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Where Do You Start? |
Don Lanphere |
első megjelenés éve: 2002 55 perc |
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(2007)
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 CD |
4.145 Ft
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1. | Ragazza de la Mer
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2. | All Across the City
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3. | Blues Away
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4. | Ming's Dream
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5. | Methuselah's Big Duck
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6. | Wilke's Grin
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7. | Where Do You Start?
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8. | The Scene Is Clean
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9. | Cottage for Sale
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Jazz / Bop; Post-Bop; Mainstream Jazz
Recorded at TRIAD STUDIOS, Redmond, WA, October 4, 2002
Don Lanphere - saxophone Jonathan Pugh - cornet Jeff Hay - trombone with New Stories Marc Sealers - piano Doug Miller - bass John Bishop - drums
"Don Lanphere is one of the most important living saxophonists in jazz." Tim Price, Saxophone Journal...With a recording career that spans more than 50 years, from New York's 52nd St. to Seattle, Lanphere further defines his position as one of the true, original jazz masters with "Where Do You Start?" Teaming once again with the inspired piano trio New Stories, Lanphere adds his long time bandmates, cornetist Jonathan Pugh & trombonist Jeff Hay, for a lush yet swinging session of classic and soon-to-be classic tunes.
Includes liner notes by Jim Wilke
Few veterans of the classic bebop era were still active in 2002, and even fewer were still in their musical prime. Don Lanphere is a major exception. Rather than just recreating the past (which in his case includes leading a date that featured Fats Navarro), Lanphere always looks ahead. A distinctive tenor-saxophonist, Lanphere also doubles effective on soprano and leads a top-notch sextet in the Pacific Northwest. Where Do You Start has a high-quality repertoire performed by Lanphere, cornetist Jonathan Pugh, trombonist Jeff Hay, pianist Marc Seales, bassist Doug Miller and drummer John Bishop. The five originals by group members include "Blues Away" (which is in the Art Blakey hard bop tradition), a feature for Lanphere's soprano on the moody ballad "Ming's Dream" and the novel "Methuselah's Big Duck," which has the cornet and trombone imitating quacking sounds. Of the four other tunes, Jim Hall's "All Across The City" and "Where Do You Start" (which is very rarely ever done interpreted as an instrumental but works quite well) are joined by Tadd Dameron's "The Scene Is Clean" and a wistful version of "A Cottage For Sale." Just one in a string of excellent Don Lanphere recordings after 1980, Where Do You Start has been put out by Origin, a valuable label that documents the jazz scene in Washington State. ---Scott Yanow, allmusic |
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