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The Essential Buck Clayton |
Buck Clayton |
első megjelenés éve: 1953 |
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(2007)
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 CD |
5.180 Ft
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1. | 'S Wonderful
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2. | Claytonia
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3. | Kandee
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4. | Squeeze Me
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5. | I Can't Get Started
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6. | Buck Huckles
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7. | Cool Too
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8. | Love Is Just Around the Corner
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9. | Blues Blasé
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10. | It's Been So Long
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11. | Ballin' the Jack
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12. | Good Morning Blues
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13. | Just a Groove
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14. | The Queen's Express
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Jazz
Buck Clayton - Trumpet Aaron Bell - Bass Benny Morton - Trombone Bobby Donaldson - Drums Buddy Tate - Sax (Tenor) Earle Warren - Sax (Alto) Edmond Hall - Clarinet Hank Jones - Piano Henderson Chambers - Trombone Jimmy Crawford - Drums Jimmy Jones - Piano Jo Jones - Drums Kenny Burrell - Guitar Mel Powell - Piano Ruby Braff - Trumpet Steve Jordan - Guitar Vic Dickenson - Trombone Walter Page - Bass
* John Hammond, Sr. - Liner Notes, Producer * Jules Halfant - Design * S.W. Bennett - Liner Notes
This excellent CD contains over 80 minutes of music and reissues 14 of the 16 selections included on a two-LP set from 1977. There are three (rather than five) numbers from a date led by pianist Mel Powell that features trumpeter Buck Clayton and clarinetist Edmond Hall, eight songs from the 1957 Buck Clayton septet (with trombonist Vic Dickenson and altoist Earle Warren) and three tunes from a matchup between the trumpets of Buck Clayton and Ruby Braff (along with the tenor of Buddy Tate and trombonist Benny Morton). The consistently swinging music includes some Count Basie-associated tunes plus seven Clayton originals with fine solos from all of the principals. Mainstream may not have been the dominant form of jazz during this period but many of its exponents (including those heard on this CD) were very much in their prime. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Buck Clayton
Active Decades: '30s, '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s Born: Nov 12, 1911 in Parsons, KS Died: Dec 08, 1991 in New York, NY Genre: Jazz Styles: Mainstream Jazz, Swing
An excellent bandleader and accompanist for many vocalists, including Billie Holiday, Buck Clayton was a valued soloist with Count Basie Orchestra during the '30s and '40s, and later was a celebrated studio and jam session player, writer, and arranger. His tart, striking tone and melodic dexterity were his trademark, and Clayton provided several charts for Basie's orchestra and many other groups. Clayton began his career in California, where he organized a big band that had a residency in China in 1934. When he returned, Clayton led a group and played with other local bands. During a 1936 visit to Kansas City, he was invited to join Basie's orchestra as a replacement for Hot Lips Page. Clayton was also featured on sessions with Lester Young, Teddy Wilson, and Holiday in the late '30s. He remained in the Basie band until 1943, when he left for army service. After leaving the army, Clayton did arrangements for Basie, Benny Goodman, and Harry James before forming a sextet in the late '40s. He toured Europe with this group in 1949 and 1950. Clayton continued heading a combo during the '50s, and worked with Joe Bushkin, Tony Parenti, and Jimmy Rushing, among others. He organized a series of outstanding recordings for Columbia in the mid-'50s under the title Jam Session (compiled and reissued by Mosaic in 1993). There were sessions with Rushing, Ruby Braff, and Nat Pierce. Clayton led a combo with Coleman Hawkins and J.J. Johnson at the 1956 Newport Jazz Festival, then reunited with Goodman in 1957 at the Waldorf Astoria. There was another European tour, this time with Mezz Mezzrow. He appeared in the 1956 film The Benny Goodman Story and played the 1958 Brussels World Fair with Sidney Bechet. Clayton later made another European visit with a Newport Jazz Festival tour. He joined Eddie Condon's band in 1959, a year after appearing in the film Jazz on a Summer's Day. Clayton toured Japan and Australia with Condon's group in 1964, and continued to revisit Europe throughout the '60s, often with Humphrey Lyttelton's band, while playing festivals across the country. But lip and health problems virtually ended his playing career in the late '60s. After a period outside of music, Clayton once again became active in music, this time as a non-playing arranger, touring Africa as part of a State Department series in 1977. He provided arrangements and compositions for a 1974 Lyttleton and Buddy Tate album, and did more jam session albums for Chiaroscuro in 1974 and 1975. He also became an educator, teaching at Hunter College in the early '80s. Clayton led a group of Basie sidemen on a European tour in 1983, then headed his own big band in 1987 that played almost exclusively his compositions and arrangements. That same year Clayton's extensive autobiography -Buck Clayton's Jazz World, with Nancy Miller-Elliot, was published. --- Ron Wynn, All Music Guide |
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