| | Benny Green In This Direction CD Benny Green Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $13.59 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
|  |
For his second album as a leader, pianist Benny Green is showcased in a trio with bassist Buster Wiliams and drummer Lewis Nash. Nearing the end of his two-year stint with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, Green had mixed together elements of Bobby Timmons and Oscar Peterson in his own impressive style. He performs two numbers apiece by Buster Williams and Bud Powell (including "I'll Keep Lovin' You"), the standard "What Is There to Say," Thelonious Monk's complex "Trinkle Tinkle," and his own "Dealin' With a Feelin'" on a well-rounded and consistently swinging outing. ~ Scott Yanow
pianist's trio w. Buster Williams on bass, and Lewis Nash on drums, recorded December 29, 1988 and January 2, 1989
Benny Green Trio: Benny Green (piano); Buster Williams (bass); Lewis Nash (drums). Benny Green In This Direction Songs In This Direction Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Benny Green In This Direction CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase In This Direction CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Allman Brothers Band Dreams CDs (1989) Box Set
In This Direction album
$38.09 DREAMS is a 4-CD box set compiling in chronological order tracks by the Allman Brothers Band, as well as tracks by bands featuring one or more member of the Allman Brothers Band and solo performances by Gregg Allman and Dickey Betts.
Recorded between 1966 & 1988. Includes a 32-page illustrated booklet and liner notes by John Swenson.
Like nearly all box sets, DREAMS has plenty to recommend it-and a few nagging drawbacks. The set's chief shortcoming is its two conflicting goals: providing an overview of the Allmans' ...
| | Poco Forgotten Trail (1969-74) CDs (1990)
In This Direction CD music
$15.29 This compilation contains 38 songs, including many new remixes from original master tapes, 6 previously unreleased songs, alternate versions of 3 others, and a comprehensive 36 page booklet, with historic liner notes and photos.
This excellent two-disc collection captures Poco's finest moments from the days when they were laying down the template for all the country-rock music that was to follow. It's hard to remember, but when the Eagles first hit the scene, they were thought by many to be a Poco-wannabe band. Listen to this set and you'll hear why. The Forgotten Trail (1969-1974) ...
| | Pure Prairie League Greatest Hits CD (1999)
In This Direction music CDs
$7.59
| | Riot Inishmore/Sons Of Society CD (2004)
In This Direction songs
$11.09
| | Doors Legacy: The Absolute Best CDs (1967)
In This Direction album
$19.79 Recorded between 1967 & 1983. Includes liner notes by Jim Ladd.
Released to celebrate the 40th anniversary of the release of the first Doors album, THE VERY BEST OF THE DOORS supercedes all former Doors compilations. At two discs and 34 tracks, this is quite comprehensive for a band whose key lineup released only half a dozen albums. In addition to all ...
| | Pharoah Sanders Welcome To Love CD (1991)
In This Direction CD music
$13.85
| | Rasta Jamz CD (2003)
In This Direction music CDs
$15.09
| | Stringbean Live @ Ragin' Cajun CD (2004)
In This Direction songs
$13.39
| | IGM Invincible: Phase, Vol. 1 CD (2005) Parental Advisory
In This Direction album
$13.05
| | Zero Hour Fragile Mind CD (2005)
In This Direction CD music
$13.89 If a huge meteor were to fatally damage our beloved planet Earth, it might be expected that only two things would survive -- cockroaches and prog metal. Despite a rapid turnover of hard rock styles and subgenres over the years, prog metal always seems to survive. A case in point: the fourth release by San Francisco's Zero Hour, 2005's A Fragile Mind. All the pieces are in place for a prog metal party -- singer Fred Marshall's Geoff Tate-esque vocals, guitarist Jasun Tipton's John Petrucci-esque six-string work, and (of course) thinking man's lyrics and tricky song structures. This is the type of stuff that requires hours upon hours of listening alone in your bedroom to be able to play, and Zero Hour's instrumental chops are never in question here, as evidenced by such selections as "Destiny Is Sorrow" and the title track. And no prog metal album would be complete without an instrumental, and Zero Hour gives you not one, but two -- "Somnecrophobia" and the album-closing "Intrinsic." For prog metal with a power metal edge, A Fragile Mind is the album to beat in 2005. ...
| | Rock & Soul Instrumental Classics CD (2001) (Import) Netherlands
In This Direction music CDs
$14.25
| | Bill Harris Comp. 50'S Sessions CD (2008) (Import)
In This Direction songs
$22.05
| | King, Jerry & The Ri Date With Jerry King & The Rivertown CD (2008) (Import) Import
In This Direction album
$17.89
| | B-Side Players Fire In The Youth CD (2007)
In This Direction CD music
$16.05 The San Diego-based B-Side Players had been giving the revolution a groove for almost 15 years when 2007 arrived, playing music like Rage Against the Machine meets War with a heavy injection of son and some other Latin flavors (the "B" stands for "Brown"). With Fire in the Youth, vocalist and leader Karlos Paez has grown up without clamping down by smoothing down some of the punky rough spots found on the band's earlier albums ...
| | Doc Watson Americana Music Series: Best Of The Sugar Hill Years CD (2008)
In This Direction music CDs
$13.49 Americana Master, indeed. Doc Watson looms almost as large in American roots music as the Appalachian Mountains themselves. As an expressively soulful singer, a songwriter, and one of the best flatpicking guitarists ever, Watson stands above the masses. His greatest role, however, is that of musical nexus point. In his playing and song choices, one can trace the bloodlines of countless ...
|
|
|