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The Pretty Sound of Joe Wilder/Jazz From "Peter Gunn" |
Joe Wilder |
első megjelenés éve: 1990 |
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(1990)
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 CD |
5.313 Ft
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1. | Harbor Lights
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2. | I Hear Music
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3. | It's So Peaceful in the Country
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4. | Autumn in New York
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5. | Guys and Dolls
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6. | Blue Moon
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7. | Caravan
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8. | Greensleeves
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9. | The Boy Next Door
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10. | Lullaby
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11. | Not from Dixie
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12. | A Quiet Gass
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13. | Brief and Breezy
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14. | Joanna
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15. | The Floater
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16. | A Profound Gass
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17. | Slow and Easy
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18. | Brothers Go to Mothers
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19. | Fallout
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20. | Blues for Mother's
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Jazz
Joe Wilder Hank Jones - Piano Herbie Mann - Flute Jeffrey James - Compilation Producer Jerome Richardson - Sax (Tenor), Flute Milt Hinton - Bass Urbie Green - Trombone
Trumpet player Joe Wilder hasn't recorded many albums under his own name, which makes the CD debut of these two albums even more auspicious. The quiet reputation that Joe Wilder built was largely founded on these reserved recordings from the late '50s. Wilder is joined by Urbie Green, Hank Jones, Jerome Richardson, and Herbie Mann on Pretty Sound of Joe Wilder, which lives up to its name on a tasteful selection of ballads and standards. Jazz From "Peter Gunn" pits Wilder against Henry Mancini's television score with Jones again on piano, bassist Milt Hinton, and John Cresci Jr. on drums. ~ Wade Kergan, All Music Guide
Joe Wilder
Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s Born: Feb 22, 1922 in Colwyn, PA Genre: Jazz
A versatile trumpeter sporting a beautiful tone quality, Joe Wilder's playing is full of character and the invaluable ability to tell a story with his horn -- a trait he says was fueled by one of his "original inspirations," Benny Carter. Wilder was raised in Philadelphia, where his father led a band, making his debut on a local radio show spotlighting talented black children. His first professional job was with Les Hite in 1941, where he met Dizzy Gillespie in the trumpet section. He joined Lionel Hampton the following year and became co-bandmaster for a Marine band during World War II. Rejoining Hampton after the war, Wilder moved on to the Jimmie Lunceford, Lucky Millander, Sam Donahue, and Herbie Fields bands while also playing in the pit orchestras for Broadway musicals (including three years with Guys and Dolls). He played with Count Basie for the first six months of 1954 and was a member of the music staff of ABC-TV from 1957 to 1973, taking time out to tour Russia with Benny Goodman and substitute with the New York Philharmonic. Upon leaving ABC in 1973, Wilder worked as a freelance studio musician. As a leader, Wilder recorded an album for Savoy in 1956 and two for Columbia in 1959; he also appeared in memorably sly form on Benny Carter's A Gentleman and His Music (Concord) in 1985 and resurfaced in the 1990s with a pair of albums on the Evening Star label. ---Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide |
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