| | Neal Hefti Jazz Pops CD Neal Hefti Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
Composer/conductor and trumpeter Neal Hefti honed his unmistakable swinging Middle of the Road (MOR) style after spending his formative years -- right out of high school -- in the company of Charlie Barnet, Muggsy Spanier, Earl "Fatha" Hines, Bobby Byrne, and Charlie Spivak. In addition to performing, Hefti was becoming an arranger of note. He then garnered the attention of Horace Heidt, whose version of "Pin Up Girl" was incorporated into the James Stewart and Paulette Goddard film Pot o' Gold (1941). That led to stints with Woody Herman -- who had rejected Hefti when the ambitious teen was still in high school -- and Harry James, as well as becoming a key component in Count Basie's legendary "New Testament" big band. It was circa his tenure as a producer at the Francis Albert Sinatra-owned Reprise Records label, that Hefti used his connections with Basie to score and conduct two of Sinatra's best-loved works, Sinatra and Swingin' Brass (1962) and Sinatra-Basie: An Historic Musical First (1963). Hefti somehow found the energy to cut a few LPs of his own. Jazz Pops is his second Reprise Records' platter, with Hefti leading a star-studded orchestra through a blend of his own high-profile tunes and a few concurrently well-known selections. Among the contributors are such West Coast studio session notables as Jack Sheldon (trumpet), Plas Johnson (flute), Al McKibbon (bass), and Emil Richards (vibes), with Shelly Manne (drums) and Earl Palmer splitting up duties on the skins. "Coral Reef" actually dates back a decade or so as the title track to Hefti's debut LP. In addition to the rousing call and response between the brass and rhythm sections, the upbeat and interminable catchiness immediately establishes the buoyant frolic that is inherent in Hefti's compositions. One especially key component occurs about 90 seconds into the number as Hefti shifts into a double-time rock & roll groove. The woodwind section's surreptitious vibe gives the performance the feel of providing the soundtrack to a dramatic spy-themed television show. The refreshingly laid-back approach to "Exodus" is in direct contrast to the typical remake as it places the melody into an exceedingly more affable context. The cover of André Previn's 1959 Grammy award winner "Like Young" is another prime example of Hefti's skills as a formidably interpretive talent. The relaxed -- yet never blasé -- big-band approach allows for copious interaction within the combo. Exceedingly clever is the coupling of Count Basie's unofficial theme "One O'clock Jump" with the historic Basie, Harry James, and Benny Goodman follow-up "Two O'clock Jump." Just like the A-side had, the second side of the album kicks off with a solid Hefti original. Continuing with his Basie connection is a brass happy rendering of his own catchy "Cute." Francisco Aquabella's percussive inflections during the chorus provide a nice response to the horn's captivating melody. From the Art Blakey catalog comes Bobby Timmons' immortal blues-based and moody "Moanin'." While not straying too far, Hefti brings out the very best that the tune has to offer. Similarly, the lovely Sidney Bechet standard jazz entry "Petit Fleur" is given a new lease on life. Thanks to Hefti's remarkable sensitivity, while overtly MOR,
Composer: Neal Hefti.
Personnel: Neal Hefti (trumpet); Willie Schwartz, Harry Klee, Plas Johnson , Justin Gordon, Buddy Collette (flute); Louis Ciotti, Med Flory, Bill Hood, Charlie Kennedy (saxophone); Joe Maini (alto saxophone); Conte Candoli, Don Fagerquist, Gerald Wilson, Jack Sheldon, Al Porcino, Pete Candoli (trumpet); Gale Robinson, Bill Hinshaw, Vincent DeRosa, Alan Robinson (French horn); Dick Noel, Dick Nash , George Roberts , Tommy Pederson , Kenny Shroyer, Tommy Shepard, Lew McCreary (trombone); Larry Bunker (vibraphone, bongos); Emil Richards (vibraphone); Earl Palmer , Shelly Manne (drums); Milt Holland (congas, bongos).
Liner Note Authors: Anthony Corbett; Ed Osborne.
Arranger: Neal Hefti. Neal Hefti Jazz Pops Songs Purchase Jazz Pops CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Ted Brown Free Spirit CD (1989)
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Jazz Pops songs
$14.79 Vinyl LP version also available directly from the label at www.whatmusic.comBuenos Aires, May 7th, 1972. A group of eight musicians (six Argentineans and two Uruguayans) gather at Estudios Ion, where so much good music has been put onto tape. What they create may be described as somewhat in between Ornette Coleman's and Miles Davis' ways of dealing with musical 'freedom'. Argentina was then going through hard times and a lot more hardships lay ahead. To jazz musicians, though, time was also ripe for dreams of success: after all Lalo Schifrin and Gato Barbieri were making it on the international jazz scene. Not that they took themselves for geniuses, they simply thought local jazz needed some shock treatment and trying their hand at some avant-garde music would hurt no one. Furthermore, they ranked among the best jazz players in Argentina. The two bassists in the group, Jorge López Ruiz and Jorge González, for instance, had both played with Gato Barbieri. López Ruiz had been the bassist of a legendary quintet led by Lalo Schifrin in 1956, whose saxophone player was Gato. González had been the bassist of Gato's regular rhythm section of the 1960s. Pocho Lapouble, the drummer, besides playing with the cream of Argentina's jazzmen, had been the percussionist of an (unrecorded) Astor Piazzolla sextet from 1968-1969 - the pianist and the guitarist in that group were jazz musicians too. Norberto Minichillo, percussionist in this record, but also an all-round drummer, was also playing avant-garde tango with a quintet that had Dino Saluzzi on bandonéon. Keyboardist Santiago Giacobbe had played many times with Gato Barbieri and was later to be the organist in Astor Piazzolla's 'Electric Group' of the mid-1970s. Fernando Gelbard, a well known jazzman, who had played with Gato and Chivo Borraro ('El Nuevo ...
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Jazz Pops album
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Jazz Pops CD music
$10.65 Music fans often struggle with their growing desire to “personally connect” with an artist through their music. In a time when more and more artists seem to merely want to entertain us, artists such as Heather Lawson understand the power, connection and reality of music to all of us. Her songs are mirrored reflections of who she really is as an artist and most importantly, as a person.In her release, Woke Up More, this Nashville based artist provides an uninhibited view of her aggressive and passionate music. Her southern influences have melded with rock and blues stylings creating an exciting and sincere musical palette from which she poetically paints about the intellectual complexities and emotional simplicities of life and love. Those who evoke passion and sincerity from all genres of the music ...
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Jazz Pops CD music
$12.15 Cosmic Jaguar music is about……Connecting with the stars.…the space between the light of the stars.…the spheres.…the transducence of Divinity into ...
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