| | Django Reinhardt 1951-1953 CD Django Reinhardt Discography of CDs
The 17th and final installment in the Classics Django Reinhardt chronology contains the Gypsy guitarist's very last recordings. Its 22 tracks consist of Decca and Blue Star records cut in Paris between May 11, 1951, and April 8, 1953. By this time, Reinhardt had switched entirely to the electrically amplified guitar and was actively collaborating with progressive young players like alto saxophonist Hubert Fol, bassist Pierre Michelot, and pianists Raymond Fol and Martial Solal. This beautifully cool and bop-inspired music differs markedly from the Gypsy swing formula established during the 1930s by Reinhardt, Stéphane Grappelli, and the Quintet of the Hot Club of France. During the last years of his life, Reinhardt was not merely adapting to modernity -- he was actively defining it. Nowhere is this more evident than on the eccentrically reconfigured 1928 pop hit "Crazy Rhythm" and its flip side, Reinhardt's lovely "Anouman," a wistful air that feels like a Charles Mingus romance or a candidate for an early Truffaut or Godard film soundtrack. (The piece's title closely resembles the name of the monkey-faced Hindu deity Hanuman; it very well may represent one of the many links between European Gypsy culture and its East Indian ancestry.) This excellent compilation works as a moving and thought-provoking conclusion to the complete recordings of Django Reinhardt as compiled and reissued by the Classics label. (The only material that didn't make it into the series was an apparently contested body of works recorded in Rome during 1949 and 1950.) A little more than one month after recording "Le Soir," "Chez Moi," "I Cover the Waterfront," and "Deccaphonie," Django Reinhardt was felled by a stroke while fishing, was subsequently hospitalized, and left his body behind on May 16, 1953. Musically speaking, this album is his last will and testament. ~ arwulf arwulf
This CD opens with the two remaining tracks from May 1951. The session with Roger Gu‚rin does not sound well rehearsed but Django's somewhat hasty contributions are delightful. Gu‚rin is again heard on half of the tracks from January 1953 - "DR Blues" al 1951-1953 Review
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Purchase 1951-1953 CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis 1953-1955 CD (2007)
1951-1953 album
$12.89 This is volume three in the complete recordings of tenor saxophonist Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis as compiled and reissued in 2007 by the producers of the Classics Chronological Series. A bracingly expressive performer who began making records under his own name in 1946, Lockjaw was ripening into a marvelous state of early maturity by the time these sides were cut for the Royal Roost and King labels in 1953, 1954, and 1955. Some may place this compilation among the more highly regarded titles in the Lockjaw Davis discography, mainly because of its friendly and gregarious demeanor. The Roost sessions (tracks one through six) showcase Jaws with a bop rhythm section composed of pianist Eddie Bonnemere, bassist John Simmons, trap drummer Charlie Rice and an unidentified bongo player who added cumin, garlic ...
| | Earl Hines 1953-1954 CD (2007)
1951-1953 CD music
$18.05 The 11th installment in the Classics Earl Hines chronology charts the pianist and bandleader's professional progress during a time period running between May 1953 and August 1954. This entertaining segment of the Hines story includes eight excellent sides cut for the King label in New York, 14 selections recorded in Los Angeles for the Nocturne label, and lastly a five-and-a-half minute interview with Hines himself. The four King instrumentals ("Hot Soup," "Sleep Walking," "In the Attic," and "Space Ship") demonstrate how adaptable Hines was ...
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