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3.821 Ft
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1. | Just You, Just Me
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2. | Lover, Come Back to Me
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3. | 'Deed I Do
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4. | Viper's Drag
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5. | Truckin'
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6. | Echoes of Spring/Passionate
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7. | Changes
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8. | St. Louis Blues
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9. | After You've Gone
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10. | Out of Nowhere
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11. | I'm Crazy 'Bout My Baby
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Jazz
Dick Hyman - Music Selection, Piano Ralph Sutton - Piano
* Bill Smith - Design * Danny Greenspoon - Producer * John Norris - Liner Notes, Preparation * Paul J. Hoeffler - Photography * Ted O'Reilly - Engineer, Producer * Todd Fraracci - Engineer * William Van Ree - Assembly
The two living stride pianists, Dick Hyman and Ralph Sutton, had only recorded one earlier album together, a set for the Concord label. This encore performance is on the same high level. Among the tunes that Hyman and Sutton romp through are "Just You, Just Me," "'Deed I Do," "Truckin'" and "After You've Gone." The complex but hard-swinging "Changes" is another one of the highlights. Sutton takes a pair of Willie "The Lion" Smith tunes as his feature while Hyman stretches out solo on "Out Of Nowhere." Classic music from a pair of keyboard masters. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Dick Hyman
Active Decades: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s Born: Mar 08, 1927 in New York, NY Genre: Jazz Styles: Swing, Stride, Classic Jazz, Standards, Lounge, Spy Music
A very versatile virtuoso, Dick Hyman once recorded an album on which he played "A Child Is Born" in the styles of 11 different pianists, from Scott Joplin to Cecil Taylor. Hyman can clearly play anything he wants to, and since the '70s, he has mostly concentrated on pre-bop swing and stride styles. Hyman worked with Red Norvo (1949-1950) and Benny Goodman (1950), and then spent much of the 1950s and '60s as a studio musician. He appears on the one known sound film of Charlie Parker (Hot House from 1952); recorded honky tonk under pseudonyms; played organ and early synthesizers in addition to piano; was Arthur Godfrey's music director (1959-1962); collaborated with Leonard Feather on some History of Jazz concerts (doubling on clarinet), and even performed rock and free jazz; but all of this was a prelude to his later work. In the 1970s, Hyman played with the New York Jazz Repertory Company, formed the Perfect Jazz Repertory Quintet (1976), and started writing soundtracks for Woody Allen films. He has recorded frequently during the past several decades (sometimes in duets with Ruby Braff) for Concord, Music Masters, and Reference, among other labels, and ranks at the top of the classic jazz field. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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