Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1948
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:31
Size: 111,2 MB
Art: Front
(5:49) 1. Good Bait
(3:08) 2. Lady Be Good
(3:41) 3. Anthropology
(4:03) 4. The Squirrel
(4:32) 5. Tadd Walk
(5:16) 6. Dameronia
(4:04) 7. Our Delight
(5:59) 8. Bebop
(4:57) 9. Good Bait (No.2)
(4:08) 10. Symphonette
(2:49) 11. The Squirrel (No.2)
"Our Delight" is a 1947 jazz standard, composed by Tadd Dameron. It is considered one of his best compositions along with "Good Bait", "Hot House", "If You Could See Me Now", and "Lady Bird". A moderately fast bebop song, it featured the trumpeter Fats Navarro, who is said to "exhibit mastery of the difficult chord progression". One author said, "'Our Delight' is a genuine song, a bubbly, jaggedly ascending theme that sticks in one's mind, enriched by harmonic interplay between a flaming trumpet section led by Dizzy, creamy moaning reeds and crooning trombones. The written accompaniments to the solos-in particular the leader's two statements-are full of inventiveness, creating call-and-response patterns and counter-melodies. What is boppish here is the off-center, syncopated melody, as well as the shifting, internal voicings of the chords, especially at the very end. These voicings, along with a love of tuneful melodies that one walks out of a jazz club humming, were Tadd's main legacy to such composers and arrangers as Benny Golson, Gigi Gryce, and Jimmy Heath."Rolling Stone describes it as a "bop gem". Bill Evans recorded his version of it for his debut album New Jazz Conceptions in 1956. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Delight
Personnel: Trumpet – Fats Navarro; Alto Saxophone – Rudy Williams; Bass – Curly Russell; Drums – Kenny Clarke; Piano – Tadd Dameron; Tenor Saxophone – Allen Eager; Vibraphone – Milt Jackson
Our Delight
Year: 1948
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:31
Size: 111,2 MB
Art: Front
(5:49) 1. Good Bait
(3:08) 2. Lady Be Good
(3:41) 3. Anthropology
(4:03) 4. The Squirrel
(4:32) 5. Tadd Walk
(5:16) 6. Dameronia
(4:04) 7. Our Delight
(5:59) 8. Bebop
(4:57) 9. Good Bait (No.2)
(4:08) 10. Symphonette
(2:49) 11. The Squirrel (No.2)
"Our Delight" is a 1947 jazz standard, composed by Tadd Dameron. It is considered one of his best compositions along with "Good Bait", "Hot House", "If You Could See Me Now", and "Lady Bird". A moderately fast bebop song, it featured the trumpeter Fats Navarro, who is said to "exhibit mastery of the difficult chord progression". One author said, "'Our Delight' is a genuine song, a bubbly, jaggedly ascending theme that sticks in one's mind, enriched by harmonic interplay between a flaming trumpet section led by Dizzy, creamy moaning reeds and crooning trombones. The written accompaniments to the solos-in particular the leader's two statements-are full of inventiveness, creating call-and-response patterns and counter-melodies. What is boppish here is the off-center, syncopated melody, as well as the shifting, internal voicings of the chords, especially at the very end. These voicings, along with a love of tuneful melodies that one walks out of a jazz club humming, were Tadd's main legacy to such composers and arrangers as Benny Golson, Gigi Gryce, and Jimmy Heath."Rolling Stone describes it as a "bop gem". Bill Evans recorded his version of it for his debut album New Jazz Conceptions in 1956. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Delight
Personnel: Trumpet – Fats Navarro; Alto Saxophone – Rudy Williams; Bass – Curly Russell; Drums – Kenny Clarke; Piano – Tadd Dameron; Tenor Saxophone – Allen Eager; Vibraphone – Milt Jackson
Our Delight