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4.388 Ft
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1. | This Could Be the Start of Something Big
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2. | I Left My Heart in San Francisco
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3. | One Mint Julep
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4. | The Swingin' Shepherd Blues
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5. | I Can't Stop Loving You
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6. | Moon River
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7. | Fly Me to the Moon
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8. | What Kind of Fool Am I?
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9. | Walk, Don't Run
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10. | Nice 'N' Easy
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11. | Theme From the Apartment
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12. | The Hucklebuck
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13. | Oh, Pretty Woman
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14. | Oh Soul Mio
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15. | Shangri-La
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16. | At Long Last Love
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Jazz / Big Band; Swing
Recorded: January 1965
Count Basie - piano Marshall Royal - alto saxophone, clarinet Eric Dixon - tenor saxophone, flute Frank Wess - tenor saxophone, flute Marshall Royal - tenor saxophone, clarinet, reeds Charlie Fowlkes - baritone saxophone, flute, bass clarinet Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis - reeds Bobby Plater - reeds Sonny Cohn - trumpet Albert Aarons - trumpet Thad Jones - trumpet F.P. Richard - trumpet Edward Preston - trumpet Wallace Davenport - trumpet Sam Noto - trumpet Henry Coker - trombone Benny Powell - trombone Urbie Green - trombone Grover Mitchell - trombone Henderson Chambers - trombone Al Grey - trombone Bill Hughes - trombone Gordon Thomas - trombone Freddie Green - guitar Buddy Catlett - bass Wyatt Ruther - bass Sonny Payne - drums Louis Bellson - drums
Three decades after the fact, people looking at releases like This Time by Basie would tend to dismiss it as pandering, Count Basie doing a "pops"-type outing -- the cheesy cover art even emphasized the songs over Basie and his band. Nothing could be further from the truth, however -- this 16-song release reveals a wonderful body of work, and deserves to be better known. For starters, This Time by Basie swings, smooth and easy but taut, or hot and heavy. From Sonny Payne's understated cymbal intro to "This Could Be the Start of Something Big" to the bluesier notes of "One Mint Julep," Basie and company sound like they're enjoying themselves, whether elegantly stretching out on "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" or "Moon River," or soaring into the air on the hotter numbers -- one of the more surprising covers here is "Walk Don't Run," which even works in a big-band arrangement. Highlights amid all of this surprising splendor include Marshall Royal's alto sax on "What Kind of Fool Am I" and Frank Foster's tenor sax on "Something Big." Quincy Jones arranged and conducted This Time by Basie, and the record was successful, returning the Count to the pop charts on the eve of the British Invasion. The last five songs here are drawn from Pop Goes the Basie, a 1965 album arranged and conducted by Billy Byers, and produced by Teddy Reig -- the playing is as good as the companion work on numbers like "The Hucklebuck." Their version of Roy Orbison's "Oh, Pretty Woman" is a big-band blues rendition of the song (sung by Leon Thomas) that buries the original's grand operatic romantic sensibilities in a posed soulfulness. "Oh Soul Mio" (highlight by Al Grey's trombone work), "Shangri-La" and "At Long Last Love" (both prominently featuring Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis) come off better -- the last number could've come off of any of Basie's best post-1951 albums. The remixing from the original three-track studio masters has yielded an especially clean sound with vivid stereo separation, enhancing the solos (check out Davis' on "At Long Last Love") and the overall ensemble. ---Bruce Eder, allmusic
Includes liner notes by Marc Crawford & Leonard Feather. |
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