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CD |
3.760 Ft
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1. | Walk Right in
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2. | Yellow Dog Blues
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3. | Mame
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4. | Petite Fleur
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5. | Winchester Cathedral
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6. | High Society
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7. | Java
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8. | Hello, Dolly!
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9. | Midnight in Moscow
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10. | Martinique
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11. | Stranger On the Shore
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12. | Barney Google
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Jazz
Danny Alguire, Don Kinch (tp) Ward Kimball (tb) George Probert (ss) K.O. Eckland (p) Bill Newman (bj, g) George Brunis (b, tu) Eddie Forrest (d) Los Angeles, CA, October 6, 1969 Walk Right In Stranger On The Shore Barney Google Los Angeles, CA, October 7, 1969 Yellow Dog Blues Petite Fleur Java
Danny Alguire, Don Kinch (tp) Ward Kimball (tb) George Probert (ss) Tom Kubis, John Smith (ss -1) K.O. Eckland (p) Bill Newman (bj, g) George Brunis (b, tu) Eddie Forrest (d) Los Angeles, CA, October 8, 1969 1. High Society 2. Hello, Dolly! 3. Midnight In Moscow 4. Martinique
omit Kubis, Smith Los Angeles, CA, October 8 or 7 or 6, 1969 Mame Winchester Cathedral
The FH5 have some surprises for this anniversary album. First, five plus two add up to eight, with Alguire & Kinch playing cornet-trumpet lead in the King Oliver-Louis Armstrong and Lu Watters-Bob Scobey tradition. Instead of jazz classics and vintage standards, the band plays comparatively new material; nine of the twelve selections were written or made popular during the FH5's two decades. If you had to sum it all up in one word, all twenty years of it, the word on this album cover's anniversary cake would do as well as any. The good news, twenty years later, is that the Firehouse Five Plus Two is still the happiest band around, with all the high spirits, energy and enthusiasm which made it world famous. --- Lester Koenig, December 12, 1969
Five years after their previous recording, the Firehouse Five Plus Two came together for one last record date, celebrating their 20th anniversary as a group. This CD reissue has two numbers from 1966 ("Mame" and "Winchester Cathedral"), but is otherwise from 1969. Rather than emphasizing standards (only "High Society" qualifies as a true dixieland warhorse), the group chose to play more offbeat material, including jazz pop hits such as "Mame," "Hello Dolly," "Midnight In Moscow" and "Stranger on the Shore." For the only time, the frontline had two trumpets (Danny Alguire and Don Kinch) in addition to the group's leader, Ward Kimball, on trombone and George Probert on soprano, but the band's sound was unchanged. It was only fitting that since the Firehouse Five Plus Two's first record launched the Good Time Jazz label, its final set was the last release by the original label. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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