Showing posts with label Satchmo Legacy Band. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Satchmo Legacy Band. Show all posts

Saturday, September 12, 2015

The Satchmo Legacy Band - Salute To Pops Vol 2

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 45:21
Size: 104,4 MB
Art: Front

( 4:59)  1. Muskrat Ramble
( 4:59)  2. Blueberry Hill
( 6:32)  3. 12th Street Rag
( 6:19)  4. West End Blues
(11:49)  5. Blues For Duane
( 6:50)  6. That Old Devil Called Love
( 3:51)  7. Potato Head Blues

Louis Armstrong is definitely in fashion. Not only has Wynton Marsalis shifted his affection Satchmo's way. Take a look at who's in the "Satchmo Legacy Band"-Kirk Lightsey, Freddie Hubbard and Curtis Fuller (those last two were part of one of Art Blakey's hardest bopping bands, for heaven's sake). The work of this group is not as interesting as Marsalis', because it has no pretensions to be. 

It is simply a group of mostly modern jazz men doing their impressions of what a great, late predecessor did. ~Jack Fuller http://articles.chicagotribune.com/1993-02-28/entertainment/9303185772_1_freddie-hubbard-curtis-fuller-art-blakey

Personnel:  Al Casey ( Vocal );  Alan Dawson ( Vocal );  Curtis Fuller ( Trombone );  Freddie Hubbard ( Flugelhorn );  Red Callender ( Vocal );  Satchmo Legacy Band ( Band );  Kirk Lightsey ( Piano ); Alvin Batiste ( Clarinet )

Salute To Pops Vol 2

Friday, September 11, 2015

The Satchmo Legacy Band - Salute To Pops Vol 1

Styles: Jazz, Hard Bop
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 50:29
Size: 116,0 MB
Art: Front

(4:51)  1. Struttin' With Some Barbecue
(6:42) 2. Ellingtonia Interlude: In a Sentimental Mood/Sophisticated Lady
(6:29)  3. Gut Bucket Blues
(8:13)  4. Blues for Pops
(3:01)  5. Ory's Creole Trombone
(6:30)  6. Stardust
(6:43)  7. Wild Man Blues
(7:55)  8. When the Saints Go Marching In

This is a hilariously rotten record. Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, trombonist Curtis Fuller, clarinetist Alvin Batiste, guitarist Al Casey, pianist Kirk Lightsey, bassist Red Callender and drummer Alan Dawson attempt to pay tribute to Louis Armstrong but the results are quite embarrassing. It is true that Batiste is from New Orleans but that hardly makes him a Dixieland clarinetist, few trombonists sound less like a New Orleans player than Fuller, and to have Hubbard cast as Satch is bad casting to say the least. 

The programming of the music is illogical, particularly having the themeless "Gut Bucket Blues" followed by the pointless "Blues For Pops." The odd part is that the closer these modern players come to imitating the Louis Armstrong All-Stars, the sillier they sound. "Ory's Creole Trombone" is remarkably bad with Fuller making Kid Ory seem like a virtuoso and Hubbard fumbling all over the place; couldn't they have attempted it again? "Wild Man Blues" is such a fiasco (didn't any of these musicians care enough to learn the songs?) that this CD should only be purchased to amuse one's knowledgable friends. 
~ Scott Yanow http://www.allmusic.com/album/salute-to-pops-vol-1-mw0000276138

Personnel: Al Casey (vocals, guitar); Alvin Batiste (vocals, clarinet); Freddie Hubbard (vocals, trumpet, flugelhorn); Curtis Fuller (vocals, trombone); Red Callender (vocals, tuba); Kirk Lightsey (vocals, piano); Alan Dawson (vocals, drums).

Salute To Pops  Vol 1