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CD BT Kft. internet bolt - CD, zenei DVD, Blu-Ray lemezek: The Complete Aladdin Recordings CD

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The Complete Aladdin Recordings
Lester Young
spanyol
első megjelenés éve: 1947
(1995)

2 x CD
4.460 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1. CD tartalma:
1.  Indiana
2.  I Can't Get Started
3.  Tea for Two
4.  Body and Soul
5.  D.B. Blues
6.  Lester Blows Again
7.  These Foolish Things
8.  Jumpin' at Mesner's
9.  It's Only a Paper Moon
10.  After You've Gone
11.  Lover, Come Back to Me
12.  Jammin' With Lester
13.  You're Driving Me Crazy
14.  New Lester Leaps In
15.  Lester's Be Bop Shop
16.  She's Funny That Way
17.  Sunday
18.  S.M. Blues
 
2. CD tartalma:
1.  Jumpin' With Symphony Sid
2.  No Eyes Blues
3.  Sax-O-Be-Bop
4.  tra On the Sunny Side of the Street
5.  Easy Does It
6.  Easy Does It
7.  Movin' With Lester
8.  One O'Clock Jump
9.  Jumpin' at the Woodside
10.  I'm Confessin'
11.  Lester Smooths It Out
12.  Just Cooling
13.  Tea for Two
14.  East of the Sun
15.  Sheik of Araby
16.  Something to Remember You By
17.  Riffin' Without Helen
18.  Please Let Me Forget
19.  He Don't Love Me Anymore
20.  Pleasing Man Blues
21.  See See Rider
22.  It's Better to Give Than Receiving
Jazz / Cool, Swing, Mainstream Jazz

Recorded: July 15, 1942-December 29, 1947, Los Angeles, California; Chicago, Illinois; New York, New York

Lester Young (tenor saxophone)
Helen Humes (vocals); Willie Smith (alto saxophone); Maxwell Davis (tenor saxophone); Howard McGhee, Shorty McConnell (trumpet); Vic Dickenson (trombone); Dodo Marmarosa, Nat Cole, Wesley Jones, Joe Albany, Argonne "Sadik Hakim" Thornton, Gene DiNovi, Jimmy Bunn (piano); Irving Ashby, Fred Lacey, Nasir Barakaat, Chuck Wayne, Dave Barbour (guitar); Red Callender, Curtis Counce, Rodney Richardson, Ted Briscoe, Curly Russell, Junior Rudd (bass); Henry Tucker, Johnny Otis, Chico Hamilton, Lyndell Marshall, Roy Haynes, Tiny Kahn (drums)

This set includes the 1942 trio session with Nat Cole, the Helen Humes session, and all 7 small-group sessions by Young. Includes one newly discovered track.

Includes liner notes by Leonard Feather.



Lester Young

Active Decades: '30s, '40s and '50s
Born: Aug 27, 1909 in Woodville, MS
Died: Mar 15, 1959 in New York, NY
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Bop, Cool, Mainstream Jazz, Swing

Lester Young was one of the true jazz giants, a tenor saxophonist who came up with a completely different conception in which to play his horn, floating over bar lines with a light tone rather than adopting Coleman Hawkins' then-dominant forceful approach. A non-conformist, Young (nicknamed "Pres" by Billie Holiday) had the ironic experience in the 1950s of hearing many young tenors try to sound exactly like him.
Although he spent his earliest days near New Orleans, Lester Young lived in Minneapolis by 1920, playing in a legendary family band. He studied violin, trumpet, and drums, starting on alto at age 13. Because he refused to tour in the South, Young left home in 1927 and instead toured with Art Bronson's Bostonians, switching to tenor. He was back with the family band in 1929 and then freelanced for a few years, playing with Walter Page's Blue Devils (1930), Eddie Barefield in 1931, back with the Blue Devils during 1932-1933, and Bennie Moten and King Oliver (both 1933). He was with Count Basie for the first time in 1934 but left to replace Coleman Hawkins with Fletcher Henderson. Unfortunately, it was expected that Young would try to emulate Hawk, and his laid-back sound angered Henderson's sidemen, resulting in Pres not lasting long. After a tour with Andy Kirk and a few brief jobs, Lester Young was back with Basie in 1936, just in time to star with the band as they headed East. Young made history during his years with Basie, not only participating on Count's record dates but starring with Billie Holiday and Teddy Wilson on a series of classic small-group sessions. In addition, on his rare recordings on clarinet with Basie and the Kansas City Six, Young displayed a very original cool sound that almost sounded like altoist Paul Desmond in the 1950s. After leaving Count in 1940, Young's career became a bit aimless, not capitalizing on his fame in the jazz world. He co-led a low-profile band with his brother, drummer Lee Young, in Los Angeles until re-joining Basie in December 1943. Young had a happy nine months back with the band, recorded a memorable quartet session with bassist Slam Stewart, and starred in the short film Jammin' the Blues before he was drafted. His experiences dealing with racism in the military were horrifying, affecting his mental state of mind for the remainder of his life.
Although many critics have written that Lester Young never sounded as good after getting out of the military, despite erratic health he actually was at his prime in the mid- to late-'40s. He toured (and was well paid by Norman Granz) with Jazz at the Philharmonic on and off through the '40s and '50s, made a wonderful series of recordings for Aladdin, and worked steadily as a single. Young also adopted his style well to bebop (which he had helped pave the way for in the 1930s). But mentally he was suffering, building a wall between himself and the outside world, and inventing his own colorful vocabulary. Although many of his recordings in the 1950s were excellent (showing a greater emotional depth than in his earlier days), Young was bothered by the fact that some of his white imitators were making much more money than he was. He drank huge amounts of liquor and nearly stopped eating, with predictable results. 1956's Jazz Giants album found him in peak form as did a well documented engagement in Washington, D.C., with a quartet and a last reunion with Count Basie at the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival. But, for the 1957 telecast The Sound of Jazz, Young mostly played sitting down (although he stole the show with an emotional one-chorus blues solo played to Billie Holiday). After becoming ill in Paris in early 1959, Lester Young came home and essentially drank himself to death. Many decades after his death, Pres is still considered (along with Coleman Hawkins and John Coltrane) one of the three most important tenor saxophonists of all time.
---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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