R.I.P. Lee Konitz, 13 October 1927 - 15 April 2020
The legendary saxophonist Lee Konitz has died at the age of 92, from Covid-related pneumonia. He was the last surviving member of Miles Davis' Birth Of The Cool band, and had a storied career in his own right as a distinctive, melodic player and improviser.
This great collection was issued by Prestige in 1956 to bring together some 78rpm sides and material from 10" LPs. The first six tracks in fact are the entirety of "The New Sounds" by "Lee Konitz featuring Miles Davis", a 10" released in 1951. All of it essential early cool jazz and bop.
link
pw: sgtg
Showing posts with label Sonny Rollins. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonny Rollins. Show all posts
Friday, 17 April 2020
Lee Konitz, Miles Davis et al - Conception (1956 compilation, rec. 1949-51)
Labels:
1950s,
Arnold Fishkin,
Art Blakey,
Billy Bauer,
Gene Ramey,
Jackie McLean,
jazz,
Lee Konitz,
Max Roach,
MIles Davis,
Roy Haynes,
Sal Mosca,
Sonny Rollins,
Stan Getz,
Tommy Potter,
Walter Bishop Jr
Friday, 17 June 2016
Miles Davis - Bags' Groove (1957 compi, rec. 1954)
One of my absolute favourite albums of early, pre-Columbia Miles Davis - and actually a compilation of two 10" mini-albums, Miles Davis With Sonny Rollins recorded in June 1954, and Miles Davis All Stars Vol. 1, recorded on Xmas eve that same year.
It's all about the magnificent, knockout triple-punch of Sonny Rollins compositions for me, all of which would become widely-covered standards. This inspired collaboration between Davis and Rollins would unfortunately prove to be a one-off (the omnipresent drug problems of 50s jazz, apparently); listen to these tracks and imagine what could've been. Also recorded was Gershwin's But Not For Me, showing that this quintet were equally versatile with ballads and standards.
The 'All Stars' session from the end of the year featured another rare congress of striking personalities, with Thelonious Monk on piano and Milt 'Bags' Jackson on vibes. Bags' Groove, the composition, is the very definition of mid-50's cool. This compilation is rounded out by two alternate takes - of the title track, and But Not For Me. Prestige seem to have been quite the label for offering value for money - I never knew until today's discogs browse that they'd done 16rpm compilations, offering presumably over an hour of music on one disc decades before the advent of CDs. Sorry, I love trivia like that...
link
It's all about the magnificent, knockout triple-punch of Sonny Rollins compositions for me, all of which would become widely-covered standards. This inspired collaboration between Davis and Rollins would unfortunately prove to be a one-off (the omnipresent drug problems of 50s jazz, apparently); listen to these tracks and imagine what could've been. Also recorded was Gershwin's But Not For Me, showing that this quintet were equally versatile with ballads and standards.
The 'All Stars' session from the end of the year featured another rare congress of striking personalities, with Thelonious Monk on piano and Milt 'Bags' Jackson on vibes. Bags' Groove, the composition, is the very definition of mid-50's cool. This compilation is rounded out by two alternate takes - of the title track, and But Not For Me. Prestige seem to have been quite the label for offering value for money - I never knew until today's discogs browse that they'd done 16rpm compilations, offering presumably over an hour of music on one disc decades before the advent of CDs. Sorry, I love trivia like that...
link
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