| Jazz / Cool, West Coast Jazz 
 Jimmy Giuffre - Sax (Alto), Sax (Tenor), Arranger, Sax (Baritone), Clarinet
 Art Pepper	Sax (Alto)
 Barney Kessel	Guitar
 Bill Russo	Arranger
 Bob Cooper	Sax (Tenor), Sax (Baritone)
 Bob Enevoldsen	Tuba
 Bob Manners	Bass
 Boots Brown	Trumpet
 Bud Shank	Sax (Alto), Flute, Sax (Baritone)
 Carlos Vidal	Conga
 Carson Smith	Bass
 Conte Candoli	Trumpet
 Curtis Counce	Bass
 Dave Pell	Sax (Tenor)
 Dexter Gordon	Sax (Tenor)
 Dodo Marmarosa	Piano
 Don Bagley	Bass
 Frank Patchen	Piano
 Gene Englund	Tuba
 Gerry Mulligan	Sax (Baritone)
 Hampton Hawes	Piano
 Howard Rumsey	Bass
 J.G. Calvados	Liner Notes
 Jackie Mills	Drums
 Joe Johnson	Vocals
 Joe Mondragon	Bass
 John Graas	Flugelhorn
 Leith Stevens	Arranger
 Marty Paich	Piano, Arranger
 Maynard Ferguson	Trumpet
 Mike Baillie	Translation
 Milt Bernhart	Trombone
 Ray Linn	Trumpet
 Red Callender	Bass
 Red Norvo	Vibraphone, Piano
 Roy Harte	Drums
 Russ Freeman	Piano
 Shelly Manne	Vocals, Drums
 Shorty Rogers	Arranger, Trumpet
 Teddy Charles	Vibraphone, Piano
 
 Basically, this Blue Moon triple-CD issue is an overview of clarinetist, saxophonist, arranger, and composer Jimmy Giuffre's small ensemble career before he became a bandleader. On this set he is portrayed in all these capacities on sessions led by Teddy Charles, Art Pepper, Conte Candoli, Shorty Rogers, and others. None of the work he did with Woody Herman's Herd (for whom he wrote "Four Brothers," the group's signature composition) or Buddy Rich is included here. There's a lot of great music here, but it is for Giuffre or west coast jazz completists only. New fans of Giuffre or those wanting to know more should begin with his Atlantic sides~ Thom Jurek, All Music Guide
 
 
 
 Jimmy Giuffre
 
 Active Decades: '40s, '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, '90s and '00s
 Born: Apr 26, 1921 in Dallas, TX
 Died: Apr 24, 2008 in Pittsfield, MA
 Genre: Jazz
 Styles: Modern Creative, Cool, Early Creative, West Coast Jazz, Folk-Jazz, Progressive Jazz, Avant-Garde Jazz
 
 Jimmy Giuffre has had many accomplishments in a long career that has never been predictable. Giuffre graduated from North Texas State Teachers College (1942), played in an Army band during his period in the service and then had stints with the orchestras of Boyd Raeburn, Jimmy Dorsey and Buddy Rich. His composition "Four Brothers" became a hit for Woody Herman, an orchestra that Giuffre eventually joined in 1949.
 Settling on the West Coast, the cool-toned tenor started also playing clarinet and occasional baritone. He was with Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars (1951-52) and Shorty Rogers' Giants (1952-56), recording with many top West Coast jazz players. In 1956 he went out on his own, forming the Jimmy Giuffre 3 with guitarist Jim Hall and bassist Ralph Pena (later Jim Atlas). Giuffre had a minor hit with his recording of "The Train and the River," a song that he played during his notable appearance on the 1957 television special The Sound of Jazz. In 1958 Giuffre had a most unusual trio with valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer and guitarist Hall (no piano, bass or drums!), appearing in the movie Jazz on a Summer's Day. After a couple years of reverting back to the reeds-guitar-bass format, in 1961 the new Jimmy Giuffre 3 featured pianist Paul Bley and bassist Steve Swallow and was involved in exploring the more introspective side of free jazz. From 1963 on Giuffre maintained a lower profile, working as an educator although Don Friedman and Barre Phillips were in his unrecorded 1964-65 group. He popped up on records now and then in the 1970s with diverse trios (including a session with Bley and Bill Connors) and his 1980s unit often utilized the synthesizer of Pete Levin. Giuffre, who started late in life playing flute and soprano and seems to have made a career out of playing surprising music, reunited with Bley and Swallow in 1992. He has recorded as a leader through the years for Capitol, Atlantic, Columbia, Verve, Hat Art, Choice, Improvising Artists, Soul Note and Owl.
 ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
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