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CD BT Kft. internet bolt - CD, zenei DVD, Blu-Ray lemezek: Work Song (180gr) *BAKELIT*

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Work Song (180gr)
Nat Adderley with Wes Montgomery, Bobby Timmons, Percy Heath, Sam Jones
első megjelenés éve: 1960
(2017)   [ LIMITED + BONUS ]

*BAKELIT*
3.560 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Work Song
2.  Pretty Memory
3.  I've Got a Crush on You
4.  Mean to Me
5.  Fallout
6.  Sack O' Woe
7.  My Heart Stood Still
8.  Violets for Your Furs
9.  Scrambled Eggs
10.  The Shouter
bonus track
Recorded: January 25 & 27, 1960, New York, New York
Digitally remastered by Phil De Lancie (1989, Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, California)

Nat Adderley - cornet
Sam "Stovepipe No. 1" Jones - cello, bass
Keter Betts - cello, bass
Bobby Timmons - piano
Wes Montgomery - guitar
Percy Heath - bass
Louis Hayes - drums

Nat Adderley led a double creative life at Riverside: featured on the highly successful working-group albums led by his brother Cannonball, and also devising several intriguingly different projects under his own name. Very possibly the most interesting was Work Song, which took its title from one of Nat's most widely known soulful compositions, and took its instrumentation from the younger Adderley's fertile imagination. Cornet, cello, and guitar make up a front line that will probably never be duplicated. The guitarist was his friend Wes Montgomery, just emerging towards jazz stardom; the cellist was the longtime bassist of Cannonball's band, Sam Jones.

* Harris Lewine - Cover Design, Producer
* Jack Higgins - Engineer
* Jack Matthews - Mastering
* Ken Braren - Cover Design, Producer
* Lawrence Shustak - Cover Photo, Photography
* Orrin Keepnews - Liner Notes, Producer
* Paul Bacon - Cover Design, Producer

This CD reissue brings back a near-classic by cornetist Nat Adderley. Utilizing a cornet-cello-guitar front line (with Sam Jones and Wes Montgomery) along with a top-notch rhythm section (pianist Bobby Timmons, Percy Heath, or Keter Betts on bass and drummer Louis Hayes), Adderley performs a fine early version of his greatest hit ("Work Song") and helps introduce Cannonball Adderley's "Sack O' Woe." Four songs use a smaller group with Timmons absent on "My Heart Stood Still" (which finds Keter Betts on cello and Jones on bass), "Mean to Me" featuring Nat backed by Montgomery, Betts, and Hayes, and two ballads ("I've Got a Crush on You" and "Violets for Your Furs") interpreted by the Adderley-Montgomery-Jones trio. No matter the setting, Nat Adderley is heard throughout in peak form, playing quite lyrically. Highly recommended.
--- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide



Nat Adderley

Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s
Born: Nov 25, 1931 in Tampa, FL
Died: Jan 02, 2000
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Hard Bop, Soul-Jazz

Nat Adderley's cornet (which in its early days was strongly influenced by Miles Davis) was always a complementary voice to his brother Cannonball in their popular quintet. His career ran parallel to his older brother for quite some time. Nat took up trumpet in 1946, switched to cornet in 1950, and spent time in the military, playing in an Army band during 1951-1953. After a period with Lionel Hampton (1954-1955), Nat made his recording debut in 1955, joined Cannonball's unsuccessful quintet of 1956-1957, and then spent periods with the groups of J.J. Johnson and Woody Herman before hooking up with Cannonball again in October 1959. This time the group became a major success and Nat remained in the quintet until Cannonball's death in 1975, contributing such originals as "Work Song," "Jive Samba," and "The Old Country" along with many exciting hard bop solos. Nat Adderley, who was at the peak of his powers in the early to mid-'60s and became adept at playing solos that dipped into the subtone register of his horn, led his own quintets after Cannonball's death; his most notable sidemen were altoists Sonny Fortune (in the early '80s) and Vincent Herring. Although his own playing declined somewhat -- Adderley's chops no longer had the endurance of his earlier days -- Nat continued recording worthwhile sessions in the years prior to his death on January 2, 2000. Many but not all of his recordings through the years are currently available (for such labels as Savoy, EmArcy, Riverside, Jazzland, Atlantic, Milestone, A&M, Capitol, Prestige, SteepleChase, Galaxy, Theresa, In & Out, Landmark, Evidence, Enja, Timeless, Jazz Challenge, and Chiaroscuro).
--- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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