Showing posts with label buddy rich. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buddy rich. Show all posts
Monday, November 16, 2020
THE HITS OF WOODY HERMAN
Cool album from clarinet player Woody Herman, you've got one of my favorite artists showing up on the second song, vibesist Terry Gibbs and the last song you've got the greatest drummer of all times, Buddy Rich, going one on one with Woody....
GET IT HERE
Enjoy!
Wednesday, February 26, 2020
LIONEL HAMPTON AND HIS GIANTS
Here's an album from Lionel Hampton with Art Tatum, Harry Edison, Buddy Rich and Barney Kessel and this is the original 1956 pressing....
GET IT HERE
Enjoy!
Thursday, February 28, 2019
CHARLIE PARKER - RETURN ENGAGEMENT
Here's a two record set with songs from the great Charlie Parker, recorded with and produced by Norman Granz, loads of big names, Thelonius Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Taylor, Buddy Rich, Benny Carter, Miles Davis, Oscar Peterson and many more, the two last recordings are from the last recording sessions of his life, done some three months before he passed in March, 1955, two songs devoted to Cole Porter compositions....
GET IT HERE
Enjoy!
Tuesday, October 16, 2018
CHARLIE PARKER & DIZZY GILLESPIE - BIRD AND BIZ
Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie with Thelonius Monk, Curly Russell and Buddy Rich, produced by Norman Granz and this is the 1956 pressing... Unfortunately a few scratches here and there but man.... what a fantastic album!!!
GET IT HERE
enjoy!
Tuesday, September 4, 2018
THE LIONEL HAMPTON QUINTET
Fantastic album from The Lionel Hampton Quintet, with Buddy Rich, Buddy De Franco, Oscar Peterson and Ray Brown, produced by Norman Granz, and this is the original 1954 pressing....
GET IT HERE
enjoy!
Friday, February 12, 2016
NORMAN GRANZ' JAZZ AT THE PHILHARMONIC - VOLUME 6
In 1944, producer Norman Granz organized a concert billed as "Jazz at the Philharmonic" (also JATP) as a fundraiser in Los Angeles. The event, which was recorded, featured Illinois Jacquet, Jack McVea, J.J. Johnson, Shorty Sherock, and a rhythm section with Nat King Cole and Les Paul; Jacquet's playing in particular caused a bit of a sensation. After a few more similar events, Granz in 1946 began organizing extensive annual tours using classic swing and bop musicians in a jam-session setting. Although some critics often complained that these events encouraged grandstanding (R&B honking was getting popular during the era), a great deal of rewarding and exciting music resulted, and Granz recorded (and later released) much of it on his Verve label. He paid his musicians very well and did his best to fight racism every bit of the way. Among JATP's stars through the years were tenors Flip Phillips (whose solo on "Perdido" became famous), Jacquet, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, Ben Webster, and Stan Getz; trumpeters Roy Eldridge, Charlie Shavers, Dizzy Gillespie, and Harry "Sweets" Edison; trombonists Bill Harris and Tommy Turk; altoists Charlie Parker, Willie Smith, and Benny Carter; pianists Hank Jones and Oscar Peterson; a variety of bassists (often Ray Brown); and drummers Louie Bellson, Gene Krupa, and Buddy Rich. Ella Fitzgerald started touring with JATP early on, usually having her own separate set and joining in on a finale, and later tours often also included performances by regular groups such as the Oscar Peterson Trio, Gene Krupa's combo, Stuff Smith, or Lester Young. After 1957, the annual tours stopped, although there was an attempt to revive JATP in 1967; and Granz kept the spirit of Jazz at the Philharmonic alive on his many jam session-type records for Pablo in the 1970s.
This is the 6th record in the series with among others Charlie Parker, Lester Young and Buddy Rich....
GET IT HERE
enjoy!
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