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Jimmy Smith Plays Fats Waller

Jimmy Smith (Organ)
Release Date: 09/02/2008
Original Release:  1962
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 1036744_CD
UPC # 5099921536922
Label: Blue Note Records (USA)
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Track Details Credits Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Everybody Loves My Baby sound samples  real  |  windows media
2. Squeeze Me sound samples  real  |  windows media
3. Ain't She Sweet sound samples  real  |  windows media
4. Ain't Misbehavin' sound samples  real  |  windows media
5. Lulu's Back in Town sound samples  real  |  windows media
6. Honeysuckle Rose sound samples  real  |  windows media
7. I've Found a New Baby sound samples  real  |  windows media

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Performer: Jimmy Smith (Organ)
Distributor: EMI Music Distribution

Notes: Personnel: Jimmy Smith (organ); Quentin Warren (guitar); Donald Bailey (drum). Playing piano-style single-note lines on his Hammond B-3 organ, Jimmy Smith revolutionized the use of the instrument in a jazz combo setting in the mid-'50s and early '60s, and this piano approach makes him a natural to adapt the piano tunes associated with Fats Waller to the B-3, which is what he did at the January 23, 1962, session that is represented here (Waller, by the way, was no stranger to the organ himself, and recorded several sides on the instrument). Working with guitarist Quentin Warren and his longtime drummer Donald Bailey (who worked with Smith throughout his Blue Note years), Smith brings his amazing rapid runs to Waller standards "Ain't Misbehavin'" and "Honeysuckle Rose," and gives "Ain't She Sweet" a wonderfully warm and soulful groove. It's fairly typical Smith, who careens, bolts, stutters, glides, and flashes notes all over the place at a frequently breathless pace, doing what he always does, which is being Jimmy Smith at the organ. That's what you want, and that's what you get here. ~ Steve Leggett
Though he was a late bloomer (he didn't start playing organ until age 28), Jimmy Smith is the single most influential figure in the history of jazz organ. He was the pioneering force in making the organ a lead instrument. And while he had bebop chops aplenty, his blues/R&B influences and preference for space over clutter also made him an icon of the subsequent acid jazz movement. Though his heyday was in the 1960s, the larger-than-life organist blazed ahead for decades afterward, until his death in February 2005.
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Soul Jazz  
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Shipping or Dimension weight in pounds: 0.5

PID # 4246425


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