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3.726 Ft
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1. | Little Pony
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2. | Souvenir [Live]
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3. | A Jug or Not [Live]
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4. | Take the "A" Train [Live]
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5. | Basie [Live]
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6. | Moten Swing [Live]
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7. | I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart [Live]
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8. | Late Date
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9. | Warm Breeze
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10. | Parker's Mood/Word from Bird
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11. | Wind Machine
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12. | Capp This! [Live]
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13. | Soft as Velvet
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14. | I'm Shoutin' Again
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Jazz
Frank Capp - Drums, Producer Frank Capp Juggernaut Andy Martin - Trombone Bob Cooper - Sax (Tenor) Conte Candoli - Trumpet Ernestine Anderson - Vocals Ernie Andrews - Vocals Gerry Wiggins - Piano Jackie Kelso - Sax (Alto) Lanny Morgan - Sax (Alto) Nat Pierce - Piano, Producer Pete Christlieb - Sax (Tenor) Plas Johnson - Saxophone Red Holloway - Saxophone Richie Kamuca - Saxophone Rickey Woodard - Sax (Tenor) Snooky Young - Trumpet Steve Wilkerson - Sax (Alto)
* Anabel Sinn - Design * Bill Putnam - Engineer * Chris Long - Producer * George Horn - Mastering * Glen Barros - Executive Producer * Jerry Barnes - Engineer * John Burk - Executive Producer * Mark Holston - Compilation Producer * Phil Edwards - Assembly, Engineer, Mixing
The Juggernaut has remained remarkably consistent during its over two decades as a Count Basie-inspired big band, despite the death of its co-leader pianist/arranger Nat Pierce in 1992. Under the direction of drummer Frank Capp, the Juggernaut has recorded exclusively for Concord, resulting in just six albums during its first 20 years, all of which are represented on the dozen selections included on this 1998 sampler. Among the key soloists of the all-star groups heard on this disc are tenor saxophonists Bob Cooper, Pete Christlieb, Red Holloway, and Rickey Woodard, altoists Marshall Royal and Lanny Morgan, trumpeters Bill Berry, Conte Candoli and Snooky Young, and Ernie Andrews and Ernestine Anderson on vocals. A good overview. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Frank Capp
Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s Born: Aug 20, 1931 in Worchester, MA Genre: Jazz Styles: Bop, Swing
Frank Capp, a flexible and consistently swinging drummer, loves to drive a big band. As leader of the Juggernaut (a group he co-led with Nat Pierce starting in 1975, until the pianist's death in 1992), he got to push and inspire some of Los Angeles' best. Capp found his initial fame playing with Stan Kenton's Orchestra (1951). Two years later, he settled in Los Angeles; became a busy studio musician; and played with everyone from Ella Fitzgerald, Harry James, and Charlie Barnet to Stan Getz, Art Pepper, and Dave Pell. He recorded often with Andre Previn's Trio (1957-1964), and also made records with Benny Goodman (1958), Terry Gibbs, and Turk Murphy. Capp worked steadily on television shows and in the film studios in the 1960s, and (starting in the 1970s) recorded extensively in a variety of settings for Concord. The Capp-Pierce Juggernaut (later known simply as the Juggernaut) sometimes sounded identical to the '70s Count Basie Orchestra, and served as a perfect format for the drummer's colorful playing. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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