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1. | Mrs. Parker of K.C.
Bird's Mother
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2. | Ode to Charlie Parker
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3. | Far Cry
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4. | Miss Ann
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5. | Left Alone
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6. | Tenderly
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7. | It's Magic
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8. | Serene
Bonus
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Jazz / Avant-Garde Jazz;Post-Bop;Free Jazz
Recorded: Dec 21, 1960, Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
Eric Dolphy - alto saxophone, flute, bass clarinet Booker Little - trumpet Jaki Byard - piano Ron Carter - bass Roy Haynes - drums
A quarter of a century after his death at 36, the astonishing saxophonist and flutist Eric Dolphy is still influencing and inspiring the most adventuresome jazz musicians. Dolphy was daring and iconoclastic while fully immersed in the jazz tradition. His musicianship was so thorough that innovators like Charles Mingus and John Coltrane held him in awe. In a dream partnership, Dolphy and trumpeter Booker Little made a handful of recordings in 1960 and '61, shortly before Little's own premature death. The first of them are in this album. Included is the rare "Serene," never before issued with the session's other material.
* Don Schlitten - Cover Photo, Design * Esmond Edwards - Supervisor * Michael Cuscuna - Liner Notes * Nat Hentoff - Liner Notes * Rudy Van Gelder - Engineer * Shigeo Miyamoto - Mastering Engineer * Tamaki Beck - Supervisor
Charlie Parker's influence permeates this 1960 session. Beyond the obvious acknowledgment on song titles ("Mrs. Parker of K.C. ['Bird's Mother']" and "Ode to Charlie Parker"), his restless spirit is utilized as a guiding light for breaking bebop molds. Far Cry finds multi-reedist Eric Dolphy in a transitional phase, relinquishing Parker's governing universal impact and diving into the next controversial phase that critics began calling "anti-jazz." On this date Booker Little's lyrical trumpet and Jackie Byard's confident grasp of multiple piano styles (though both steeped in hard bop) were sympathetic to the burgeoning "avant-garde" approach that Dolphy displays, albeit sparingly, on this session. Far Cry contains the initial performance of Dolphy's future jazz classic "Miss Ann," along with his first recorded solo alto sax performance on "Tenderly," in which Dolphy bridges the gap between the solo saxophone performances of Coleman Hawkins and Anthony Braxton. ---Al Campbell, All Music Guide |
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