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5.133 Ft
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1. | At Last
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2. | Prisoner of Love
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3. | Dream
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4. | I've Heard That Song Before
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5. | Moonlight Serenade
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6. | Stairway to the Stars
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7. | Let's Fall in Love
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8. | My Silent Love
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9. | My Melancholy Baby
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10. | I Had the Craziest Dream
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11. | I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
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12. | I Can't Get Started
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13. | While We're Young
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14. | It Could Happen to You
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15. | Love Letters
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16. | Close Your Eyes
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17. | I Fall in Love Too Easily
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18. | On the Street Where You Live
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19. | Skylark
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20. | Runnin' Wild
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21. | No Moon at All
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22. | On a Slow Boat to China
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23. | Hello Young Lovers
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24. | The Poor Soul
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Jazz
Urbie Green - Conductor, Soloist, Trombone Art Ryerson - Guitar Barry Galbraith - Guitar Bernard Kaufman - Sax (Alto) Bernie Glow - Trumpet Bob Haggart - Bass Bobby Byrne - Arranger, Trombone Chauncey Welsch - Trombone Dave McKenna - Piano Doc Severinsen - Trumpet Don Ferrara - Trumpet Don Lamond - Drums Eddie Bert - Trombone Eddie Costa - Piano, Vibraphone Eddie Wasserman - Flute, Sax (Tenor) Frank Rehak - Trombone Gil Cohen - Trombone (Bass) Hal McKusick - Sax (Alto) Joe Wilder - Trumpet John Bello - Trumpet Milt Hinton - Bass Nat Pierce - Piano Nick Travis - Trumpet Paul Faulise - Trombone Pepper Adams - Sax (Baritone) Ralph Burns - Arranger Rolf Kuhn - Clarinet, Sax (Alto) Sol Schlinger - Sax (Baritone) Stan Webb - Sax (Baritone) Walter Levinsky - Clarinet, Sax (Alto)
This killer set combines both volumes of master Urbie Green's early-'60s The Persuasive Trombone of Urbie Green recordings on a single disc. The sessions for these dates took place between 1960 and 1962, and featured two different bands. The first sessions feature cats like Hal McKusick, Milt Hinton, Doc Severinsen, a very young Rolf Kuhn, and Detroit baritone boss Pepper Adams. The track list is impressive as well: Johnny Mercer's"Dream," a romping reading of "I Can't Get Started," and Johnny Burke's "It Could Happen to You." The latter volume keeps Hinton and Severinsen on some tunes but adds the great vibraphonist Eddie Costa, and baritone saxophonist Stan Webb replaces Adams. The program is equally divided between ballads and swinging modern big-band material, including great arrangements of "Skylark" and "I Fall in Love Too Easily." If this weren't enough, to fill out the CD the producers added four numbers from Green's sextet sessions, including "On a Slow Boat to China" and "Poor Soul," with some beautiful interplay between the leader and Costa. It seems Lonehill Jazz always does it right. ~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
Urbie Green
Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s and '90s Born: Aug 08, 1926 in Mobile, AL Genre: Jazz Styles: Ballads, Bop, Swing
A fine jazz player with a beautiful tone who has spent most of his career in the studios, Urbie Green is highly respected by his fellow trombonists. He started playing when he was 12; was with the big bands of Tommy Reynolds, Bob Strong, and Frankie Carle as a teenager; and worked with Gene Krupa during 1947-1950. Green had a stint with Woody Herman's Third Herd, appeared on some of the famous Buck Clayton jam sessions (1953-1954), and was with Benny Goodman off and on during 1955-1957. He played with Count Basie in 1963, and spent a period in the 1960s fronting the Tommy Dorsey ghost band (1966-1967), but has mostly stuck to studio work. Urbie Green recorded frequently as a leader in the 1950s up to 1963 (for Blue Note, Vanguard, Bethlehem, ABC-Paramount, and dance band-oriented records for RCA and Command). He has appeared much less often in jazz settings since then, but did make two albums for CTI in 1976-1977. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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