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3.228 Ft
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1. | Miss Fine
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2. | Milestones
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3. | I Remember Bird
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4. | Night Train
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5. | Guitar Blues
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6. | Down by the Riverside
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7. | Ja-Da
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Jazz / Post-Bop, Hard Bop
Oliver Nelson - Sax (Soprano), Arranger, Sax (Alto), Sax (Tenor), Conductor Barbara Flynn Cover Design Bill Perkins Reeds Billy Byers Trombone Bob Thiele Original Recording Producer Bobby Bryant Trumpet Buddy Childers Trumpet Conte Candoli Trumpet Ed Thigpen Drums Ernie Tack Trombone Frank Strozier Reeds Fred Seligo Photography Freddie Hill Trumpet Gabe Baltazar Reeds Jack Bradley Photography, Liner Notes Jack Nimitz Reeds Joe Lebow Liner Design Lou Blackburn Trombone Mel Brown Guitar Monty Budwig Bass Nat Hentoff Liner Notes Peter Myers Trombone Robert Flynn Cover Design Tom Scott Reeds Wally Heider Original Engineering, Engineer
Oliver Nelson's live recordings don't seem as sharp as his studio stuff. Good playing, though, from a good group of West Coasters, but nothing exciting happens. ~ Douglas Payne, All Music Guide
Oliver Nelson
Active Decades: '50s, '60s and '70s Born: Jun 04, 1932 in St. Louis, MO Died: Oct 27, 1975 in Los Angeles, CA Genre: Jazz Styles: Soul-Jazz, Fusion, Post-Bop, Hard Bop, Modern Big Band, Mainstream Jazz, Soundtracks, Film Music
Oliver Nelson was a distinctive soloist on alto, tenor, and even soprano, but his writing eventually overshadowed his playing skills. He became a professional early on in 1947, playing with the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra and with St. Louis big bands headed by George Hudson and Nat Towles. In 1951, he arranged and played second alto for Louis Jordan's big band, and followed with a period in the Navy and four years at a university. After moving to New York, Nelson worked briefly with Erskine Hawkins, Wild Bill Davis, and Louie Bellson (the latter on the West Coast). In addition to playing with Quincy Jones' orchestra (1960-1961), between 1959-1961 Nelson recorded six small-group albums and a big band date; those gave him a lot of recognition and respect in the jazz world. Blues and the Abstract Truth (from 1961) is considered a classic and helped to popularize a song that Nelson had included on a slightly earlier Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis session, "Stolen Moments." He also fearlessly matched wits effectively with the explosive Eric Dolphy on a pair of quintet sessions. But good as his playing was, Nelson was in greater demand as an arranger, writing for big band dates of Jimmy Smith, Wes Montgomery, and Billy Taylor, among others. By 1967, when he moved to Los Angeles, Nelson was working hard in the studios, writing for television and movies. He occasionally appeared with a big band, wrote a few ambitious works, and recorded jazz on an infrequent basis, but Oliver Nelson was largely lost to jazz a few years before his unexpected death at age 43 from a heart attack. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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