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Grand Max - Live at the Loosdrecht Jazz Festival |
Charles Tolliver |
német első megjelenés éve: 1972 58 perc |
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(2002)
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 CD |
2.893 Ft
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1. | Grand Max
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2. | Truth
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3. | Prayer for Peace
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4. | Our Second Father
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5. | Repetition
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Jazz / Post-Bop; Hard Bop
Recorded: Aug 9, 1972
Charles Tolliver - Drums, Producer, Trumpet, Flugelhorn Alan Bates Producer Alvin Queen Drums Anita Westin Photography Cees Van Der Gracht Engineer John Hicks Piano Malcolm Walker Design Reggie Workman Bass
Originally released by Strata East as Live at the Loosdrecht Jazz Festival, this CD reissue features the great but very underrated trumpeter Charles Tolliver in a quartet with pianist John Hicks, bassist Reggie Workman and drummer Alvin Queen. The group performs three of the leader's songs plus Cowell's "Prayer for Peace" and Neal Hefti's "Repetition"; the lengthy renditions clock in between 11 and 17 minutes apiece. Tolliver's music (which holds on to one's attention throughout the live set) has its connections to the bebop tradition but also forges ahead and can be quite passionate. Recommended. ---Scott Yanow, AMG
Charles Tolliver
Active Decades: '60s, '70s, '80s and '00s Born: Mar 06, 1942 in Jacksonville, FL Genre: Jazz Styles: Post-Bop, Hard Bop
In the early '70s, Charles Tolliver was one of the brightest young trumpeters in jazz. He studied at Howard University and then moved to New York in 1964, playing and recording with Jackie McLean. Tolliver was on quite a few excellent advanced hard bop records in the mid-'60s, played with Gerald Wilson's Orchestra in Los Angeles (1966-1967), and was a member of Max Roach's group at the same time (1967-1969) as the compatible Gary Bartz. In 1969, Tolliver formed a quartet called Music Inc. that often featured pianist Stanley Cowell and was on a few occasions expanded to a big band. Tolliver and Cowell founded the Strata East label in 1971, which released many fine records in the 1970s. Although it was an era when there was a serious shortage of talented young trumpeters (prior to the rise of Wynton Marsalis), Tolliver after the mid-'70s maintained a low profile. Charles Tolliver, whose fat tone was influenced by Freddie Hubbard while his ideas display bits of John Coltrane, has recorded as a leader for Impulse (two songs from a 1965 concert), Black Lion, Enja, and Strata East. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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