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3.729 Ft
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1. | But Not For Me
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2. | Love For Sale |
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3. | I Remember Clifford
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4. | Inga
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5. | Tell It Like It Is
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6. | Adriatica
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7. | One For Klook
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8. | Recado Bossa Nova
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9. | Balkan Blue
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Jazz / Hard Bop
Dusko Goykovich - trumpet, flh Oscar Pettiford - bass, cello Jimmy Heath - tenor sax Tommy Flanagan - piano Lucky Thompson - tenor sax Eddie Gomez - bass Mickey Roker - drums Abraham Burton - alto sax Hartwig Bartz - drums Kenny Barron - piano Fred Dutton - bass Monica Zetterlund - vocal Ferdinand Povel - tenor sax, flute Ray Drummond - bass Larry Vuckovich - piano Alvin Queen - drums Isla Eckinger - bass Steve Gut - trumpet Clarence Becton - drums Tony Lakatos - tenor sax Bora Rokovic - piano Branko Pejakovic - bass Dejan Terzic - drums Hans Hammerschmid - piano
Dusko Goykovich's colorful life is like a mirror of nearly fifty years of jazz history. This outstanding trumpet player caused stylistic developments, set technical standards, played with all the greats of the genre and finally became one of them. Since 1955 he has been a formative influence not only on the German jazz scene. He performed with such as Chet Baker, Dizzy Gillespie, Gerry Mulligan, Stan Getz, Kenny Clarke, Woody Herman, Tommy Flanagan or Kenny Barron and is highly admired in the U. S. and Japan. He is best known for his unmistakably melodic phrasing and his high-class ballad renditions on the trumpet, muted trumpet, and flugelhorn. On the occasion of his 70th birthday in October 2001, we proudly present this musical portrait including very rare or previously unreleased recordings covering forty years of Goykovich's career.
The compilation starts in 1959 when Goykovich was 25 years old and just returned from a performance at the Newport Jazz Festival. On "But Not For Me" Goykovich and US ex-patriate Oscar Pettiford give a fine example of the high art of duet playing while "Love For Sale" features Pettiford on the cello along with Swedish singer Monica Zetterlund and sax player Lucky Thompson. After his studies at Berklee School of Music in Boston and stints with the big bands of Maynard Ferguson and Woody Herman in the early sixties, Goykovich returned to Europe eager to play his own music. His regular working band, the Dusko Goykovich International Quintet featuring sax player Ferdinand Povel, recorded "I Remember Clifford", "Inga" and "Tell It Like It Is" live in concert at Munich's legendary Domicile in 1970.
In 1993 Goykovich re-launched his international career when teaming up with Tommy Flanagan, Jimmy Heath, Eddie Gomez and Mickey Roker for the album "Soul Connection". On the ballad "Adriatica" (from that date) Dusko's Yugoslav folk roots come to the fore along with his deep respect for Miles Davis. The bop tune "One For Klook" is from the follow-up album (1994) featuring Abraham Burton and Kenny Barron. Dusko's stage presence is nicely caught on "Recado Bossa Nova" and "Balkan Blue", two tunes from a Munich club gig in 1999. The story continues. |
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