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Chris Barber 1957-58
Chris Barber
első megjelenés éve: 2009
(2009)

2 x CD
5.919 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1. CD tartalma:
1.  Kay Cee Rider
2.  I Love My Baby
3.  When the Saints Go Marching In
4.  Olga
5.  Old Rugged Cross
6.  Bye & Bye
7.  Pound of Blues
8.  When You and I Were Young Maggie Dear
9.  Just a Closer Walk with Thee
10.  Bourbon Street Parade
11.  Savoy Blues
12.  Lonesome Road
13.  The Sheik of Araby
14.  Won't You Come Home Bill Bailey
15.  You Took Advantage of Me
16.  Sweet Sue
17.  Moonshine Man
18.  You Rascal You
 
2. CD tartalma:
1.  Trombone Cholly
2.  Lawdy Lawdy Blues
3.  Bugle Boy March
4.  Pretty Baby
5.  Majorca
6.  Indiana
7.  New Orleans Hula
8.  St. Philip Street Breakdown
9.  Georgia Grind
10.  Rockin' in Rhythm
11.  My Old Kentucky Home
12.  Rent Party Blues
13.  Careless Love
14.  Strange Things Happen Every Day
15.  Mama Don't Allow
Jazz

Chris Barber
with
Ottilie Patterson
Monty Sunshine
Pat Halcox
Eddie Smith
Dick Smith
Ron Bowden
Graham Burbidge

A DOUBLE CD FOR THE PRICE OF ONE collection of Chris Barber recordings from 1957 and 1958. It comprises two concert recordings, Birmingham Town Hall and Brighton Pavilion (including some previously unreleased tracks), the 10" LP, 'Chris Barber Plays Vol 4' plus some singles by Ottilie Patterson. As well as Ottilie all the usual team are present, Monty Sunshine and Pat Halcox.


Chris Barber 1957-58 is the third in a series of single and double CDs from Lake records, each focussing on one or two years of recordings by Chris Barber's Jazz Band in the mid- to late-1950s. The previous two sets, Chris Barber 1955 and Chris Barber 1956, have previously been announced on the Barber website, and perhaps should be consulted for continuity into the present collection.

To summarize, this CD set includes three complete LPs from the Pye/Nixa jazz label, Chris Barber Plays Volume 4, Chris Barber In Concert Volume 2, and Chris Barber In Concert, Volume 3. In addition, there are the four sides from two singles featuring Ottilie Patterson (Kay Cee Rider / I Love My Baby and Trombone Cholly / Lawdy Lawdy Blues).

An added bonus is the inclusion of four tracks that were not on the original Brighton Concert LP (In Concert, Volume 3). As Paul Adams points out in his exemplary sleeve notes, "When I compiled this collection I tried to do it chronologically, but where there were entire albums I have stuck to the original LP running order. The exception is the Brighton concert. Over the years almost all of the unissued tracks from the ‘live’ concerts have 'disappeared’ but the exception was the Brighton one where four tracks not issued at the time were still in existence: ... Indiana, Rent Party Blues, New Orleans Hula and St Philip Street Breakdown."



Chris Barber

Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s
Born: Apr 17, 1930 in Welwyn Garden City, England
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Dixieland, Trad Jazz, New Orleans Jazz Revival, Jazz Instrument, Trombone Jazz

Trombonist and bandleader Chris Barber spearheaded the Anglo-European trad jazz movement during the late '50s and early '60s and devoted 60 years to the endless celebration of old-fashioned music. But that's only part of his story. Even as he presided over that transatlantic response to the Dixieland revival, Barber went out of his way to make music with U.S. blues legends Big Bill Broonzy, Brother John Sellers, Sonny Terry, Brownie McGhee, Otis Spann, Muddy Waters, James Cotton, and Sonny Boy Williamson II. This cross-pollination dramatically affected the lives and careers of budding British rockers such as the Rolling Stones, the Yardbirds, Eric Burdon, Jimmy Page, and John Mayall.
Donald Christopher "Chris" Barber was born on April 17, 1930, in Welwyn Garden City, Hertfordshire, just north of London, England. After studying double bass and trombone at London's Guildhall School of Music, he assembled the King Oliver-inspired Barber New Orleans Band in 1949. In 1953 he co-founded a group called the Jazzmen with Ken Colyer, a cornetist who had just returned from New Orleans where he had worked with clarinetist George Lewis. In 1954 the group was rechristened Chris Barber's Jazz Band. Trumpeter Pat Halcox had begun what would amount to a 59-year commitment, banjoist/guitarist Lonnie Donegan now sang songs from the jazz, blues, and folk traditions, and Barber sometimes performed on the string bass while Beryl Bryden stroked a washboard.
Donegan and Barber are credited with having ignited the mid-'50s U.K. skiffle movement with a 1955 cover of Leadbelly's "Rock Island Line" that went gold on both sides of the Atlantic. Another of the band's chart-topping hits was its interpretation of Sidney Bechet's "Petite Fleur," a feature for clarinetist Monty Sunshine that led to the eventual rise of pop instrumentalist Acker Bilk. The year 1955 also saw the arrival of Barber's future wife, vocalist Ottilie Patterson, a blues-based performer who sang duets with Sister Rosetta Tharpe when the gospel/swing star sat in with the band in 1957. Barber's often surprisingly diverse lineup also included Jamaican saxophonists Joe Harriott and Bertie King.
In 1959 Barber went cinematic by generating music for Look Back in Anger, a film noir exercise in kitchen sink realism directed by Tony Richardson and starring Richard Burton as a violently misogynistic, emotionally disturbed confection peddler and part-time Dixieland trumpeter (dubbed by Pat Halcox). Barber made the first of many U.S. tours in 1959, bringing out of the woodwork African-American jazz veterans like pianist Hank Duncan, clarinetist Edmond Hall, trumpeter Sidney DeParis, and rhythm & blues pioneer singer/saxophonist Louis Jordan. Barber's 1960s discography includes air shots from the BBC radio archives and live recordings made in Budapest and East Berlin, with gospel and folk material enriching the already fertile ground of the band's repertoire. As the years passed, a gradually renamed Chris Barber's Jazz & Blues Band regularly employed blues and rock musicians, blurring the artificially imposed delineations between genres while offering music that was accessible to a wide range of listeners.
Barber spent a lot of time performing in Europe during the 1970s, and after the passing of Duke Ellington deliberately sought out some of Duke's key soloists in organist Wild Bill Davis, saxophonist Russell Procope, and singer/trumpeter/violinist Ray Nance. Throughout the 1980s Barber stayed faithful to his traditional and progressive instincts by teaming up with Louisiana singer, philosopher, and keyboardist Dr. John. Originally from backgrounds as different as could be, the two made several records together and toured a show called Take Me Back to New Orleans. The 1990s and the first decade of the 21st century found Barber carrying the torch of trad jazz into a sixth decade of creative professional activity, often expanding his group to include 11 players while consistently delivering music of unpretentious warmth and historic depth.
---arwulf arwulf, All Music Guide

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