| | Prince Lasha Cry! CD Prince Lasha Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Personnel: Prince Lasha (flute); Sonny Simmons (alto saxophone); Gary Peacock, Mark Proctor (bass); Gene Stone (drums). Recorded at Contemporary Records Studio, Los Angeles, California on November 21, 1962. Includes liner notes by Lester Koenig. Digitally remastered by Kirk Felton (Fantasy Studios, Berkeley, California). Personnel: Prince Lasha (flute); Sonny Simmons (alto saxophone); Mark Proctor, Gary Peacock (acoustic bass); Gene Stone (drums). Audio Remasterer: Kirk Felton. Liner Note Author: Lester Koenig. Recording information: Contemporary's Studio, Los Angeles, CA (11/21/1962). Photographer: Roger Marshutz. In the early '60s, flutist Prince Lasha's work with alto saxophonist Sonny Simmons was often compared to the trailblazing free jazz that Ornette Coleman was exploring at the time. To be sure, Coleman was a major inspiration to both of them. And yet, The Cry! demonstrates that Lasha's work with Simmons had an avant-garde energy of its own. Coleman is a strong influence on this 1962 session -- which Lasha co-led with Simmons -- but The Cry! isn't an outright imitation of Coleman's work any more than Phil Woods' recordings are outright imitations of Charlie Parker's. For one thing, The Cry! (which Fantasy reissued on CD in 2001) is slightly more accessible than the albums that Coleman recorded for Atlantic in the early '60s. Free jazz performances like "Bojangles," "A.Y.," and the rhythmic "Congo Call" are abstract, cerebral, and left-of-center, but they're still a bit more accessible than Coleman's harmolodic experimentation. The same thing goes for the Latin-influenced "Juanita" and the bluesy "Red's Mood," which is Coleman-minded but also has a strong Charlie Parker influence -- in fact, the tune successfully bridges the gap between Bird and Coleman and shows listeners what those altoists had in common. It should be noted that, even though The Cry! (which employs Gary Peacock or Mark Proctor on acoustic bass and Gene Stone on drums) is free jazz, it isn't the blistering, ferocious stuff that Albert Ayler, Cecil Taylor, and late-period John Coltrane were known for in the 1960s. This album is quirky and dissonant, but it isn't harsh or confrontational. In avant-garde circles, The Cry! went down in history as one of Lasha's finest accomplishments -- and deservedly so. ~ Alex Henderson Purchase Cry! CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Prince Lasha Firebirds CD (1967)
Cry!
$9.89
| | Chico Freeman Lenox Avenue Breakdown CD (1978)
Cry!
$13.49 Personnel: Arthur Blythe (alto saxophone); Bob Stewart (tuba); ...
| | Yusef Lateef Golden Flute CD (1966) Remastered; Digipak
Cry!
$9.89
| | Bill Evans Complete Village Vanguard Recordings, 1961 CDs (2005) Remastered
Cry!
$22.25 Live Recording
Bill Evans (Piano): Bill Evans ; Scott LaFaro (double bass); Paul Motian. Personnel: Bill Evans (piano); Paul Motian (drums). Liner Note Author: Orrin Keepnews. Recording information: Village Vanguard, New York, NY (06/25/1961). Photographer: Steve Schapiro. The music recorded by Bill Evans on June 25, 1961, has long since acquired legendary status. Evans, a brilliant pianist whose unique voicings have influenced over a generation of jazz pianists who have followed him, weaves one masterpiece after another with bassist Scott LaFaro ...
| | John Coltrane One Up, One Down: Live At The Half Note CDs (2005) Remastered
Cry!
$18.95 Live Recording
Personnel: John Coltrane (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Alan Grant (spoken vocals); McCoy Tyner (piano); Jimmy Garrison (double bass); Elvin Jones (drums). ONE DOWN, ONE UP: LIVE AT THE HALF NOTE, recorded in the last year of the classic quartet's existence, captures John Coltrane, drummer Elvin Jones, pianist McCoy Tyner, and bassist Jimmy Garrison going full blast. Recorded a year ...
| | Ran Blake All That Is Tied CD (2006) Digipak
Cry!
$12.95
| | Jean-Michel Jarre Les Chants Magnetiques CD (1981) (Import) France
Cry!
$10.35
| | Maurice Deebank Inner Thought Zone CD (1999) (Import) United Kingdom
Cry!
$16.09
| | DR Feelgood Potts Dr. "Feelgodd" Potts CD (2002)
Cry!
$13.19
| | Miles Davis Miles Ahead CD (1957) (Import) Netherlands
Cry!
$11.79 Import-only collection from the Back Up label includes 'Dig', 'Out Of The Blue', 'Darn That Dream' and more.
Personnel: Miles Davis (flugelhorn); Gil Evans (arranger, conductor); Lee Konitz (alto saxophone); Taft Jordan, Ernie Royal, Bernie Glow, John Carisi, Louis Mucci (trumpet); Jimmy Cleveland, Frank Rehak, Joe Bennett (trombone); Tom Mitchell (bass trombone); Willie Ruff, Tony Miranda, Jimmy Buffington (French horn); Bill Barber (tuba); Romeo Penque (flute, clarinet, bass clarinet, oboe); Sid Cooper, Eddie Caine (flute, clarinet); Danny Bank (bass clarinet); Wynton Kelly (piano); Paul Chambers (bass); Art Taylor (drums). Recorded at the Columbia 30th Street Studios, New York, New York between May 6 and August 22, 1957. This album is perhaps most significant for the process it set in motion -- the collaboration between Gil Evans and Miles Davis that would produce Porgy and Bess and Sketches of Spain, two of Davis' best albums. That said, this album is a miracle in itself, the result of a big gamble on the part of Columbia Records, who put together Evans and Davis, who hadn't worked together since recording the critically admired but commercially unsuccessful sides that would later be issued as The Birth of the Cool. Columbia also allowed Evans to assemble a 19-piece band for the recordings, at a time when big bands were far out of fashion and also at a time when the resulting recordings could not be released until two years in the future (because of Davis' contractual obligations with Prestige). Davis was also expected to carry the album ...
| | Aota Green Walk To Market To Buy A Plum C CD (2006) (Import)
Cry!
$30.19
| | Atlantic Standards CD (2006) Import
Cry!
$23.29
| | Laissez Le Bon Temps Rouler CD (2006) (Import)
Cry!
$7.59
| | Duke Ellington Duke Box CDs (2007) (Import) Box Set; Denmark
Cry!
$69.39 Duke Ellington: Duke Ellington. Personnel: Duke Ellington (piano); Ray Nance (vocals, violin, trumpet); Herb Jeffries, Ivie Anderson, Joya Sherrill, Kay Davis, Al Hibbler, Betty Roché (vocals); Fred Guy (whistling, guitar); Harry Carney (clarinet, bass clarinet, alto saxophone, baritone saxophone); Johnny Hodges (clarinet, soprano saxophone, alto saxophone); Sax Mallard, Nat Jones, Otto Hardwick (clarinet, alto saxophone); Skippy Williams, Jimmy Hamilton, Barney Bigard, Ben Webster (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Russell Procope (alto saxophone); Al Sears (tenor saxophone); Rex Stewart (trumpet, cornet); Cootie Williams, Reunald Jones, Harold Baker, Al Killian, Taft Jordan, Shelton Hemphill, Francis Williams, Wallace Jones, Cat Anderson (trumpet); Lawrence D. Brown, Joe Tricky Sam Nanton, Juan Tizol, Quentin Jackson, Sandy Williams , Tyree Glenn, Wilbur DeParis, Claude Jones (trombone); Billy Strayhorn (piano); Sonny Greer (drums). Liner Note Author: Dan Morgenstern. Recording information: Carnegie Hall, NY (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); CBS Studios, New York, NY (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Crystal Ballroom, Fargo, ND (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Hollywood Empire, L.A (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Howard Theatre, Washington DC (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Hurrican, NY (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Langley Air Force Base, Hampton, VA (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Naval Training Center, Bainbridge, MD (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); Southland Cafe, Boston, MA (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); The New Zanzibar, NY (01/09/1940-02/??/1949); World Studios, NY (01/09/1940-02/??/1949). Photographers: William Gottlieb; Gordon Parks; Bettmann; Herman Leonard. Was Duke Ellington, as pianist, composer, and/or bandleader, one of the most vital musical figures in 20th-century history (and beyond)? The answer is, naturally, yes, and the proof lies within this box set. In the 1940s, Ellington led an edition of his orchestra considered by fans and scholars to be his best--it featured iconic players Jimmy Blanton, Johnny Hodges, and Ben Webster. Ellington's abilities as a songwriter and arranger were in full flower--by then he'd established a catalog of tunes that achieved both commercial success and melodic excellence. ...
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