Showing posts with label Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra. Show all posts

Monday, July 7, 2014

Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra - SRJO Live

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 68:10
Size: 156.0 MB
Styles: Big band
Year: 2002
Art: Front

[ 5:06] 1. Happy Go Lucky Local (Parts 1 & 2)
[ 5:11] 2. Stomp It Off
[ 4:25] 3. The Maids Of Cadiz
[ 4:49] 4. Jumpin' At The Woodside
[ 3:33] 5. Concerto For Cootie
[ 7:41] 6. Better Get Hit In Your Soul
[ 6:00] 7. Isfahan
[ 7:20] 8. Nasty Magnus
[ 4:40] 9. Blue And Sentimental
[ 5:49] 10. Caravan
[13:28] 11. Walk On The Wild Side

The jazz scene in Seattle has a richness and depth that is rare. Not only is there a wealth of fine musicians who have gained recognition throughout the nation and around the globe, but also a lineage of jazz writers and players that began in the 1920s, and reached a golden age in the 1940s when Seattle enjoyed a flowering of jazz culture centered around the clubs and dance halls of Jackson Street. This period produced such greats as Ray Charles, Ernestine Anderson, Dick Wilson, Quincy Jones and Buddy Catlett. Since then, the torch has consistently been passed. Sixty years later, there is still a major jazz scene, supported by many clubs, large, enthusiastic audiences, and populated by both veteran and young players and writers who carry on Seattle's own, unique jazz tradition.

The Seattle Repertory Jazz Orchestra (SRJO) is an award-winning, 17-piece big band comprised of many of the region's leading jazz soloists and band leaders. The SRJO is the Northwest's only permanent ensemble dedicated to the accurate and historically observant performance of the great works of big band jazz. Drummer Clarence Acox, nationally recognized director of bands at Seattle's Garfield High School, and saxophonist/arranger Michael Brockman, long-time faculty member at the University of Washington School of Music, founded the SRJO in 1995. As early as 1988, however, many of the players had assembled for a now-annual concert of the Sacred Music of Duke Ellington, presented by Seattle's Earshot Jazz Society. A 1992 "Evening of Ellington" program, presented by Brockman at the University of Washington's Meany Theater, brought together players not normally included in the sacred concerts, and featured new transcriptions by Brockman of classic Ellingtonia. ~John Killoch

SRJO Live