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3.324 Ft
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1. | Somethin' Special
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2. | Deep in a Dream
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3. | Melody for C
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4. | Melody for C [Alternate Take]
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5. | Eric Walks
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6. | Voodoo
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7. | Midnight Mambo
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8. | Zellmar's Delight
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Jazz
Sonny Clark - Piano Billy Higgins - Drums Butch Warren - Bass Charlie Rouse - Sax (Tenor) Ike Quebec - Sax (Tenor) Tommy Turrentine - Trumpet
* Alfred Lion - Producer * Francis Wolff - Photography * J.M.E. - Liner Notes * Michael Cuscuna - Liner Notes, Producer * Rudy Van Gelder - Engineer
Sonny Clark's final recording as a leader gives no hint as to his increasingly erratic lifestyle (he passed away in January 1963). Heading a quintet with trumpeter Tommy Turrentine, tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse, bassist Butch Warren, and drummer Billy Higgins, Clark introduces such originals as the modestly titled "Somethin' Special," "Melody for C," and "Voodoo"; "Deep in a Dream" was the date's only standard. The CD reissue adds Clark's formerly unknown "Zellmar's Delight" and the alternate of "Melody for C" to the original six-song program. The music is high-quality hard bop and keeps Clark's record perfect. During his shortened life, every one of the albums that he led were excellent. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Sonny Clark
Active Decades: '50s and '60s Born: Jul 21, 1931 in Herminie, PA Died: Jan 13, 1963 in New York, NY Genre: Jazz Styles: Bop, Post-Bop, Hard Bop, West Coast Jazz, Mainstream Jazz
Like Fats Navarro and Charlie Parker before him, Sonny Clark's life was short but it burned with musical intensity. Influenced deeply by Bud Powell, Clark nonetheless developed an intricate and hard-swinging harmonic sensibility that was full of nuance and detail. Regarded as the quintessential hard bop pianist, Clark never got his due before he passed away in 1963 at the age of 31, despite the fact that it can be argued that he never played a bad recording date either as a sideman or as a leader. Known mainly for seven records on the Blue Note label with a host of players including such luminaries as John Coltrane, Art Farmer, Donald Byrd, Jackie McLean, Hank Mobley, Art Taylor, Paul Chambers, Wilbur Ware, Philly Joe Jones, and others, Clark actually made his recording debut with Teddy Charles and Wardell Gray, but left soon after to join Buddy DeFranco. His work with the great clarinetist has been documented in full in a Mosaic set that is now sadly out of print. Clark also backed Dinah Washington, Serge Chaloff, and Sonny Criss before assuming his role as a leader in 1957. Clark's classic is regarded as Cool Struttin' but each date he led on Blue Note qualifies as a classic, including his final date, Sonny's Crib with John Coltrane. And though commercial success always eluded him, he was in demand as a sideman and played dozens of Alfred Lion-produced dates, including Tina Brooks' Minor Move. Luckily, Clark's contribution is well documented by Alfred Lion; he has achieved far more critical, musical, and popular acclaim than he ever did in life. ---Thom Jurek, All Music Guide |
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