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Boppin' with Scott
Ronnie Scott
első megjelenés éve: 2007
(2007)

4 x CD
6.216 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1. CD tartalma:
1.  On The Sunny Side Of The Street
2.  Scrubber Time
3.  Ad Lib Frolic
4.  Lady Be Good
5.  Boppin' At Esquire
6.  Idabop
7.  What Is This Thing Called Love?
8.  Buzzy (Pts, 1 & 2)
9.  How High The Moon, (Pts, 1 & 2)
10.  Wee Dot
11.  Coquette
13.  52nd Street Theme
14.  Ow!
15.  Don't Blame Me
16.  Stoned
17.  Scrapple From The Apple
18.  Donna Lee
 
2. CD tartalma:
1.  Gone With The Windmill
2.  Barbados
3.  Elevenses
4.  Ool Ya Koo
5.  Galaxy
6.  Brand's Essence
7.  Marshall's Plan
8.  Too Marvellous For Words
9.  Have You Met Miss Jones?
10.  September Song
11.  Flamingo
12.  Chasin' The Bird
13.  Little Willie Leaps
14.  El Sino
15.  Crazy Rhythm
16.  Close Your Eyes
17.  I Didn't Know What Time It Was
18.  The Nearness Of You
19.  All Of Me
20.  Not So Fast
21.  Battle Royal
22.  Fast
23.  Twin Beds
24.  Leap Year
25.  The Champ
 
3. CD tartalma:
1.  Once In A While
2.  Smoke Gets In Your Eyes
3.  Scott's Expedition
4.  Avalon
5.  Love Me Or Leave Me
6.  The Champ
7.  All The Things You Are
8.  Pantagrulian
9.  Mullenium
10.  Nemo
11.  The Nearness Of You
12.  Popo
13.  The Champ
14.  Nemo
15.  All The Things You Are
 
4. CD tartalma:
1.  Troubled Air
2.  Eureka
3.  Seven Eleven
4.  I May Be Wrong
5.  On The Alamo
6.  Day Dream
7.  What's New?
8.  Ballot Box
9.  Lover Come Back To Me
10.  Compos Mentos
11.  Stompin' At The Savoy
12.  Body Beautiful
13.  Sunshine On A Dull Day
14.  Fools Rush In
15.  Poor Butterfly
16.  Perfidia
17.  S'il Vous Plait
18.  Jordu
19.  Bang
20.  With Every Breath I Take
21.  A Night In Tunisia
22.  The Big Fist
23.  I'll Take Romance
24.  Speak Low
Jazz

Four CD set. As well as running a hugely successful Jazz club in London, Ronnie Scott was also a world-class saxophonist and pivotal in the rise of Jazz in the UK. This 81 track set focuses on Ronnie's first ten years as a professional musician when he was accompanied by the cream of British Jazz at the time. Contains six tracks available for the first time on CD and not available at all since the days of the 78.


Ronnie Scott will long be remembered as the co-owner of the club that carries his name, a jazz venue that became renowned throughout the world for the excellence of its setting and the artists on display. Scott was a club proprietor extraordinaire, distinguished for his entrepreneurial courage and artistic vision. He also was a stand-up comedian who could rival anyone on his best nights, of which there were plenty. Ronnie's prominence as a club owner tended to obscure the fact that he was a world-class tenor saxophonist, whose tone and affinity for the blues recall that other superb white tenorist Zoot Sims, although Ronnie's phrasing and attack were closer to Sonny Rollins, one of Scott's idols with whom he played on many occasions. Ronnie Scott was also a tireless promoter of fine British musicians, utterly committed to jazz all his life.

Disc 1 - BOPPIN AT ESQUIRE
Disc 2 - OOL YA KOO
Disc 3 - THE CHAMP
Disc 4 - COMPOS MENTOS



Ronnie Scott

Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
Born: Jan 28, 1927 in London, England
Died: Dec 23, 1996 in London, England
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Bop, Post-Bop, Swing

Tenor saxophonist Ronnie Scott looms among the towering figures of Britain's postwar jazz scene, exerting equal influence as a performer and as the owner of the world-famous club bearing his name. He was born Ronald Schatt in the east end of London on January 28, 1927 -- his father, dance band saxophonist Jock Scott, separated from his mother shortly after his birth. After first purchasing a cornet from a local junk shop, Scott then moved to the soprano saxophone, finally settling on the tenor sax during his teens; at a local youth club he began performing with aspiring drummer Tony Crombie, and soon began playing the occasional professional gig. After backing bandleader Carlo Krahmer, Scott toured with trumpeter Johnny Claes in 1945, joining the hugely popular Ted Heath Big Band the following year; however, changing economics made the big bands increasingly unfeasible, and as the nascent bebop sound developing across the Atlantic began making its way to the U.K., he and Crombie traveled to New York City to explore the source firsthand. Scott would regularly return to New York after signing on to play alongside alto saxophonist Johnny Dankworth on the transatlantic ocean liner the Queen Mary.
Despite his travels Scott remained a linchpin of the growing London bop scene, and in late 1948 he co-founded Club Eleven, the first U.K. club devoted to modern jazz. During this time he developed the lyrical but harmonically complex style that would remain the hallmark of his career, first backing drummer Jack Parnell before finally forming his own band in 1953. The nine-piece group made its public debut in conjunction with a London appearance by Norman Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic touring revue -- working from arrangements by trumpeter Jimmy Deuchar, the Scott band's debut proved a landmark moment in the history of British jazz, in many respects heralding the true starting point of the postwar era. Not all of Scott's instincts were sound -- in 1955, he briefly assembled a full-size big band, to disastrous creative and commercial results -- but when he officially dissolved the group in 1956, he was a household name throughout Britain. In 1957 he co-founded the Jazz Couriers with fellow tenor saxophonist Tubby Hayes, scaling to even greater heights of fame. The Jazz Couriers amicably split in 1959.
Around this time Scott began to again entertain the notion of a London-based jazz club in the tradition of the landmarks dotting New York's 52nd Street -- along with Pete King, a longtime collaborator who'd recently retired from active performing, he borrowed the money necessary to lease the building at 39 Gerrard Street and on October 31, 1959 opened Ronnie Scott's Club for business. Scott himself co-headlined the opening night along with Hayes and Parnell -- sales were promising, but the venue only began reaching true critical mass in 1961 when it hosted its first American act, Scott favorite Zoot Sims. In the months to follow, Ronnie Scott's was the setting of performances by a who's who of American tenor icons including Dexter Gordon, Roland Kirk, Stan Getz, Sonny Stitt, Ben Webster, and Sonny Rollins. In late 1965 the club moved to its present location on Frith Street, where before the end of the decade it would host everyone from Ella Fitzgerald to Albert Ayler, becoming the epicenter of London's jazz community. Although the club consumed much of his time, Scott continued touring with a quartet featuring pianist Stan Tracey -- during the late 1960s, he also spearheaded an eight-piece group with whom he created the most idiosyncratic and experimental music of his career. At the time of Scott's death on December 23, 1996, his namesake club was perhaps the most famous jazz venue in all of Europe.
---Jason Ankeny, All Music Guide

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