| | Tim Armacost Live At Smalls CD Tim Armacost Discography of CDs
 |
|
Our Price: $12.89 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
Our Price: $10.89
|  |
This is a burning set recorded live at one of New York's hottest jazz clubs, Smalls. The presence of the great Tom Harrell on trumpet and flugelhorn ratchets up the intensity, but the lesser-known quintet members -- Gerald Cannon on bass, Shingo Okudaira on drums, and the delightful Jonny King on piano -- turn in excellent performances as well. Tim Armacost's tenor sound is rich and his solos are steeped in classic post-bop vocabulary. He shines on the ballads "Whistling Away the Dark" and "You Don't Know What Love Is," ably handles the faster tempos of Gary Bartz's "Libra" and Ornette Coleman's "Invisible," and plays a mean soprano sax on Hank Mobley's "Hank's Other Bag," a 14-bar blues. ~ David R. Adler
up & coming tenor/soprano saxophonist is joined by his modern sounding quintet, feat. Tom Harrell-tpt/flg, Johnny King-pno, Gerald Cannon-bss & Shingo Okudaira-drm
Recorded live at Smalls, New York, New York in December 1996. Includes liner notes by Zan Stewart.
Personnel: Tim Armacost (soprano & tenor saxophones); Tom Harrell (trumpet, flugelhorn); Jonny King (piano); Gerald Cannon (bass); Shingo Okudaira (drums).
Tim Armacost Live At Smalls Songs Live At Smalls Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Tim Armacost Live At Smalls 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 Live At Smalls CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Modern Jazz Quartet Pyramid CD (1960)
Live At Smalls album
$9.09
| | Modern Jazz Quartet Complete Last Concert CDs (1974)
Live At Smalls CD music
$15.65 Recorded live at Avery Fisher Hall, New York on November 25, 1974. Includes liner notes by Nat Hentoff.
This two-disc live set features the Modern Jazz Quartet in its final concert (at New York City's Lincoln Center in 1974). Though the group would later reunite in the early '80s, there is the distinct feel of retrospective here, looking back on a career of remarkable invention and artistry. Both qualities are in ample evidence during this performance, which showcases the remarkable solo and ...
| | Modern Jazz Quartet Dedicated To Connie CDs (1960)
Live At Smalls music CDs
$12.25 Regarding this 1960 live date, recorded in Slovenia, group leader John Lewis writes in the album liner notes, "In my opinion, never before or since has the ...
| | Joni Mitchell Blue CD (1971)
Live At Smalls songs
$8.59
| | Swingle Singers American Look / Place Vendome CDs (1969)
Live At Smalls album
$24.45
| | Modern Jazz Quartet Concorde CD (1955) Remastered
Live At Smalls CD music
$8.05
| | Rough Guide To Bellydance CD (2002) (Import) United Kingdom
Live At Smalls music CDs
$13.09
| | Giacomo Gates Centerpiece CD (2004)
Live At Smalls songs
$15.29 Featuring Harold Danko, Ray Drummond, Greg Bandy, Vic Juris ...
| | Vikki Carr 10 De Collecion CD (2005) Remastered
Live At Smalls album
$5.69
| | Brian Bromberg Downright Upright CD (2007)
Live At Smalls CD music
$14.19
| | Wonder Stuff Live At The BBC CDs (2007) England
Live At Smalls music CDs
$26.79 Indie undergrounders turned grebo heroes turned pop monsters the Wonder Stuff's alternate history is revealed via their British radio appearances on BBC Sessions. We first meet the Stuff in late 1987, playing a quartet of songs recorded for Radio One DJ Janice Long, all of which would reappear on their debut album The Eight Legged Groove Machine. At the time, the group were already ferociously finding their stylistic feet, and an insouciance worthy of the Small Faces helped lay the foundation for the entire Brit-pop movement to come. By the summer of 1991, when the Stuff recorded their next radio session, they were already huge stars, and their pop transformation was complete. A year later, the BBC caught them in all their glory at that summer's Reading Festival, strutting through a set stuffed with hits and songs culled from their recently released, chart busting Never Loved Elvis album. Another full concert, recorded in Leicester, in March, 1994, found the group seemingly going from strength to strength, even if we now know that the end was already nigh. However, the Wonder Stuff went out on a high ...
|
|
|