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Mating Call
Tadd Dameron with John Coltrane
első megjelenés éve: 1956
35 perc
(2007)

CD
2.721 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Mating Call
2.  Gnid
3.  Soultrane
4.  On a Misty Night
5.  Romas
6.  Super Jet
Jazz / Bop

Recorded: Nov 30, 1956, Hackensack, New Jersey

Tadd Dameron - piano
John Coltrane - tenor saxophone
John Simmons - acoustic bass
Philly Joe Jones - drums

This November 1956 date marked the first recording of the deeply moving ballad "Soultrane", and the first exposition as well of the lovely line "On a Misty Night" (based on "September in the Rain"), a number Dameron would later explore himself in other contexts.
This is not a typical Tadd Dameron date in that his music is not played by a large ensemble or even a quintet. He is represented as a composer but not as an arranger. Yet his pungent themes come through strongly, carried by the searing, probing tenor saxophone of John Coltrane.

Includes liner notes by Ira Gitler and Mark Gardner.



Tadd Dameron

Active Decades: '40s, '50s and '60s
Born: Feb 21, 1917 in Cleveland, OH
Died: Mar 08, 1965 in New York, NY
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Bop, Progressive Big Band, Post-Bop, Hard Bop

The definitive arranger/composer of the bop era, Tadd Dameron wrote such standards as "Good Bait," "Our Delight," "Hot House," "Lady Bird." and "If You Could See Me Now." Not only did he write melody lines but full arrangements and he was an influential force from the mid-'40s on even though he never financially prospered. Dameron started out in the swing era touring with the Zack Whyte and Blanche Calloway bands, he wrote for Vido Musso in New York and most importantly contributed arrangements for Harlan Leonard's Kansas City Orchestra, some of which were recorded. Soon Dameron was writing charts for such bands as Jimmie Lunceford, Count Basie, Billy Eckstine and Dizzy Gillespie (1945-47) in addition to Sarah Vaughan. Dameron was always very modest about his own piano playing but he did gig with Babs Gonzales' Three Bips and a Bop in 1947 and led a sextet featuring Fats Navarro (and later Miles Davis) at the Royal Roost during 1948-49. Dameron co-led a group with Davis at the 1949 Paris Jazz Festival, stayed in Europe for a few months (writing for Ted Heath) and then returned to New York. He wrote for Artie Shaw's last orchestra that year, played and arranged R&B for Bull Moose Jackson (1951-52) and in 1953 led a nonet featuring Clifford Brown and Philly Joe Jones. However drug problems started to get in the way of his music. After recording a couple of albums (including 1958's Mating Call with John Coltrane) he spent much of 1959-61 in jail. After he was released, Dameron wrote for Sonny Stitt, Blue Mitchell, Milt Jackson, Benny Goodman and his last record but was less active in the years before his death from cancer. Tadd Dameron's classic Blue Note recordings of 1947-48, his 1949 Capitol sides and Prestige/Riverside sets of 1953, 1956, 1958 and 1962 are all currently in print on CD.
---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide

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