Showing posts with label Lucky Thompson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lucky Thompson. Show all posts

Monday, October 21, 2024

Lucky Thompson, Barney Wilen - Four Brothers

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 76:15
Size: 174.5 MB
Styles: Bop, Contemporary jazz
Year: 2015
Art: Front

[6:17] 1. This Here
[3:46] 2. Why Weep
[4:05] 3. Have A Light
[3:16] 4. Oleo
[4:44] 5. I Want To Be Happy
[6:56] 6. Jahrgang'37
[4:20] 7. Autumn Leaves
[4:49] 8. One Last Goodbye
[5:23] 9. Take The A Train
[4:26] 10. Düsseldorf Süd Wuppertal West
[4:13] 11. Iris
[3:49] 12. I Surrender Dear
[6:12] 13. Easy
[5:11] 14. The Mysterioso Mr. X
[4:05] 15. Edith
[4:35] 16. Einsames Mädchen Am Meer

Baritone Saxophone – Helmut Brandt (tracks: 1 to 6, 8 to 14, 16); Bass – Jürgen Ehlers; Drums – Rudy Pronk; Guitar – Larry Atwell (tracks: 1 to 14, 16); Piano – Roland Kovac (tracks: 1 to 7, 9 to 16); Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Barney Wilen (tracks: 1 to 6, 8 to 14, 16), Lucky Thompson (tracks: 1 to 6, 8 to 14, 16); Tenor Saxophone – Bent Jaedig (tracks: 1 to 6, 8 to 14, 16). Recorded November 25, 1960 at Funkhaus Hamburg .

Previously unreleased studio concert from Hamburg in 1960, featuring four jazz saxophone legends: Lucky Thompson (ss/ ts), Barney Wilen (ss/ ts), Helmut Brandt (bars) and Bent Jaedig (ts), recorded with the quartet of Dr. Roland Kovac (p) in a unique workshop. Excellent blend of Modern, Bebop, Cool and Progressive: Full ensemble pieces in a sound made famous by Giuffre's Four Brothers, from original material to standards, plus musical essays in small groups.

Four Brothers mc

Friday, January 20, 2023

Jo Jones - The Essential Jo Jones

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1990
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:28
Size: 180,0 MB
Art: Front

(5:55)  1. Shoe Shine Boy (first take)
(6:33)  2. Lover Man (Oh, Where Can You Be?)
(4:50)  3. Georgia Mae
(4:01)  4. Caravan
(7:50)  5. Lincoln Heights
(6:44)  6. Embraceable You
(5:54)  7. Satin Doll
(5:22)  8. Little Susie
(4:48)  9. Spider Kelly's Blues
(4:03) 10. Cubano Chant
(4:55) 11. Splittin'
(4:42) 12. Sweet Lorraine
(2:40) 13. Bicycle for Two
(6:44) 14. Old Man River
(3:26) 15. Sometimes I'm Happy

Jo Jones, one of the most influential drummers of the swing era, did not lead that many recording sessions of his own during his career. Producer John Hammond gave him his first two dates when he was working for Vanguard and, with the exception of a second take of "Shoe Shine Boy," all of the music from the two LPs is on this single-CD reissue. The first session is very much in the spirit of Count Basie's band; in fact, Basie himself makes a guest appearance on "Shoe Shine Boy." The other swing-oriented players include trumpeter Emmett Berry, guitarist Freddie Green, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson, and (on one song apiece) trombonist Lawrence Brown and clarinetist Rudy Powell. The later date is quite a bit different: a trio session with pianist Ray Bryant and bassist Tommy Bryant. There is a liberal amount of drum soloing but the early versions of Ray Bryant's "Cubano Chant" and "Little Susie" are of greatest interest. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-essential-jo-jones-mw0000644547

Personnel:  Drums – Jo Jones;  Bass – Tommy Bryant, Walter Page;  Clarinet – Rudy Powell;  Guitar – Freddie Green;  Piano – Count Basie, Nat Pierce, Ray Bryant;  Tenor Saxophone – Lucky Thompson;  Trombone – Benny Green, Lawrence Brown;  Trumpet – Emmett Berry    

The Essential Jo Jones

Thursday, March 11, 2021

Lucky Thompson - A Lucky Songbook in Europe

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:22
Size: 91,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:27) 1. Sauvabelin
(5:31) 2. Lady Gail
(3:53) 3. Street of Dreams
(5:45) 4. Soul City
(6:11) 5. Easy Living
(5:18) 6. I Came from Sunday
(6:12) 7. Centre Ville

In 1968, saxophonist Lucky Thompson moved back to Europe with his family after a five-year stay in the States. He settled in Lausanne, Switzerland, which allowed him to tour in European cities where he found the most work. A year later, in March 1969, he recorded A Lucky Songbook in Europe for MPS, one of the Continent’s great labels. The album would become one of Thompson’s finest works. Lucky Thompson’s first trip to Europe came in 1956, when he relocated to Paris. While he was there, he joined the reed section of Stan Kenton’s orchestra when Kenton was short a baritone saxophonist after Jack Nimitz failed to make the trans-Atlantic tour. When the Kenton orchestra returned to the States, Thompson recorded with the band on Cuban Fire starting in May. Overall, the tour was a rather awkward fit for Thompson, since by the 1950s, his instrumental poetry was better suited to smaller ensembles. The blessing for Thompson is that he fell hard for European life. He returned to Paris for an extended stay in ’57, which enabled him to play the city’s many clubs and tour regionally. He remained in Paris until late 1962, when he moved back to the States before his move to Switzerland in ’68.

If you look at Thompson’s years of migration, he couldn’t have picked worse times to relocate. He left the States in ’57 just as jazz recording was picking up following the release of the 12-inch LP in 1956 and launch of stereo in 1958. Then he returned to the States at the dawn of the pop-rock era, when recording work and gigs were drying up for jazz artists who weren’t household names or studio musicians. On the other hand, Thompson seemed to suffer from mental illness and depression, so a more tranquil, integrated environment with access to healthcare surely meant more than hustling for scraps of opportunity. The good news for Lucky is that Europe was his oyster and he was highly appreciated there, which kept him busy. He also was more comfortable in Europe as a creative artist. But as a result of his detachment from the U.S. jazz scene, Thompson was one of only a few jazz giants who really can’t be classified as a member of one jazz school or another. In essence, if you combine the toughness of Coleman Hawkins and relaxed tones and agility of Lester Young, you’d probably come close to Thompson’s sound. [Photo above of Lucky Thompson and British pianist Stan Tracey]

Thompson also was magnificently inventive as a composer and particularly graceful and slippery on song introductions and improvisational passages. He had great training. Thompson had worked with Count Basie in 1944 and ’45 and then Boyd Raeburn in ’45, two challenging bands. He also worked and recorded with plenty of small groups, including dates with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. On March 13, 1969, after a flurry of written pleas by the team at MPS in Germany, Thompson finally agreed to record an album for the label at its studios in Villingen, in the Black Forest. Thompson, it turns out, was a perfectionist and something of a gentle control freak. According to the original liner notes for A Lucky Songbook in Europe by album producer Joachim Berendt (above), Thompson hand-picked each musician and insisted they be on the date. The album featured Lucky Thompson (ts,sop), Fats Sadi (vib,bgo), Ingfried Hoffman (org), Rene Thomas (g), Eberhard Weber (b) and Stu Martin (d). Guitarist Rene Thomas (above) and vibist Fats Sadi were Belgians and essential, Thompson said. In a series of letters between Thompson and MPS, Thompson said of Thomas, “Rene is very much worthy of the wonderful comments I had heard about him.” And of Sadi: “He is a must for our session. For not only does he come fully prepared to give 100% of himself but he is always in full possession of a big humor and great spirit.”

Five of the seven songs recorded for A Lucky Songbook in Europe were originals by Thompson while two Street of Dreams and Easy Living were standards. Thompson plays soprano sax on four of the tracks Lady Gail, Street of Dreams, Soul City and Easy Listening and tenor on the balance. Thompson took up the soprano sax during his first European stay between 1957 and late 1962. For the original album, Lucky wrote notes explaining his choices for each song. Perhaps the most telling and revealing were his comments for Sauvabelin: “Sauvabelin is the name of a very beautiful park here in Lausanne, where I often go, and especially so during some of my most depressing moments. For it is there I can be completely sure to find some real friends, who unfortunately are better known as animals. As as a personal gesture for their friendship and the many moments of happiness they always give to me, I composed Sauvabelin, which I do sincerely hope shall please them.” This is an extraordinary album, and I spent much of the weekend listening to it over and over again while writing. There isn’t a bad note or a dull phrase on the entire session. It’s just Lucky Thompson in all his glory recorded by a label that truly understood him and the nuances of jazz. https://jazz.fm/lucky-thompson-on-mps/

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Lucky Thompson; Bass – Eberhard Weber; Bongos, Congas, Vibraphone – Sadi; Guitar – René Thomas; Organ – Ingfried Hoffmann

A Lucky Songbook in Europe

Sunday, June 10, 2018

Lucky Thompson - Accent on Tenor Sax

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:00
Size: 132,9 MB
Art: Front

( 6:25)  1. Tune For Tex
( 6:24)  2. Where Or When
( 8:05)  3. Mr. E-Z
(13:13)  4. Kamman's A'Comin'
( 7:33)  5. Ever So Easy
( 3:20)  6. Salute To Charlie Parker
( 4:18)  7. Mood Indigo
( 5:02)  8. Easy To Love
( 3:35)  9. Prelude To A Mood

Born in Columbia, SC, on June 16, 1924, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson bridged the gap between the physical dynamism of swing and the cerebral intricacies of bebop, emerging as one of his instrument's foremost practitioners and a stylist par excellence. Eli Thompson's lifelong nickname the byproduct of a jersey, given him by his father, with the word "lucky" stitched across the chest -- would prove bitterly inappropriate: when he was five, his mother died, and the remainder of his childhood, spent largely in Detroit, was devoted to helping raise his younger siblings. Thompson loved music, but without hope of acquiring an instrument of his own, he ran errands to earn enough money to purchase an instructional book on the saxophone, complete with fingering chart. He then carved imitation lines and keys into a broom handle, teaching himself to read music years before he ever played an actual sax. According to legend, Thompson finally received his own saxophone by accident a delivery company mistakenly dropped one off at his home along with some furniture, and after graduating high school and working briefly as a barber, he signed on with Erskine Hawkins' 'Bama State Collegians, touring with the group until 1943, when he joined Lionel Hampton and settled in New York City. Soon after his arrival in the Big Apple, Thompson was tapped to replace Ben Webster during his regular gig at the 52nd Street club the Three Deuces Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Art Tatum were all in attendance at Thompson's debut gig, and while he deemed the performance a disaster (a notorious perfectionist, he was rarely if ever pleased with his work), he nevertheless quickly earned the respect of his peers and became a club fixture. 

After a stint with bassist Slam Stewart, Thompson again toured with Hampton before joining singer Billy Eckstine's short-lived big band that included Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Blakey in other words, the crucible of bebop. But although he played on some of the earliest and most influential bop dates, Thompson never fit squarely within the movement's paradigm his playing boasted an elegance and formal power all his own, with an emotional depth rare among the tenor greats of his generation. He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in late 1944, exiting the following year while in Los Angeles and remaining there until 1946, in the interim playing on and arranging a series of dates for the Exclusive label. Thompson returned to the road when Gillespie hired him to replace Parker in their epochal combo he also played on Parker's landmark March 28, 1946, session for Dial, and that same year was a member of the Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette-led Stars of Swing which, sadly, never recorded. More...Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/artist/lucky-thompson-mn0000302799/biography             

Personnel: Lucky Thompson (tenor sax), Jimmy Hamilton (clarinet), Billy Taylor (piano), Sidney Gross (guitar on #1-3), Oscar Pettiford (bass), Osie Johnson (drums).

Accent on Tenor Sax

Friday, February 9, 2018

Jimmy Cleveland - Introducing Jimmy Cleveland & His All Stars

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:30
Size: 127.1 MB
Styles: Bop, Swing
Year: 1955/2007
Art: Front

[5:46] 1. Hear Ye! Hear Ye!
[4:59] 2. You Don't Know What Love Is
[4:25] 3. Vixen
[4:00] 4. My One And Only Love
[7:39] 5. Little Beaver
[3:29] 6. Love Is Here To Stay
[6:33] 7. Count 'em
[5:38] 8. Bone Brother
[4:11] 9. I Hadn't Anyone Till You
[5:15] 10. See Minor
[3:29] 11. Love Is Here To Stay (Alternate Version)

Baritone Saxophone – Cecil Payne; Bass – Oscar Pettiford, Paul Chambers (3); Drums – Max Roach, Osie Johnson; Guitar – Barry Galbraith; Piano – Hank Jones, John Williams; Tenor Saxophone – Lucky Thompson; Trombone – Jimmy Cleveland; Trumpet – Ernie Royal. First session August 4, 1955; Second session August 12, 1955; Third session November 22, 1955.

The first of five albums headed by trombonist Jimmy Cleveland during 1955-1959 (he has not led any since), this out of print LP (which was reissued by Trip in the 1970s) features Cleveland in medium-size groups with trumpeter Ernie Royal; either Lucky Thompson or Jerome Richardson on tenor; baritonist Cecil Payne; Hank Jones, John Williams, or Wade Legge on piano; Barry Galbraith, Paul Chambers, or Oscar Pettiford on bass; and either Max Roach, Osie Johnson, or Joe Harris on drums. The all-star cast interprets a variety of Quincy Jones arrangements, alternating standards with lesser-known originals, and although many of his sidemen get fine spots, Cleveland generally wins solo honors. ~Scott Yanow

Introducing Jimmy Cleveland & His All Stars mc
Introducing Jimmy Cleveland & His All Stars zippy

Friday, September 1, 2017

Miles Davis All Stars - Walkin'

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:27
Size: 85.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Trumpet jazz
Year: 1957/2014
Art: Front

[13:21] 1. Walkin'
[ 8:13] 2. Blue 'n' Boogie
[ 4:39] 3. Solar
[ 4:19] 4. You Don't Know What Love Is
[ 6:52] 5. Love Me Or Leave Me

Alto Saxophone – Davey Schildkraut; Bass – Percy Heath; Drums – Kenny Clarke; Piano – Horace Silver; Tenor Saxophone – Lucky Thompson; Trombone – Jay Jay Johnson; Trumpet – Miles Davis.

The undeniable strength and conviction present in Miles Davis' performance on Walkin', underscores the urgency and passion with which he would rightfully reclaim his status as a primary architect of bop. Davis is supported by his all-stars, consisting of his primary rhythm unit: Horace Silver (piano), Percy Heath (bass), and Kenny Clarke (drums). The sextet featured on the title track, as well as "Blue 'n' Boogie," adds the talents of J.J. Johnson (trombone) and Lucky Thompson (tenor sax). Davis' quintet includes the primary trio and Dave Schildkraut (alto sax). Perhaps not an instantly recognizable name, Schildkraut nonetheless made some notable contributions to Stan Kenton's Kenton Showcase EPs, concurrent with his work with Miles. Walkin' commences with the extended title track, which follows a standard 12-bar blues theme. While the solos from Johnson and Thomson are unique, Miles retains a palpable sense of extrication from the music -- as if the song was an extension of his solo instead of the other way around. The lethargic rhythms reiterate the subtle adornments of the horn section to the basic trio. In direct contrast to "Walkin'" is a full-tilt jumper, "Blue 'n' Boogie." The improvisation yields some truly memorable solos and exchanges between Davis and Johnson -- who can be heard clearly quoting from Thelonious Monk's "Rhythm-A-Ning." "Solar" maintains a healthy tempo while drawing the listener in to the delicate interplay where the solos often dictate the melody. Horace Silver's piano solo is Ellington-esque in it's subdued elegance. The final track, "Love Me or Leave Me," gives the most solid indication of the direction Miles' impending breakthrough would take. So swift and certain is each note of his solo, it reflects the accuracy of someone thinking several notes ahead of what he is playing. Walking is a thoroughly solid effort. ~Lindsay Planer

Walkin'

Saturday, June 3, 2017

Benny Carter - All Of Me

Styles: Saxophone, Clarinet And Trumpet Jazz 
Year: 1991
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:16
Size: 147,2 MB
Art: Front

(3:22)  1. All Of Me
(2:46)  2. Cuddle Up
(3:16)  3. Ev'ry Goodbye Ain't Gone
(3:09)  4. Babalu
(3:20)  5. Midnight
(3:08)  6. My Favorite Blues
(3:10)  7. Lullaby To A Dream
(3:04)  8. What A Difference A Day Made
(2:47)  9. Sunday
(3:05) 10. Ill Wind [alt. take]
(2:56) 11. Back Bay Boogie
(2:51) 12. Tree Of Hope
(2:52) 13. 35th And Calumet
(2:56) 14. The Sheik Of Araby
(2:46) 15. Push Out
(3:22) 16. Confessin'
(3:17) 17. Boulevard Bounce
(3:40) 18. The Lonely Beat
(2:05) 19. The Mugger
(2:28) 20. The Jukebox
(2:46) 21. Phantom Raiders

A strong sampling of Benny Carter's music is heard in this hodgepodge CD reissue. Twelve of the altoist's 16 Bluebird big-band recordings of 1940-41 (including a previously unissued version of "Ill Wind") precede nine titles gathered from a wide variety of sessions with one song apiece taken from dates led by Mezz Mezzrow, Willie Bryant, Ethel Waters, Artie Shaw and Lucky Thompson and four performances reissued from Carter's soundtrack album of his score for the M Squad in 1959. Obviously not a set recommended to completists (the European Classics series is much preferred), the high quality of the music ("All of Me" has a classic Carter arrangement) makes this a worthwhile purchase for more casual collectors. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/all-of-me-mw0000674400

Personnel: Benny Carter (alto saxophone, clarinet, trumpet), Ethel Waters (vocals), Bud Freeman, Ben Webster, Lucky Thompson (tenor saxophone), Doc Cheatham, Henry "Red" Allen (trumpet), Teddy Wilson (piano), Barney Kessel (guitar), Red Callender, Milt Hinton (bass), Chick Webb (drums).

All Of Me

Wednesday, April 19, 2017

Lucky Thompson - Tricotism

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 66:00
Size: 151,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:57)  1. Bo-Bi My Boy
(3:51)  2. OP Meets LT
(4:34)  3. Tricotism
(4:31)  4. Deep Passion
(4:03)  5. Old Reliable
(4:02)  6. Translation
(5:01)  7. Tom-Kattin'
(5:11)  8. A Lady's Vanity
(3:09)  9. Dancing Sunbeam
(3:32) 10. Mister Man
(4:45) 11. The Plain But the Simple Truth
(2:49) 12. Little Tenderfoot
(4:03) 13. Once There Was
(4:38) 14. N R #1
(3:11) 15. N R #2
(4:33) 16. Good Luck

Lucky Thompson creates a host of spectacular improvisations on the 16 songs on this wonderful CD reissue. It is comprised of two 1956 sessions; one features Thompson heading a trio backed by bassist Oscar Pettiford and guitarist Skeeter Best, and the other has him heading either a quartet or quintet including the great trombonist Jimmy Cleveland. Cleveland's smooth, superbly articulated phrases and statements rank alongside Thompson's gliding lines in their brilliance, and pianist Hank Jones (on three cuts) also sparkles with some marvelous solos. 

But Thompson is the star on this date, his elegant yet robust and exuberant playing demonstrating again what a loss his voluntary departure from the scene has constituted. ~ Ron Wynn http://www.allmusic.com/album/tricotism-mw0000105728

Personnel:  Lucky Thompson - tenor sax;  Jimmy Cleveland – trombone;  Hank Jones, Don Abney – piano;  Skeeter Best – guitar;  Oscar Pettiford – bass;  Osie Johnson - drums

Tricotism

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Lucky Thompson - Lucky Strikes

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1964
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:51
Size: 91,9 MB
Art: Front

(5:52)  1. In a Sentimental Mood
(4:04)  2. Fly With the Wind
(5:11)  3. Mid-Nite Oil
(4:07)  4. Reminiscent
(4:51)  5. Mumble Neua
(6:40)  6. I Forgot to Remember
(4:08)  7. Prey-Loot
(4:55)  8. Invitation

This CD reissue serves as a perfect introduction to the talents of the underrated saxophonist Lucky Thompson. Heard on four songs apiece on tenor and soprano (he was one of the first bop-oriented soprano players), Thompson plays two standards and six originals in a quartet with pianist Hank Jones, bassist Richard Davis, and drummer Connie Kay. The playing time on this straight reissue of an earlier LP is a bit brief (just over 38 minutes), but the quality is quite high. Thompson's soprano solos in particular are quite memorable. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/lucky-strikes-mw0000649753

Personnel: Lucky Thompson (soprano & tenor saxophones); Hank Jones (piano); Richard Davis (bass); Connie Kay (drums).

Lucky Strikes

Tuesday, February 14, 2017

Charlie Parker - Newly Discovered Sides By The Immortal Charlie Parker

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:15
Size: 105.9 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 1993/2009
Art: Front

[5:22] 1. 52nd Street Theme
[4:44] 2. A Night In Tunisia
[3:56] 3. Slow Boat To China
[5:00] 4. Groovin' High
[4:42] 5. Big Foot
[4:23] 6. Hot House
[3:18] 7. Out Of Nowhere
[5:05] 8. Oop-Bop-Sh'bam
[4:38] 9. East Of The Sun
[5:02] 10. Jumpin' With Symphony Sid Be-Bop

Alto Saxophone – Charlie Parker; Bass – Tommy Porter; Drums – Max Roach; Tenor Saxophone – Lucky Thompson; Trumpet – Kenny Dorham, Miles Davis; Vibraphone – Milt Jackson.

These are radio show transcriptions from 1948-49, when Parker ruled at Manhattan's Royal Roost joint. Although the recording quality isn't superb, some of the tracks come off really well. Charlie plays with a very young Miles Davis on trumpet. Max Roach is the drummer on some tunes, Tadd Dameron is on piano and Milt Jackson makes a guest appearance.

Charlie was born in KC in 1920, got his professional start there as a teen, and was buried there 34 years later after shaking up jazz in a major way. ~William E. Adams

Newly Discovered Sides By The Immortal Charlie Parker

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Milt Jackson - The Jazz Skyline

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:26
Size: 85.7 MB
Styles: Bop, Vibraphone jazz
Year: 1956/1986/2009
Art: Front

[7:46] 1. Lover
[4:36] 2. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
[7:18] 3. The Lady Is A Tramp
[6:38] 4. Angel Face
[7:14] 5. Sometimes I'm Happy
[3:51] 6. What's New

Milt Jackson - vibraphone; Lucky Thomson - tenor-saxophone; Hank Jones - piano; Wendell Marshall - bass; Kenny Clarke - drums.

This session has interest as an example of Milt Jackson's mid-'50s work in a non-Modern Jazz Quartet context. And despite the many critical assertions that the vibist was restrained by pianist John Lewis' direction, his playing here revealed no marked changed. The overall feel of the group (Lucky Thompson, tenor sax; Hank Jones, piano; Wendell Marshall; bass, Kenny Clarke, drums; Jackson, vibes), however, was somewhat more dynamic than that of The MJQ, as Clarke and Jones generally achieved a greater sense of forward momentum than Connie Kay or Lewis. ~Bob Rusch

The Jazz Skyline

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Lucky Thompson - Bop & Ballads

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:23
Size: 97,5 MB
Art: Front

(3:42)  1. Summertime
(3:23)  2. Thin Ice
(5:20)  3. Lover Man
(5:03)  4. Jeannie
(3:52)  5. Deep Passion
(4:03)  6. Brother Bob
(5:12)  7. Yesterdays
(4:05)  8. Cherokee
(4:39)  9. The World Awakes
(3:00) 10. Star Eyes

Born in Columbia, SC, on June 16, 1924, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson bridged the gap between the physical dynamism of swing and the cerebral intricacies of bebop, emerging as one of his instrument's foremost practitioners and a stylist par excellence. Eli Thompson's lifelong nickname the byproduct of a jersey, given him by his father, with the word "lucky" stitched across the chest -- would prove bitterly inappropriate: when he was five, his mother died, and the remainder of his childhood, spent largely in Detroit, was devoted to helping raise his younger siblings. Thompson loved music, but without hope of acquiring an instrument of his own, he ran errands to earn enough money to purchase an instructional book on the saxophone, complete with fingering chart. He then carved imitation lines and keys into a broom handle, teaching himself to read music years before he ever played an actual sax. According to legend, Thompson finally received his own saxophone by accident a delivery company mistakenly dropped one off at his home along with some furniture, and after graduating high school and working briefly as a barber, he signed on with Erskine Hawkins' 'Bama State Collegians, touring with the group until 1943, when he joined Lionel Hampton and settled in New York City. Soon after his arrival in the Big Apple, Thompson was tapped to replace Ben Webster during his regular gig at the 52nd Street club the Three Deuces Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Art Tatum were all in attendance at Thompson's debut gig, and while he deemed the performance a disaster (a notorious perfectionist, he was rarely if ever pleased with his work), he nevertheless quickly earned the respect of his peers and became a club fixture. After a stint with bassist Slam Stewart, Thompson again toured with Hampton before joining singer Billy Eckstine's short-lived big band that included Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Blakey in other words, the crucible of bebop. But although he played on some of the earliest and most influential bop dates, Thompson never fit squarely within the movement's paradigm his playing boasted an elegance and formal power all his own, with an emotional depth rare among the tenor greats of his generation. He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in late 1944, exiting the following year while in Los Angeles and remaining there until 1946, in the interim playing on and arranging a series of dates for the Exclusive label. Thompson returned to the road when Gillespie hired him to replace Parker in their epochal combo he also played on Parker's landmark March 28, 1946, session for Dial, and that same year was a member of the Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette-led Stars of Swing which, sadly, never recorded.

Thompson returned to New York in 1947, leading his own band at the famed Savoy Ballroom. The following year, he made his European debut at the Nice Jazz Festival, and went on to feature on sessions headlined by Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis (the seminal Walkin'). Backed by a group dubbed the Lucky Seven that included trumpeter Harold Johnson and altoist Jimmy Powell, Thompson cut his first studio session as a leader on August 14, 1953, returning the following March 2. For the most part he remained a sideman for the duration of his career, however, enjoying a particularly fruitful collaboration with Milt Jackson that yielded several LPs during the mid-'50s. But many musicians, not to mention industry executives, found Thompson difficult to deal with he was notoriously outspoken about what he considered the unfair power wielded over the jazz business by record labels, music publishers, and booking agents, and in February 1956 he sought to escape these "vultures" by relocating his family to Paris. Two months later he joined Stan Kenton's French tour, even returning to the U.S. with Kenton's group, but he soon found himself blacklisted by Louis Armstrong's manager, Joe Glaser, after a bizarre conflict with the beloved jazz pioneer over which musician should be the first to leave their plane after landing. Without steady work, he returned to Paris, cutting several sessions with producer Eddie Barclay. Thompson remained in France until 1962, returning to New York and a year later headlining the Prestige LP Plays Jerome Kern and No More, which featured pianist Hank Jones. Around this same time his wife died, and in addition to struggling to raise their children on his own, Thompson's old battles with the jazz power structure also remained, and in 1966 he formally announced his retirement in the pages of Down Beat magazine. Within a few months he returned to active duty, but remained frustrated with the industry and his own ability during the March 20, 1968, date captured on the Candid CD Lord, Lord Am I Ever Gonna Know?, he says "I feel I have only scratched the surface of what I know I am capable of doing." From late 1968 to 1970, Thompson lived in Lausanne, Switzerland, touring widely across Europe before returning the U.S., where he taught music at Dartmouth University and in 1973 led his final recording, I Offer You. The remaining decades of Thompson's life are in large part a mystery he spent several years living on Ontario's Manitoulin Island before relocating to Savannah, GA, trading his saxophones in exchange for dental work. He eventually migrated to the Pacific Northwest, and after a long period of homelessness checked into Seattle's Columbia City Assisted Living Center in 1994. Thompson remained in assisted care until his death on July 30, 2005. ~ Jason Ankeny http://www.allmusic.com/artist/lucky-thompson-mn0000302799/biography

Personnel:  Lucky Thompson – ts, ss;  Michael Naura – p;  Hajo Lange – b;  Heinz von Moisy – d;  Guests:  Hans Koller (3, 4, 7-9) – ts;  Georges Grenu (3, 4, 7-9) – ts;  Klaus Marmulla – as;  Helmut Reinhardt (3, 4, 7-9) – bars;  Jimmy Gourley (1, 2, 5, 6, 10) – g;  Wolfgang Schlüter – vib, perc

Bop & Ballads

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Thelonious Monk - 'Round Midnight: The Complete Blue Note Singles 1947-1952 (2-Disc Set)

Alto Saxophone – Danny Quebec West, Lou Donaldson, Sahib Shihab; Bass – Al McKibbon, Robert Paige, Gene Ramey, John Simmons, Nelson Boyd; Drums – Art Blakey, Max Roach, Shadow Wilson; Piano – Thelonious Monk; Tenor Saxophone – Billy Smith, Lucky Thompson; Trumpet – George Taitt, Idrees Sulieman, Kenny Dorham; Vibraphone – Milt Jackson; Vocals – Kenny 'Pancho' Hagood.

This collection presents for the first time Monk’s Blue Note recordings in their original 78 rpm sequence of release, adding as bonus tracks the alternate takes that appeared on later LP and CD releases.

The two-disc Thelonious Monk anthology, 2014's 'Round Midnight: The Complete Blue Note Singles (1947-1952)), compiles all of the influential jazz pianist’s original 78 rpm singles released on the storied Blue Note label. These are Monk's first recordings under his own name, leading a group (not his debut recordings as a sideman with Coleman Hawkins). All of these recordings were later collected on various albums including Genius of Modern Music, Vol. 1., and other anthologies. Here, they are presented in chronological order and with alternate takes. Recorded in six separate sessions beginning in October of 1947 and ending in May of 1952, these sides showcase many of the songs Monk composed, and which would quickly become part of the jazz canon. Included are "Evidence," "Mysterioso," "Well, You Needn't," and others. While the focal point of these albums is Monk's innovative use of dissonance and unexpected, angular melodicism, the recordings also benefit from a veritable who's-who of modern jazz of the period. Backing Monk here, variously, are such luminaries as drummers Art Blakey and Max Roach, vibraphonist Milt Jackson, trumpeters Kenny Dorham and Idrees Sulieman, saxophonists Lou Donaldson and Lucky Thompson, and many more. While these recordings are widely available, it's both historically enlightening and aesthetically pleasing to have them collected so thoughtfully here. ~Matt Collar

Album: 'Round Midnight: The Complete Blue Note Singles 1947-1952 (Disc 1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:10
Size: 172.1 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2014

[2:57] 1. Thelonious
[2:59] 2. Suburban Eyes
[3:09] 3. 'round Midnight
[2:57] 4. Well, You Needn't
[3:01] 5. Evonce
[2:59] 6. Off Minor
[2:54] 7. In Walked Bud
[3:04] 8. Epistrophy
[3:11] 9. Ruby, My Dear
[2:30] 10. Evidence
[2:51] 11. Humph
[3:19] 12. Misterioso
[2:55] 13. All The Things You Are
[2:59] 14. I Should Care
[2:43] 15. I Mean You
[3:06] 16. Monk's Mood
[2:40] 17. Who Knows
[2:59] 18. Nice Work If You Can Get It
[3:19] 19. April In Paris
[3:26] 20. Four In One
[2:55] 21. Straight, No Chaser
[2:54] 22. Criss-Cross
[3:02] 23. Eronel
[3:13] 24. Ask Me Now
[3:00] 25. Willow Weep For Me 

Round Midnight: The Complete Blue Note Singles 1947-1952 (Disc 1)

Album: 'Round Midnight: The Complete Blue Note Singles 1947-1952 (Disc 2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 70:13
Size: 160.8 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[2:58] 1. Skippy
[3:46] 2. Let's Cool One
[3:11] 3. Hornin' In
[3:25] 4. Carolina Moon
[3:00] 5. Evonce
[2:54] 6. Suburban Eyes
[2:59] 7. Nice Work If You Can Get It
[3:04] 8. Ruby, My Dear
[2:53] 9. Well, You Needn't
[2:40] 10. April in Paris
[3:10] 11. Introspection
[2:43] 12. Who Knows
[3:00] 13. I Should Care
[2:42] 14. Misterioso
[3:26] 15. Four in One
[2:47] 16. Criss-Cross
[4:26] 17. Ask Me Now
[3:06] 18. Skippy
[3:05] 19. Hornin' In
[3:26] 20. Sixteen
[3:38] 21. Sixteen
[3:44] 22. I'll Follow You

Round Midnight: The Complete Blue Note Singles 1947-1952 (Disc 2)

Saturday, July 23, 2016

Lucky Thompson, Gigi Gryce - Street Scenes

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 67:01
Size: 159,0 MB
Art: Front

(2:41)  1. Quick as a Flash
(2:14)  2. The Parisian Knights
(2:59)  3. Street Scene
(3:16)  4. Angel Eyes
(3:12)  5. To You Dear One
(4:00)  6. But Not For Tonight
(3:00)  7. A Distant Sound
(2:51)  8. Once Upon a Time
(3:01)  9. Still Waters
(3:08) 10. Theme for a Brown Rose
(3:32) 11. A Sunkissed Rose
(3:44) 12. Portrait of Django
(4:16) 13. Paris the Beautiful
(2:52) 14. Purple Shades
(3:36) 15. La Rose Noire
(3:34) 16. Anne Marie
(4:20) 17. Hello
(3:57) 18. Evening in Paris
(3:59) 19. Strike up the Band
(2:40) 20. Serenade to Sonny

Tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson recorded enough material as a leader during the first half of 1956 (mostly in Paris) to fill up 12 LPs. This CD has music from two of his rarer sessions, featuring Thompson playing 12 songs (ten of which are his originals) with a French octet that includes pianist Martial Solal and some fine sidemen; these sessions were last available as the Xanadu LP Brown Rose. Thompson's warm tenor is well showcased at a variety of tempoes during the high-quality music. None of the songs caught on but the performances are quite enjoyable. In addition, this CD reissue features altoist Gigi Gryce on six numbers cut in France in 1953 when he was touring with Lionel Hampton's Orchestra; those selections are from the same sessions that resulted in classic recordings by trumpeter Clifford Brown although Brownie (who appears on one of these numbers) is not heard from here. The CD concludes with two selections from the same period featuring the young trumpeter Art Farmer in a sextet/septet with trombonist Jimmy Cleveland and altoist Anthony Ortega. Although not essential, this reissue is easily recommended to collectors of 1950s straightahead jazz. ~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/lucky-thompson-and-gigi-gryce-in-paris-mw0000172915

Featuring : Gigi Gryce (saxophone), Lucky Thompson (saxophone), Art Farmer (trumpet), Quincy Jones (trumpet), Anthony Ortega (saxophone), Martial Solal (piano)

Street Scenes

Monday, December 28, 2015

Stan Kenton - Cuban Fire!

Styles: Piano Jazz, Latin Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 54:06
Size: 125,0 MB
Art: Front

(6:02)  1. Fuego Cubano (Cuban Fire)
(5:53)  2. El Congo Valiente (Valiant Congo)
(5:01)  3. Recuerdos (Reminiscences)
(4:49)  4. Quien Sabe (Who Knows)
(5:09)  5. La Quera Baila (The Fair One Dances)
(4:20)  6. La Suerte De Los Tontos (Fortune Of Fools)
(2:59)  7. Tres Corazones (Three Hearts)
(3:51)  8. Malibu Moonlight
(4:34)  9. El Panzon
(5:22) 10. Carnival
(3:05) 11. Wagon
(2:56) 12. Early Hours (Lady Luck)

This CD contains one of the classic Stan Kenton albums, a six-part suite composed and arranged by Johnny Richards. The Kenton orchestra was expanded to 27 pieces for these dates including six percussionists, two French horns and six trumpets. With such soloists as tenor-great Lucky Thompson (on "Fuego Cubano,") trombonist Carl Fontana, altoist Lennie Niehaus, Bill Perkins on tenor and trumpeters Sam Noto and Vinnie Tanno, and plenty of raging ensembles, this is one of Stan Kenton's more memorable concept albums of the 1950s. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/cuban-fire!-mw0000264239

Personnel : Stan Kenton (piano);  Lennie Neihaus, Gene Baltazar (alto saxophone);  Bill Perkins, Lucky Thompson (tenor saxophone);  Billy Root, Marvin Holliday (baritone saxophone);  Ed Leddy, Sam Noto, Lee Katzman, Phil Gilbert, Al Mattaliano (trumpets); Vinnie Tano (trumpet, flugelhorn); Bob Fitzpatrick, Carl Fontana, Kent Larsen (trombone); Irving Rosenthal, Julius Watikins (French horn); Jay McAllister (tuba); Gene Roland (mellophonium); Ralph Blaze (guitar); Curtis Counce, Pete Chivily (bass); Art Anton, Mel Lewis (drums); Tommy Lopez, George Acevedo (congas); George Laguna (timbales); Roger Mozian (claves); Mario Alvarez (maracas).

Cuban Fire!

Friday, September 25, 2015

Lucky Thompson - Love Ya

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 75:36
Size: 173.1 MB
Styles: Saxophone jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[6:25] 1. Let's Try Again
[3:22] 2. I Cover The Waterfront
[4:51] 3. You Got To My Head
[4:04] 4. Easy Going
[6:40] 5. Soul In 3 4
[4:13] 6. My Funny Valentine
[3:14] 7. Angel Eyes
[7:06] 8. One For The Boys And Us
[4:13] 9. I Should Care
[3:30] 10. A Sunkissed Rose
[3:47] 11. Home Free
[4:14] 12. Paris The Beautiful
[8:16] 13. Now's The Time
[3:41] 14. Portrait Of Django
[3:58] 15. But Not For Tonight
[3:56] 16. Lullaby Of The Leaves

Born in Columbia, SC, on June 16, 1924, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson bridged the gap between the physical dynamism of swing and the cerebral intricacies of bebop, emerging as one of his instrument's foremost practitioners and a stylist par excellence. Eli Thompson's lifelong nickname -- the byproduct of a jersey, given him by his father, with the word "lucky" stitched across the chest -- would prove bitterly inappropriate: when he was five, his mother died, and the remainder of his childhood, spent largely in Detroit, was devoted to helping raise his younger siblings. Thompson loved music, but without hope of acquiring an instrument of his own, he ran errands to earn enough money to purchase an instructional book on the saxophone, complete with fingering chart. He then carved imitation lines and keys into a broom handle, teaching himself to read music years before he ever played an actual sax. According to legend, Thompson finally received his own saxophone by accident -- a delivery company mistakenly dropped one off at his home along with some furniture, and after graduating high school and working briefly as a barber, he signed on with Erskine Hawkins' 'Bama State Collegians, touring with the group until 1943, when he joined Lionel Hampton and settled in New York City.

Soon after his arrival in the Big Apple, Thompson was tapped to replace Ben Webster during his regular gig at the 52nd Street club the Three Deuces -- Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Art Tatum were all in attendance at Thompson's debut gig, and while he deemed the performance a disaster (a notorious perfectionist, he was rarely if ever pleased with his work), he nevertheless quickly earned the respect of his peers and became a club fixture. After a stint with bassist Slam Stewart, Thompson again toured with Hampton before joining singer Billy Eckstine's short-lived big band that included Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Blakey -- in other words, the crucible of bebop. But although he played on some of the earliest and most influential bop dates, Thompson never fit squarely within the movement's paradigm -- his playing boasted an elegance and formal power all his own, with an emotional depth rare among the tenor greats of his generation. He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in late 1944, exiting the following year while in Los Angeles and remaining there until 1946, in the interim playing on and arranging a series of dates for the Exclusive label. Thompson returned to the road when Gillespie hired him to replace Parker in their epochal combo -- he also played on Parker's landmark March 28, 1946, session for Dial, and that same year was a member of the Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette-led Stars of Swing which, sadly, never recorded.

Thompson returned to New York in 1947, leading his own band at the famed Savoy Ballroom. The following year, he made his European debut at the Nice Jazz Festival, and went on to feature on sessions headlined by Thelonious Monk and Miles Davis (the seminal Walkin'). Backed by a group dubbed the Lucky Seven that included trumpeter Harold Johnson and altoist Jimmy Powell, Thompson cut his first studio session as a leader on August 14, 1953, returning the following March 2. For the most part he remained a sideman for the duration of his career, however, enjoying a particularly fruitful collaboration with Milt Jackson that yielded several LPs during the mid-'50s. But many musicians, not to mention industry executives, found Thompson difficult to deal with -- he was notoriously outspoken about what he considered the unfair power wielded over the jazz business by record labels, music publishers, and booking agents, and in February 1956 he sought to escape these "vultures" by relocating his family to Paris. Two months later he joined Stan Kenton's French tour, even returning to the U.S. with Kenton's group, but he soon found himself blacklisted by Louis Armstrong's manager, Joe Glaser, after a bizarre conflict with the beloved jazz pioneer over which musician should be the first to leave their plane after landing. Without steady work, he returned to Paris, cutting several sessions with producer Eddie Barclay.

Thompson remained in France until 1962, returning to New York and a year later headlining the Prestige LP Plays Jerome Kern and No More, which featured pianist Hank Jones. Around this same time his wife died, and in addition to struggling to raise their children on his own, Thompson's old battles with the jazz power structure also remained, and in 1966 he formally announced his retirement in the pages of Down Beat magazine. Within a few months he returned to active duty, but remained frustrated with the industry and his own ability -- during the March 20, 1968, date captured on the Candid CD Lord, Lord Am I Ever Gonna Know?, he says "I feel I have only scratched the surface of what I know I am capable of doing." From late 1968 to 1970, Thompson lived in Lausanne, Switzerland, touring widely across Europe before returning the U.S., where he taught music at Dartmouth University and in 1973 led his final recording, I Offer You. The remaining decades of Thompson's life are in large part a mystery -- he spent several years living on Ontario's Manitoulin Island before relocating to Savannah, GA, trading his saxophones in exchange for dental work. He eventually migrated to the Pacific Northwest, and after a long period of homelessness checked into Seattle's Columbia City Assisted Living Center in 1994. Thompson remained in assisted care until his death on July 30, 2005. ~bio by Jason Ankeny

Love Ya

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

Lucky Thompson - Rhythm Is A Rift

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 63:51
Size: 146.2 MB
Styles: Bop, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2014
Art: Front

[3:01] 1. From Dixieland To Bop
[2:43] 2. Sugar Hips
[2:33] 3. Flamingo
[2:52] 4. Why Not
[2:53] 5. The Scene Is Clean
[3:10] 6. No-Good Man Blues
[5:21] 7. Oodie Coo Bop (Ornithology), Pts. 1 & 2
[3:20] 8. Irresistible You
[2:48] 9. Mambo In Blues
[2:43] 10. Phace
[3:10] 11. Just One More Chance
[3:07] 12. Rhythm In A Riff
[2:50] 13. Vout Rhythm
[2:58] 14. Stay In There
[2:57] 15. The Hour Of Parting
[2:40] 16. Cherokee
[3:13] 17. Boulevard Bounce
[2:50] 18. Don't Drive This Jive Away
[2:57] 19. Boppin' The Blues
[2:57] 20. Over The Rainbow
[2:37] 21. I'm In The Mood For Love

Eli (Lucky) Thompson (June 16, 1924 in Columbia, South Carolina – July 30, 2005 in Seattle, Washington) was an African American jazz tenor and soprano saxophonist. He is considered to have, alongside Steve Lacy brought the soprano saxophone out of obsolescence, playing it in a more advanced boppish format, which inspired John Coltrane to take it up in the early 1960s. After playing with the swing orchestras of Lionel Hampton, Don Redman, Billy Eckstine, Lucky Millinder, and Count Basie, he worked in rhythm and blues and then established a career in bop and hard bop.

Rhythm Is A Rift

Thursday, June 4, 2015

King Pleasure, Annie Ross - King Pleasure Sings - Annie Ross Sings

Styles: Vocal
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:21
Size: 111,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:14)  1. Red Top
(2:33)  2. Jumpin' with Symphony Sid
(2:55)  3. Sometimes I'm Happy
(3:13)  4. This Is Always
(3:09)  5. What Can I Say (After I Say I'm Sorry)
(3:17)  6. Don't Get Scared
(2:57)  7. Parker's Mood
(3:29)  8. I'm Gone
(3:01)  9. I'm In The Mood For Love
(2:37) 10. Exclamation Blues
(3:10) 11. You're Crying
(3:04) 12. Funk Junction
(2:37) 13. Twisted
(2:43) 14. Farmer's Market
(3:16) 15. The Time Was Right
(2:58) 16. Annie's Lament

The brief life span of classic jazz vocalese singing found its first inspiration in these King Pleasure sides. Pleasure vocalized many bebop solos by the likes of James Moody, Charlie Parker, and Lester Young, often adding his own hip and witty lyrics to the mix. Initially issued on his debut, Moody's Mood for Love, the first eight sides here include solid senders like "Parker's Mood," "Red Top" (based on a Gene Ammons solo and featuring singer Betty Carter), and "Jumpin' With Symphony Sid" (Lester Young). Balancing out the boppish fare, Pleasure also delivers ballads like "This Is Always" (featuring the Dave Lambert Singers) and his own composition, "Don't Be Scared" (up-and-coming vocalese star Jon Hendriks guests). Future Hendriks cohort Annie Ross co-headlines this LP, matching Pleasure's best with hits like "Twisted" (Wardell Gray) and "Farmer's Market" (Art Farmer). Her wordless scat feature, "Annie's Lament," is a highlight as well. A must for bop and vocal jazz fans. ~ Stephen Cook  http://www.allmusic.com/album/king-pleasure-sings-annie-ross-sings-mw0000188272

Personnel: King Pleasure, Annie Ross, Betty Carter, Blossom Dearie, The Three Riffs, The Dave Lambert Singers, Jon Hendricks (vocals); Lucky Thompson (tenor saxophone); Danny Bank (baritone saxophone); Eddie Lewis (trumpet); J.J. Johnson, Kai Winding (trombone); Charlie Ferguson, Teacho Wiltshire, John Lewis, George Wallington, Ed Swanston, Jimmy Jones (piano); Ram Ramirez (organ); Peck Morrison, Paul Chambers, Percy Heath (bass); Herbie Lovelle, Art Blakey, Joe Harris, Kenny Clarke (drums).

King Pleasure Sings - Annie Ross Sings

Saturday, April 11, 2015

Lucky Thompson - Home Comin'

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2003
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:37
Size: 93,4 MB
Art: Front

(3:32)  1. Home Comin'
(5:28)  2. Tea Time
(4:29)  3. Soul Lullaby
(5:01)  4. Then Soul Walked In
(6:25)  5. Fillet of Soul
(5:00)  6. Monsoon
(6:15)  7. Sun Out
(4:23)  8. Yesterday's Child

Born in Columbia, SC, on June 16, 1924, tenor saxophonist Lucky Thompson bridged the gap between the physical dynamism of swing and the cerebral intricacies of bebop, emerging as one of his instrument's foremost practitioners and a stylist par excellence. Eli Thompson's lifelong nickname the byproduct of a jersey, given him by his father, with the word "lucky" stitched across the chest would prove bitterly inappropriate: when he was five, his mother died, and the remainder of his childhood, spent largely in Detroit, was devoted to helping raise his younger siblings. Thompson loved music, but without hope of acquiring an instrument of his own, he ran errands to earn enough money to purchase an instructional book on the saxophone, complete with fingering chart. He then carved imitation lines and keys into a broom handle, teaching himself to read music years before he ever played an actual sax. According to legend, Thompson finally received his own saxophone by accident a delivery company mistakenly dropped one off at his home along with some furniture, and after graduating high school and working briefly as a barber, he signed on with Erskine Hawkins' 'Bama State Collegians, touring with the group until 1943, when he joined Lionel Hampton and settled in New York City.

Soon after his arrival in the Big Apple, Thompson was tapped to replace Ben Webster during his regular gig at the 52nd Street club the Three Deuces , Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Art Tatum were all in attendance at Thompson's debut gig, and while he deemed the performance a disaster (a notorious perfectionist, he was rarely if ever pleased with his work), he nevertheless quickly earned the respect of his peers and became a club fixture. After a stint with bassist Slam Stewart, Thompson again toured with Hampton before joining singer Billy Eckstine's short-lived big band that included Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, and Art Blakey  in other words, the crucible of bebop. But although he played on some of the earliest and most influential bop dates, Thompson never fit squarely within the movement's paradigm his playing boasted an elegance and formal power all his own, with an emotional depth rare among the tenor greats of his generation. 

He joined the Count Basie Orchestra in late 1944, exiting the following year while in Los Angeles and remaining there until 1946, in the interim playing on and arranging a series of dates for the Exclusive label. Thompson returned to the road when Gillespie hired him to replace Parker in their epochal combo  he also played on Parker's landmark March 28, 1946, session for Dial, and that same year was a member of the Charles Mingus and Buddy Collette-led Stars of Swing which, sadly, never recorded. More Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/lucky-thompson/id3539270#fullText

Personnel: Lucky Thompson (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Cedar Walton (piano, electric piano); Billy Higgins (drums).

Wednesday, November 12, 2014

Lucky Thompson - Star Chaser

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2014
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 78:29
Size: 181,0 MB
Art: Front

( 9:15)  1. One O'Clock Jump
( 3:39)  2. Tenderly
( 4:52)  3. The World Awakes
( 8:28)  4. Cherokee
( 7:41)  5. Yesterdays
( 3:08)  6. East Of The Sun (And West Of The Moon)
( 5:05)  7. Lover Man
( 7:56)  8. Strike Up The Band
( 5:38)  9. Sophisticated Lady
( 3:39) 10. I Can't Give You Anything But Love
( 4:49) 11. Don't Blame Me
(11:25) 12. Satin Doll
( 2:50) 13. Lester Leaps In

A legendary tenor and soprano saxophonist who took his place among the elite improvisers of jazz from the 1940's to the 1960's and then quit music. Lucky Thompson connected the swing era to the more cerebral and complex bebop style. His sophisticated, harmonically abstract approach to the tenor saxophone endeared him to the beboppers, but he was also a beautiful balladeer.Thompson was born in Columbia, South Carolina, but grew up on Detroit's East Side. He saved to buy a saxophone study book, practicing on a simulated instrument carved from a broomstick. He finally acquired a saxophone when he was 15, practiced eight hours a day and, within a month, was playing around town, most notably with the King's Aces big band, among who was vibraphonist Milt Jackson, later a frequent associate. Thompson left Cass high school early to join ex-Lunceford altoist Ted Buckner at Club 666, a top spot in the black section of Detroit. 

He left the city in August 1943 with Lionel Hampton's orchestra, touring for four months before settling in New York. He was soon playing for exacting bandleaders such as Don Redman and Lucky Millinder, performing on 52nd street with drummer Big Sid Catlett, and making his recording debut in March 1944 with trumpeter Hot Lips Page. After a run with Billy Eckstine's big band, then a hotbed of modernism, Thompson spent a fruitful year with the Count Basie orchestra. By October 1945, he was in Los Angeles, and stayed for two years, taking on the mantle of local hero and participating in more than 100 recording sessions, with everyone from Dinah Washington to Boyd Raeburn. When Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker made their legendary visit to Billy Berg's club in Los Angeles, Thompson was retained to cover for the errant Parker. Lucky played on one of Parker's most celebrated recording sessions, for Dial Records on March 28, 1946. Back in New York by 1948, Thompson began a period of varied activity, fronting groups at the Savoy Ballroom, appearing at the Nice festival, recording with Thelonious Monk and playing on the heralded Miles Davis album, “Walkin'.” In 1956, he toured Europe with Stan Kenton, then chose to live abroad for extended periods, from 1957 to 1962, making a number of recordings with groups while overseas. 

His skepticism about the jazz business may have kept him from a broader career recording as a bandleader; but there was “Tricotism,” from 1953, with the Lucky Seven. Then in 1962 Thompson came back to New York, where he signed with Prestige and recorded the sessions for albums “Happy Days Are Here Again,” “Plays Jerome Kern and No More,” and “Lucky Strikes,” from 1964, thought to be his highlight album. He did other sides for various labels as in the ’65 joining with Tommy Flanagan “Lucky Meets Tommy.” His last recordings were “Goodbye Yesterday,” (1972) and “I Offer You,” (1973), made for the Groove Merchant label. After returning to New York for a few years, he lived in Lausanne, Switzerland, from late 1968 to 1970. He came back to New York again, taught at Dartmouth in 1973 and 1974, then disappeared from the Northeast, and soon from music entirely. By the early 90's he was in Seattle, mostly living in the woods or in shelter offered by friends. He did not own a saxophone. He was hospitalized a number of times in 1994, and finally entered an Assisted Living Center, where he lived from 1994 until his death in July 2005. 
Bio ~ http://musicians.allaboutjazz.com/luckythompson