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CD BT Kft. internet bolt - CD, zenei DVD, Blu-Ray lemezek: All Star Sessions - Chicago, Hollywood & New York - Volume 2, Hot Mallets CD

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All Star Sessions - Chicago, Hollywood & New York - Volume 2, Hot Mallets
Lionel Hampton feat. Coleman Hawkins, Benny Carter, Harry James, Jonah Jones, Charlie Christian, Teddy Bunn
angol
első megjelenés éve: 2000
150 perc
(2000)

2 x CD
3.801 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1. CD tartalma:
1.  China Stomp
2.  I Know That You Know
3.  You're My Ideal
4.  The Sun Will Shine Tonight
5.  Ring Dem Bells
6.  Don't Be That Way
7.  I'm in the Mood for Swing
8.  Shoe Shiner's Drag
9.  Any Time at All
10.  Muskrat Ramble
11.  I Can Give You Love
12.  High Society
13.  It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
14.  Johnny Get Your Horn and Blow It
15.  Sweethearts on Parade
16.  Shufflin' at the Hollywood
17.  Denison Swing
18.  Wizzin' the Wizz
19.  If It's Good [The I Want It] (Then I Want It)
20.  Stand by for Further Announcements
21.  Ain't Cha Comin' Home?
22.  Big Wig in the Wigwam
23.  Memories of You
24.  The Jumpin' Jive
25.  Shufflin' at the Hollywood
 
2. CD tartalma:
1.  Twelfth Street Rag
2.  When Lights Are Low
3.  One Sweet Letter from You
4.  Hot Mallets
5.  Early Session Hop
6.  I'm on My Way from You
7.  Haven't Named It Yet
8.  The Heebie Jeebies Are Rockin' the Town
9.  The Munson Street Breakdown
10.  I've Found a New Baby
11.  I Can't Get Started
12.  Four or Five Times
13.  Gin for Christmas
14.  Dinah
15.  My Buddy
16.  Singin' the Blues (Till My Daddy Comes Home)
17.  Flying Home
18.  Tempo and Swing
19.  Just for Laffs
20.  Martin on Every Block
21.  Pig Foot Sonata
22.  Charlie Was a Sailor
23.  When Lights Are Low
24.  The Heebie Jeebies Are Rockin' the Town
25.  Dinah
Jazz / Big Band, Swing, New York Blues, Regional Blues, Jazz Instrument, Vibraphone/Marimba Jazz

Al Casey Guitar
Allan Reuss Guitar
Artie Bernstein Sax (Bass)
Babe Russin Tenor (Vocal)
Ben Webster Sax (Tenor)
Benny Carter Clarinet, Sax (Alto)
Big Sid Catlett Drums
Billy Kyle Piano
Billy Taylor Sax (Baritone)
Buster Bailey Clarinet
Chu Berry Sax (Tenor)
Clyde Hart Piano
Coleman Hawkins Sax (Tenor)
Cootie Williams Trumpet
Cozy Cole Drums
Dave Matthew Sax (Alto)
Douglas Daniels Vocals, Tiple
Earl Bostic Sax (Alto)
Edgar Sampson Sax (Baritone)
Edmond Hall Clarinet
Freddie Green Guitar
Harry Carney Sax (Baritone)
Hayes Alvis Sax (Bass)
Henry "Red" Allen Trumpet
Herschel Evans Tenor (Vocal)
Hymie Shertzer Sax (Alto), Clarinet (Bass)
J.C. Higginbotham Trombone
Jerry Jerome Sax (Tenor)
Jess Stacy Piano
Joe Sullivan Piano
John Kirby Sax (Bass)
Johnny Hodges Sax (Alto)
Joseph "Kaiser" Marshall Drums
Lawrence Brown Trombone
Lionel Hampton Piano, Vocals, Drums, Vibraphone
Marlowe Morris Piano
Milt Hinton Sax (Bass)
Rex Stewart Cornet
Russell Procope Sax (Alto), Sax (Soprano)
Slick Jones Drums
Sonny Greer Drums
Teddy Bunn Guitar
Toots Mondello Clarinet, Sax (Alto)
Ziggy Elman Trumpet
Zutty Singleton Drums



Lionel Hampton

Active Decades: '20s, '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
Born: Apr 20, 1909 in Louisville, KY
Died: Aug 31, 2002 in New York, NY
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Big Band, Classic Jazz, Mainstream Jazz, New York Blues, R&B, Swing

Lionel Hampton was the first jazz vibraphonist and was one of the jazz giants beginning in the mid-'30s. He has achieved the difficult feat of being musically open-minded (even recording "Giant Steps") without changing his basic swing style. Hamp started out as a drummer, playing with the Chicago Defender Newsboys' Band as a youth. His original idol was Jimmy Bertrand, a '20s drummer who occasionally played xylophone. Hampton played on the West Coast with such groups as Curtis Mosby's Blue Blowers, Reb Spikes, and Paul Howard's Quality Serenaders (with whom he made his recording debut in 1929) before joining Les Hite's band, which for a period accompanied Louis Armstrong. At a recording session in 1930, a vibraphone happened to be in the studio, and Armstrong asked Hampton (who had practiced on one previously) if he could play a little bit behind him and on "Memories of You" and "Shine"; Hamp became the first jazz improviser to record on vibes.
It would be another six years before he found fame. Lionel Hampton, after leaving Hite, had his own band in Los Angeles' Paradise Cafe, until one night in 1936 when Benny Goodman came into the club and discovered him. Soon, Hampton recorded with B.G., Teddy Wilson, and Gene Krupa as the Benny Goodman Quartet, and six weeks later he officially joined Goodman. An exciting soloist whose enthusiasm even caused B.G. to smile, Hampton became one of the stars of his organization, appearing in films with Goodman, at the famous 1938 Carnegie Hall concert, and nightly on the radio. In 1937, he started recording regularly as a leader for Victor with specially assembled all-star groups that formed a who's who of swing; all of these timeless performances (1937-1941) were reissued by Bluebird on a six-LP set, although in piecemeal fashion on CD.
Hampton stayed with Goodman until 1940, sometimes substituting on drums and taking vocals. In 1940, Lionel Hampton formed his first big band, and in 1942 had a huge hit with "Flying Home," featuring a classic Illinois Jacquet tenor spot (one of the first R&B solos). During the remainder of the decade, Hampton's extroverted orchestra was a big favorite, leaning toward R&B, showing the influence of bebop after 1944, and sometimes getting pretty exhibitionistic. Among his sidemen, in addition to Jacquet, were Arnett Cobb, Dinah Washington (who Hampton helped discover), Cat Anderson, Marshall Royal, Dexter Gordon, Milt Buckner, Earl Bostic, Snooky Young, Johnny Griffin, Joe Wilder, Benny Bailey, Charles Mingus, Fats Navarro, Al Gray, and even Wes Montgomery and Betty Carter. Hampton's popularity allowed him to continue leading big bands off and on into the mid-'90s, and the 1953 edition that visited Paris (with Clifford Brown, Art Farmer, Quincy Jones, Jimmy Cleveland, Gigi Gryce, George Wallington, and Annie Ross) would be difficult to top, although fights over money and the right of the sideman to record led to its breakup. Hampton appeared and recorded with many all-star groups in the 1950s including reunions with Benny Goodman, meetings with the Oscar Peterson Trio, Stan Getz, Buddy DeFranco, and as part of a trio with Art Tatum and Buddy Rich. He also was featured in The Benny Goodman Story (1956).
Since the 1950s, Lionel Hampton has mostly repeated past triumphs, always playing "Hamp's Boogie Woogie" (which features his very rapid two-finger piano playing), "Hey Ba-Ba-Re-Bop," and "Flying Home." However, his enthusiasm still causes excitement and he remains a household name. Hampton has recorded through the years for nearly every label, including two of his own (Glad Hamp and Who's Who). Despite strokes and the ravages of age, Lionel Hampton remained a vital force into the 1990s. In January 2001, a vibraphone he had played for 15 years was put into the National Museum of American History. On August 31, 2002, at age 94, Lionel Hampton suffered major heart failure and passed away.
---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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