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Moody's Mood for Blues |
James Moody |
első megjelenés éve: 1955 55 perc |
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(1994)
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 CD |
Kérjen árajánlatot! |
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1. | I'm Gone
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2. | A Hundred Years from Today
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3. | Keepin' up With Jonesy
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4. | Workshop
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5. | That Man O' Mine
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6. | Over the Rainbow
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7. | Jack Raggs
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8. | Mambo With Moody
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9. | It Might as Well Be Spring [Take 1]
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10. | It Might as Well Be Spring [Take 2]
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11. | Blues in the Closet
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12. | Moody's Mood for Blues
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13. | Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen
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14. | I Got the Blues
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15. | Blues Walk
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16. | Faster James
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Jazz Bop Jazz Blues
Recorded: Jan 8-28, 1955
James Moody - Flute, Sax (Alto), Sax (Tenor) Clarence Johnson - Drums Dave Burns - Trumpet Eddie Jefferson - Vocals Iona Wade - Vocals Jimmy Boyd - Piano Joe Harris - Drums John Latham - Bass John Lathan - Bass Numa Moore - Sax (Baritone) Pee Wee Moore - Brass Sadik Hakim - Piano William Shepherd - Trombone
This is a typical set from the great James Moody band of the mid-Fifties: lots of blues, a couple of exceptional ballads (including the alto sax version of "It Might as Well Be Spring", which Moody also recorded on tenor), deep-dish soul (most obviously on the track "Nobody Knows the Trouble I’ve Seen") and a spot for vocalese pioneer Eddie Jefferson. While the magnificent Moody holds the spotlight much of the way, there is also room for important contributions from trumpeter Dave Burns, a sturdy if unheralded rhythm section, and the then-upcoming composer/arrangers Benny Golson and Quincy Jones.
* Quincy Jones - Arranger * Rudy Van Gelder - Engineer
In the mid-'50s James Moody led a four-horn septet that played music falling somewhere between bop and rhythm & blues. The danceable rhythms and riffing made its recordings somewhat accessible but the solos of Moody (on tenor and alto) and trumpeter Dave Burns also held listener's interests. Vocalese master Eddie Jefferson has two guest appearances (on "Workshop" and "I Got the Blues") and Iona Wade sings "That Man O' Mine" in a Dinah Washington-influenced style but the emphasis is on Moody's solos and the ensembles; the leader's two versions of "It Might as Well Be Spring" (one on tenor, the other on alto) are highlights of this enjoyable CD reissue. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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