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Little Niles
Randy Weston with Johnny Griffin, Melba Liston, George Joyner, Charlie Persip, Ray Copeland, Idrees Sulieman
spanyol
első megjelenés éve: 2009
73 perc
(2009)   [ DIGIPACK ]

CD
4.917 Ft 

 

IMPORT!
Kosaramba teszem
1.  Earth Birth
2.  Little Susan
3.  Nice Ice
4.  Little Niles
5.  Pam's Waltz
6.  Babe's Blues
7.  Let's Climb A Hill
8.  Eath Birth
9.  Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
10.  Saucer Eyes
11.  I Got Rhythm
12.  Gingerbread
13.  Cocktails For Two
14.  Honeysuckle Rose
15.  Fe-Double-U Blues
16.  Saucer Eyes (*)
Jazz

Tracks #1-7 originally issued as "Little Niles" (United Artists UAL 4011 / UAS 5011)
Recorded at RCA Studios, New York City, October, 1958

Ray Copeland (tp on #1-6), Idrees Sulieman (tp on #7), Melba Liston (tb, arr), Johnny Griffin (ts), Randy Weston (p), Jamil Nasser (b) and Charlie Persip (d)

Tracks #8-15 originally issued as "Piano a-la-mode" (Jubilee JP 1060)
Recorded in New York City, Spring, 1957

Randy Weston (p), Peck Morrison (b) and Connie Kay (d)

The bonus track features: Randy Weston (p), Cecil Payne (bar), Ron Carter (b) and Roy Haynes (d). Recorded in June, 1960.

This CD contains Randy Weston's complete original LP "Little Niles" (1958), presenting his own compositions arranged by Melba Liston. As a bonus, it's dded the complete album "Piano a-la-Mode" (1957), plus a 1960 quartet version of "Saucer Eyes" taken from a rare anthology.

"I'm convinced that Randy Weston is one of the few key figures in modern jazz. 'Little Niles' provides a glimpse into Weston's waltz-filled world and it’s a rewarding experience."

"Rarely, in the mass of LPs, pleasant and otherwise, you encounter a genuinelysignificant one. This is such an LP."
---Both by Don Gold -Down Beat (1959)



Randy Weston

Active Decades: '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s
Born: Apr 06, 1926 in Brooklyn, NY
Genre: Jazz
Styles: Modern Creative, World Fusion, Highlife, Post-Bop, Hard Bop, Mainstream Jazz, Progressive Jazz, African Jazz, African Traditions, Jazz Instrument, Piano Jazz

Placing Randy Weston into narrow bop-derived categories only tells part of the story of this restless musician. Starting with the gospel of bop according to Thelonious Monk, Weston has gradually absorbed the letter and spirit of African and Caribbean rhythms and tunes, welding everything together into a searching, energizing, often celebratory blend. His piano work ranges across a profusion of styles from boogie-woogie through bop into dissonance, marking by a stabbing quality reminiscent of, but not totally indebted to, Monk.
Growing up in Brooklyn, Weston was surrounded by a rich musical community: he knew Max Roach, Cecil Payne, and Duke Jordan; Eddie Heywood lived across the street; Wynton Kelly was a cousin. Most influential of all was Monk, who tutored Weston upon visits to his apartment. Weston began working professionally in R&B bands in the late '40s before playing in the bebop outfits of Payne and Kenny Dorham. After signing with Riverside in 1954, Weston led his own trios and quartets and attained a prominent reputation as a composer, contributing jazz standards like "Hi-Fly" and "Little Niles" to the repertoire. He also met arranger Melba Liston, who has collaborated with Weston off and on into the '90s. Weston's interest in his roots was stimulated by extended stays in Africa; he visited Nigeria in 1961 and 1963, lived in Morocco from 1968 to 1973 following a tour, and has remained fascinated with the music and spiritual values of the continent ever since. In the '70s, Weston made recordings for Arista-Freedom, Polydor, and CTI while maintaining a peripatetic touring existence -- mostly in Europe -- returning to Morocco in the mid-'80s.
However, starting in the late '80s, after a long recording drought, Weston's visibility in the U.S. skyrocketed with an extraordinarily productive period in the studios for Antilles and Verve. Among his highly eclectic recording projects were a trilogy of "Portrait" albums depicting Ellington, Monk, and himself, an ambitious two-CD work rooted in African music called The Spirits of Our Ancestors, a blues album, and a collaboration with the Master Gnawa Musicians of Morocco. Though he does tend now and then to recycle material written up to nearly half-a-century before, well in to his seventies, Weston remains an unpredictable, unusually enterprising musician, issuing Khepara in 1998.
---Richard S. Ginell, All Music Guide

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