Sittin' In [Digipak]Dizzy Gillespie
Release Date: 04/12/2005
Original Release:
1957
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 586226_CD
UPC # 075021034792
Label: Verve (USA)
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Disc: 1
2.
Ballad Medley: I'm Through With Love / Without A Word Of Warning / Sweet Lorraine / Love Walked In / September Song
4.
Ballad Medley: On The Alamo / Stompin' At The Savoy / This Time The Dream's On Me / Time After Time / Gone With The Wind
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Performer: Dizzy Gillespie
Producer: Norman Granz Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet); Coleman Hawkins, Paul Gonsalves, Stan Getz (tenor saxophone); Wynton Kelly (piano); Wendell Marshall (double bass); J.C. Heard (drums). SITTIN' IN is a jazz lover's dream come true. On this historic session, recorded in the summer of 1957, Dizzy Gillespie, Stan Getz, Coleman Hawkins, and Paul Gonsalves got together to create one of the most formidable frontlines ever captured on tape. The program, which includes "Dizzy Atmosphere," the chestnut "The Way You Look Tonight," and two lengthy ballad medleys, lets each horn player take a turn in the spotlight. The music blends West Coast cool, swing, bop, and hard-bop styles in a manner befitting each of the monumental leaders, and the whole is driven by a spry rhythm section consisting of bassist Wendell Marshall, drummer J.C. Heard, and pianist Wynton Kelly. Aficionados will relish the opportunity to identify the solos and styles of each player--Getz's cool complexity, Gillespie's athleticism, Gonsalves's unique lyricism, and Hawkins's pioneering technique and tone. SITTIN' IN is a superb slice of bop history, starring some of the most influential figures in the evolution of jazz.
If Charlie Parker was the chief architect of the bop revolution of the 1940s, Dizzy Gillespie was its standard-bearer, an evangelist who battled public hostility and incomprehension with rapier wit. A trumpeter of dazzling virtuosity, he matched Parker's rhythmic innovations with deft harmonic ingenuity. He also functioned as teacher, putting his vast knowledge of harmony at the disposal of younger musicians like Miles Davis, who were trying to get a handle on the new sound. His historic big band featuring Chano Pozo was the first large-scale attempt to combine Latin music with jazz, and the unflagging excellence of his subsequent career was a tribute to the integrity of his original vision. He died in 1993.
Also Appears On:
Similar Artist:
Ammons, Gene Bauza, Mario Blakey, Art Brown, Clifford D'Rivera, Paquito Davis, Miles Douglas, Dave (Trumpet) Ellis, Don Faddis, Jon Farmer, Art Ferguson, Maynard Gordon, Dexter Gray, Wardell Hargrove, Roy Harrell, Tom Hubbard, Freddie Johnson, J.J. Lewis, John Machito Marsalis, Wynton McPherson, Charles Monk, Thelonious Moody, James Parker, Charlie Parker, Maceo Parker, William (Jazz) Powell, Bud Roach, Max Rodney, Red Sandoval, Arturo Turre, Steve
Influences:
Armstrong, Louis Bechet, Sidney Beiderbecke, Bix Calloway, Cab Eckstine, Billy Eldridge, Roy Hackett, Bobby Hampton, Lionel Hawkins, Coleman Hines, Earl Millinder, Lucky Navarro, Fats Trumbauer, Frankie Williams, Mary Lou Young, Lester
Similar Genres:
Bebop |