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Out of Nowhere |
Sonny Criss |
első megjelenés éve: 1975 35 perc |
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(1997)
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 CD |
4.790 Ft
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1. | All the Things You Are
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2. | The Dreamer
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3. | El Tiante
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4. | My Ideal
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5. | Out of Nowhere
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6. | Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?
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7. | The First One
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Jazz
Sonny Criss - Sax (Alto) Bob Porter Producer Dolo Coker Piano Don Hahn Remixing Jimmie Smith Drums Larry Gales Bass Peter Granet Engineer Ron Warwell Photography, Design
Sonny Criss never became a major name or a pollwinner, but he was one of the great altoists. His recordings for Muse in the 1970s were often classics, including this superb effort. Assisted by pianist Dolo Coker, bassist Larry Gales and drummer Jimmie Smith, Criss comes up with one inventive chorus after another on two of his originals, a song by Coker, and four standards including "All The Things You Are," "My Ideal" and "Out of Nowhere." Criss's distinctive sound, mastery of bop and consistently swinging ideas are three strong reasons to acquire this CD reissue. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Sonny Criss
Active Decades: '40s, '50s, '60s and '70s Born: Oct 23, 1927 in Memphis, TN Died: Nov 19, 1977 in Los Angeles, CA Genre: Jazz Styles: Hard Bop
Alto saxophonist William "Sonny" Criss was an anomaly of the jazz musicians who came up during the bebop era. Criss moved to Los Angeles from Memphis at the age of 15, and at 19 played in Howard McGhee's band with Charlie Parker and Teddy Edwards. As was the norm for every alto player, Parker exerted a huge influence on Criss' playing. His beefy, earthy tone can be heard on a number of Savoy sessions beginning the next year. Criss drifted, playing in jazz and R&B groups, including those led by Johnny Otis, Billy Eckstine, and Stan Kenton. After joining Buddy Rich in 1956, Criss recorded Jazz U.S.A. for Imperial as a leader; it's one of the true underground classics of the hard bop era. Imperial -- mainly an R&B label specializing in New Orleans acts such as Fats Domino -- put no promotional push behind it. Nonetheless, he was able to cut two more sessions for the label: the excellent Go Man! and Sonny Criss Plays Cole Porter. Still playing with Rich, Criss cut At the Crossroads while on tour in Chicago for the Peacock label; the set featured Wynton Kelly and was critically well received. The saxophonist continued to work, fronting his own band in Los Angeles and gigging with others for brief out-of-town jaunts. He signed with Prestige in 1965 and issued a host of fine recordings, This Is Criss! and Sonny's Dream among them. Criss also cut various sessions for Xanadu, Muse, and ABC/Impulse near the end of his life. He committed suicide in 1977 due to the painful consequences of stomach cancer. His fine Crisscraft and Out of Nowhere albums were reissued on CDs, as were his complete Imperial recordings. ---Thom Jurek, All Music Guide |
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