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Jay & Kai [Savoy Jazz]
J.J. Johnson & Kai Winding with Billy Bauer, Charles Mingus, Wally Cirillo, Kenny Clarke
első megjelenés éve: 2003
44 perc
(2003)

CD
3.861 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Bernie's Tune
2.  Lament
3.  Blue's For Trombones
4.  The Major
5.  Yesterdays
6.  Co-Op
7.  Reflections
8.  Blues In Twos
9.  What Is This Thing Called Love
10.  The Boy Next Door
11.  I Could Write A Book
12.  Carioca
Jazz / Hard Bop

Recorded:
Tracks 1, 6-8: 1954.08.26
Tracks 2-4, 9: 1954.08.24
Track 5: 1947.12.24
Tracks 10-12: 1952.03.04

J. J. Johnson, trombone 1-9
Kai Winding, trombone 1-4, 6-12
Charles Mingus, bass 1-4, 6-9
Kenny Clarke, drums 1-4, 6-9
Wally Cirillo, piano 1, 6-8
Billy Bauer, guitar 2-4, 9
Leo Parker, baritone saxophone 5
Hank Jones, piano 5
Al Lucas, bass 5
Shadow Wilson, drums 5
Lou Stein, piano 10-12
Eddie Safranski, bass 10-12
Tiny Kahn, drums 10-12
Al Young, bongos/timbales 10-12

The music on this Savoy CD is excellent, but the packaging is rather dumb. Rather than reissue all 12 selections from a pair of 1954 sessions that led to the birth of the J.J. Johnson-Kai Winding two-trombone quintet (renditions that also include either pianist Wally Cirillo or guitarist Billy Bauer along with bassist Charles Mingus and drummer Kenny Clarke), there are just eight on this CD along with a Johnson track from 1947 ("Yesterdays") and three of the four Winding performances (in a quintet with pianist Lou Stein) from 1952. Sure to frustrate completists, this reissue is still worth picking up if found at a budget price, for the music contains plenty of worthy trombone solos. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide



J.J. Johnson

Active Decades: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
Born: Jan 22, 1924 in Indianapolis, IN
Died: Feb 04, 2001 in Indianapolis, IN
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Bop, Hard Bop, Mainstream Jazz, Modern Big Band, Third Stream

Considered by many to be the finest jazz trombonist of all time, J.J. Johnson somehow transferred the innovations of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie to his more awkward instrument, playing with such speed and deceptive ease that at one time some listeners assumed he was playing valve (rather than slide) trombone. Johnson toured with the territory bands of Clarence Love and Snookum Russell during 1941-1942, and then spent 1942-1945 with Benny Carter's big band. He made his recording debut with Carter (taking a solo on "Love for Sale" in 1943), and played at the first JATP concert (1944). Johnson also had plenty of solo space during his stay with Count Basie's Orchestra (1945-1946). During 1946-1950, he played with all of the top bop musicians, including Charlie Parker (with whom he recorded in 1947), the Dizzy Gillespie big band, Illinois Jacquet (1947-1949), and the Miles Davis Birth of the Cool Nonet. His own recordings from the era included such sidemen as Bud Powell and a young Sonny Rollins. Johnson, who also recorded with the Metronome All-Stars, played with Oscar Pettiford (1951) and Miles Davis (1952), but then was outside of music, working as a blueprint inspector for two years (1952-1954). His fortunes changed when, in August 1954, he formed a two-trombone quintet with Kai Winding that became known as Jay and Kai and was quite popular during its two years.
After Johnson and Winding went their separate ways (they would later have a few reunions), Johnson led a quintet that often included Bobby Jaspar. He began to compose ambitious works, starting with 1956's "Poem for Brass," and including "El Camino Real" and a feature for Dizzy Gillespie, "Perceptions"; his "Lament" became a standard. Johnson worked with Miles Davis during part of 1961-1962, led some more small groups of his own, and by the late '60s was kept busy writing television and film scores. J.J. Johnson was so famous in the jazz world that he kept on winning Downbeat polls in the 1970s, even though he was not playing at all. However, starting with a Japanese tour in 1977, Johnson gradually returned to a busy performance schedule, leading a quintet in the 1980s that often featured Ralph Moore. In the mid-'90s, he remained at the top of his field, but by the late '90s and early into the 2000s, the legendary musician fell ill with prostate cancer, and sadly took his own life on February 4, 2001.
---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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