”. 

Put together by Gillespie’s long-time musical companion Gil Fuller, the band only needed a few days’ rehearsals before they were breathing as one and ready to conduct their triumphant European tour. They strut their stuff in six pieces, from the exuberant, animalistic energy of “Things To Come” through Paul West’s swinging bass work on “One Bass Hit” on to “Frisco”, pianist Mike Longo’s composition with its chromatic ostinato resounding like a gangster movie soundtrack. From the Latin-saturated “Con Alma” with Dizzy dancing through the piece, through to the precisely arranged “Things Are There”, a wild chase that, after a series of excellent solos, ends in Candy Finch’s drumming fireworks. Dizzy Gillespie commented back then that it was his best big band of the last 20 years. After listening to the music you’ll have to agree. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Dizzy-Gillespie-Reunion-Big-Band/dp/B01JQUBHK6

Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie - trumpet; Jimmy Owens - trumpet; Dizzy Reece - trumpet; Victor Paz - trumpet;  Stu Haimer - trumpet;  Curtis Fuller - trombone; Tom McIntosh - trombone; Ted Kelly - trombone;  Chris Woods - saxophone;  James Moody - saxophone; Paul Jeffrey - saxophone; Sahib Shihab - saxophone; Cecil Payne - saxophone;  Mike Longo - piano;  Paul West - bass; Candy Finch - drums

20th And 30th Anniversary

Wednesday, April 10, 2019

Dizzy Reece - Soundin' Off

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1960
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:58
Size: 96,2 MB
Art: Front

(5:05)  1. A Ghost of a Chance
(7:58)  2. Once in a While
(7:30)  3. Eb Pob
(7:46)  4. Yesterdays
(7:10)  5. Our Love Is Here to Stay
(6:27)  6. Blue Streak

Originally issued in 1960 and subsequently reissued multiple times in a variety of formats, the trumpeter Dizzy Reece's fourth Blue Note outing as a leader is here presented in Super Audio CD format by the APO label. While it would have been nice to see a bit more material on a reissue like this (with at least a couple of alternate takes), the original program is densely packed with high-quality music and makes for a solidly satisfying listening experience on its own. The opening track, interestingly enough, is both a ballad and a standard: on "Ghost of a Chance" Reece plays with a buttery, burnished tone that coats the familiar melody in a golden haze like the quality of light at dusk. The sun rises again on the next track, a midtempo number titled "Once in a While," and the tempo ratchets up another notch on "Eb Pob," a rather undistinguished composition on the "I Got Rhythm" changes that is completely redeemed by the quality of the solos. "Yesterday" finds pianist Walter Bishop delivering a curiously lackadaisical solo, but he gets back in the groove on a wonderful version of "Our Love Is Here to Stay." The program ends with a nice, bouncy blues original titled "Blue Streak." Throughout the album, Reece digs into his bag of sonic tricks without ever doing anything that detracts from the music itself. Soundin' Off is a little bit uneven, but is never less than a solid pleasure to listen to. ~ Rick Anderson https://www.allmusic.com/album/soundin-off-mw0000368905

Personnel:  Dizzy Reece - trumpet; Walter Bishop Jr. - piano; Doug Watkins - bass; Art Taylor - drums

Soundin' Off

Sunday, April 7, 2019

Dizzy Reece - A New Star

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:44
Size: 162,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:36)  1. O Moon
(9:23)  2. Butch
(3:07)  3. Bang
(6:21)  4. This Is Always
(2:36)  5. Now's the Time
(3:02)  6. Please Call
(2:58)  7. Chorous
(3:40)  8. Basie Line
(6:36)  9. Yardbird Suite
(3:41) 10. How Deep Is the Ocean
(6:37) 11. Out of Nowhere
(5:40) 12. Scrapple from the Apple
(7:37) 13. Bluebird (take 1)
(5:44) 14. Bluebird (take 2)

This is what musicians call a 'blowing sessions'. No attempt to create any so-called 'new sounds'. Just honest-to-goodness, down-to-earth, relaxed swinging jazz. This date gives a real first recording break to one of the British jazz scene's 'musicians' musicians, trumpeter Dizzy Reece. Dizzy's following is confined to just about every musician who has blown with him, a handful of knowledgeable fans (the kind who dig Miles Davis) and a couple of critics. This particular writer has tried to wake the town and tell the people about Dizzy since early 1954, but so far all appears to have fallen on deaf ears. Born in Kingston, Jamaica, Dizzy Reece first learnt baritone horn before switching to trumpet, his schoolmates included altoist Joe Harriott and tenorist Wilton 'Bogey' Gaynair. Reece came to Europe, via London, in 1948 and whilst in Paris between 1949 and 1950 sat in with Americans Don Byas and Hay Cameron. 

He later worked in Germany, Holland and Italy, returning to London in 1954. Playing loosely in the Miles Davis style, he gained sufficient attention in the London clubs for Tempo to give him a recording contract. The session presented here by Jasmine date from 1955 and 1956 and include his complete LP 'A New Star' plus his 'Dizzy Blows Bird' tracks. Tubby Hayes is featured on "Now's The Time" & "Please Call" and Ronnie Scott plays on "Out Of Nowhere" & "Scrapple From The Apple". ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/New-Star-ORIGINAL-RECORDINGS-REMASTERED/dp/B000059T6Q

A New Star

Thursday, March 7, 2019

Dizzy Reece - Comin' On

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1999
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:53
Size: 153,8 MB
Art: Front

( 6:42)  1. Ye Olde Blues
( 5:44)  2. The Case Of The Frightened Lover
( 9:05)  3. Tenderly
( 8:30)  4. Achmet
(10:11)  5. The Story Of Love
( 6:42)  6. Sands
( 6:47)  7. Comin' On
( 6:50)  8. Goose Dance
( 6:17)  9. The Things We Did Last Summer

For a short time in the late '50s trumpeter Dizzy Reece was an up-and-coming jazz artist. However, success eluded him and he quietly faded into obscurity, only occasionally releasing material after the early '60s. As a matter of fact, the sessions that became Comin' On! languished in the Blue Note vaults for almost four decades. Rediscovered in 1999, these dates feature six well-rounded hard bop compositions by Reece along with three standards. The tracks from April 3, 1960, not only document the Blue Note debut of tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine but also employ the talents of the Jazz Messengers' rhythm section of the time, pianist Bobby Timmons, bassist Jymie Merritt, and drummer Art Blakey. By July 17, 1960, the only musician remaining from the previous date was Turrentine, sharing tenor duties with Musa Kaleem, who is also heard on flute. (The later session's rhythm section had changed to pianist Duke Jordan, bassist Sam Jones, and drummer Al Harewood.) Neglected, although spirited, sessions from an underrated trumpeter and composer. ~ Al Campbell https://www.allmusic.com/album/comin-on%21-mw0000257295

Personnel:  Dizzy Reece - trumpet, conga;  Stanley Turrentine - tenor saxophone; Musa Kaleem - tenor saxophone, flute;  Bobby Timmons, Duke Jordan - piano; Jymie Merritt, Sam Jones - bass;  Art Blakey, Al Harewood - drums.

Comin' On

Wednesday, August 29, 2018

Andrew Hill - Passing Ships

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 47:40
Size: 109,4 MB
Art: Front

(4:09)  1. Sideways
(7:08)  2. Passing Ships
(8:32)  3. Plantation Bag
(9:49)  4. Noon Tide
(6:22)  5. The Brown Queen
(6:27)  6. Cascade
(5:11)  7. Yesterday's Tomorrow

The history of Blue Note Records is in many ways the history of the golden age of jazz. When Blue Note changed, the whole face of jazz changed. After releasing classic sides one after another for much of the '60s, Blue Note veered off into populist funk and, despite its present renaissance, never really recovered. With today's Blue Note subsisting on fewer quality releases and the RVG reissue series, its reputation of yore seems firmly in the past. If so, the occasional new "old" album released by the label is a rare opportunity to be part of those heady days. Pianist Andrew Hill, like Wayne Shorter, or Herbie Hancock, was one of the main proponents of the Blue Note style - heavy post bop that didn't shy away from experimentation. Hill's albums like Point of Departure or Compulsion probably would be mentioned in the same breath as Juju or Maiden Voyage if he had more consistent exposure. By the late '60s, Hill's tenure at Blue Note was almost up and several sessions he recorded remained unissued, not seen as commercially viable. What has become the recently released Passing Ships is a rare chance to hear Hill's advanced melodic and harmonic concepts applied to a nonet including such musicians as Woody Shaw, Julian Priester, Joe Farrell and Ron Carter. 

The irony of this material lying dormant for 34 years is that this Hill is more commercial; apparently Blue Note didn't agree then but with interest resurging for the idiosyncratic pianist, Passing Ships is available now as a period document, a burning bridge away from '60s progressive jazz. Hill's music doesn't translate very well to a big band, though this may be the strange audio levels and a presumed lack of substantial rehearsal. Howard Johnson's tuba sounds jarring on occasion, Ron Carter is underwhelming, and this is only rookie Lenny White's second session.  Bright spots include the double punch of trumpeters - Shaw and Dizzy Reece, both underappreciated and overshadowed by the era's more strident players. Even more satisfying is how the late Joe Farrell completely takes over, playing no less than five disparate instruments: soprano and tenor sax for lead work, alto flute and bass clarinet for moody ambience and English horn for stylistic filigree. What was originally a curio piece of large ensemble writing by Hill becomes an opportunity to see why everyone was so high on Farrell before he bottomed out on the CTI label in the '70s. Whatever he is playing, the music centers on him, the other musicians granting him well-deserved space.  But if you forget this is an Andrew Hill record, the twists of his compositions remind you. Much of the material is the typical bread-and-water post bop which Blue Note pioneered, Hill's leads calmly flowing through the steep ravine of the horns. Of the seven tunes, three are the length and intellectual meat of the album. The title track features all the perks of Hill's playing: suspensions, ostinatos, thought-provoking dissonances. "Plantation Bag" is quite a funky plantation, Hill's island roots in evidence. "Noon Tide" is the freest, most quintessential Hill piece; one segment demonstrates the subtleties of Hill's accompaniment. As Farrell leads, Hill comps underneath, distinctly changing the feel of the piece five times with his chord voicings. Hill, a product of an era that had many virtuosos, may be able to the most with the least, which is probably why his take on the avant-garde seems less dated than many. While not his best album, and there may be other sessions more deserving of resuscitation, the moments where Hill stretches out and Farrell makes one strong contribution after another make one pine for the days when Blue Notes were the notes. ~ Andrey Henkin https://www.allaboutjazz.com/andrew-hill-passing-ships-by-andrey-henkin.php?width=1920

Personnel:  Andrew Hill - piano;  Ron Carter - bass;  Julian Priester - trombone;  Dizzy Reece - trumpet;  Woody Shaw - trumpet;  Lenny White - drums;  Joe Farrell - bass clarinet, alto flute, English horn, soprano sax, tenor sax;  Bob Northern - French horn;  Howard Johnson - tuba, bass clarinet

Passing Ships

Saturday, August 11, 2018

Dexter Gordon & Slide Hampton - A Day In Copenhagen

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1969
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:57
Size: 113,4 MB
Art: Front

(9:07)  1. My Blues
(5:59)  2. You Don't Know What Love Is
(5:03)  3. A New Thing
(8:00)  4. What's New
(4:57)  5. The Shadow Of Your Smile
(7:48)  6. A Day In Vienna

Unlike many other American expatriates living in Europe, tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon always managed to play and record with the top musicians while overseas. This excellent sextet session (with trombonist Slide Hampton, trumpeter Dizzy Reece, pianist Kenny Drew, bassist Niels Pedersen and drummer Art Taylor) finds him exploring three Slide Hampton compositions and a trio of standard ballads. The other soloists are fine but Gordon easily dominates the set, playing his brand of hard-driving bop.~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/day-in-copenhagen-mw0000649538

Personnel:  Dexter Gordon - tenor saxophone;  Slide Hampton - trombone;  Dizzy Reece - trumpet;  Kenny Drew - piano;  Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen - bass;  Art Taylor - drums

A Day In Copenhagen

Tuesday, September 26, 2017

Dizzy Reece - Asia Minor

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 36:13
Size: 82.9 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1962/1992
Art: Front

[5:26] 1. The Shadow Of Khan
[4:31] 2. The Story Of Love
[5:38] 3. Yamask
[4:37] 4. Spiritus Parkus (Parker's Spiritus)
[7:48] 5. Summertime
[8:11] 6. Ackmet

Baritone Saxophone – Cecil Payne; Bass – Ron Carter; Drums – Charlie Persip; Flute – Joe Farrell; Piano – Hank Jones; Tenor Saxophone – Joe Farrell; Trumpet – Dizzy Reece. Recorded in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey; March 13, 1962.

This is one of trumpeter Dizzy Reece's finest recordings, a well-planned sextet date (reissued on CD) with baritonist Cecil Payne, Joe Farrell on tenor and flute, pianist Hank Jones, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Charlie Persip that is on the level of a Blue Note album. Reece (who contributed three diverse originals) performs mostly minor-toned songs that seem to really inspire the musicians. The solos tend to be concise but quite meaningful, and, overall, this hard bop but occasionally surprising session is quite memorable. Strange that Reece would not get another opportunity to lead a record date until 1970. ~Sxptt Yanow

Asia Minor