Dizzy Gillespie Quartet - At Onkel Pö's Carnegie Hall (2017/2020)
BAND/ARTIST: Dizzy Gillespie Quartet
- Title: At Onkel Pö's Carnegie Hall
- Year Of Release: 2017/2020
- Label: Delta Music
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: FLAC (tracks)
- Total Time: 110:18 min
- Total Size: 683 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Sunshine
02. The Land of Milk and Honey
03. Brother K
04. Unicorn
05. Oop-Pop-a-Da
06. Diddy Wa Diddy
07. Olinga
08. Blues
09. A Night in Tunisia
10. Dizzy's Party
01. Sunshine
02. The Land of Milk and Honey
03. Brother K
04. Unicorn
05. Oop-Pop-a-Da
06. Diddy Wa Diddy
07. Olinga
08. Blues
09. A Night in Tunisia
10. Dizzy's Party
The pioneering jazz trumpeter and vocalist Dizzy Gillespie, one of the biggest names in jazz, recorded live at the legendary Hamburg venue Onkel Pö's Carnegie Hall in 1978.
Dizzy was on tour with a small group: the solos were divided between him and 22-year-old guitarist Rodney Jones, a brisk wanderer between different styles, the equally youthful Ben Brown was the man on the electric bass. However, when it came to drummer Mickey Roker, Dizzy relied on his own, a player from the bebop-tradition - Roker, born in Miami in 1932, guaranteed the band's supply with rhythmical energy. Dizzy's passion for funky rhythms had noticeably increased by the late '70s and was apparent throughout the atmospheric two-hour set.
In the second part of the concert Dizzy invited the saxophonist Leo Wright onto the stage. Wright, one of the style-defining Americans in Europe and in early post-war West-Germany. He was born 1933 and died 1991 in Vienna. He was - together with Phil Woods - one of Charlie Parker's legitimate heirs and since 1959 Dizzy's permanent quintet-partner for two years. Wright, as a member of the SFB-big band, was firmly established in Europe's American jazz scene in the Berlin of the '60s.
Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet, vocal), Rodney Jones (guitar), Benjamin Brown (bass), Mickey Roker (drums), special guest: Leo Wright (alto saxophone)
Dizzy was on tour with a small group: the solos were divided between him and 22-year-old guitarist Rodney Jones, a brisk wanderer between different styles, the equally youthful Ben Brown was the man on the electric bass. However, when it came to drummer Mickey Roker, Dizzy relied on his own, a player from the bebop-tradition - Roker, born in Miami in 1932, guaranteed the band's supply with rhythmical energy. Dizzy's passion for funky rhythms had noticeably increased by the late '70s and was apparent throughout the atmospheric two-hour set.
In the second part of the concert Dizzy invited the saxophonist Leo Wright onto the stage. Wright, one of the style-defining Americans in Europe and in early post-war West-Germany. He was born 1933 and died 1991 in Vienna. He was - together with Phil Woods - one of Charlie Parker's legitimate heirs and since 1959 Dizzy's permanent quintet-partner for two years. Wright, as a member of the SFB-big band, was firmly established in Europe's American jazz scene in the Berlin of the '60s.
Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet, vocal), Rodney Jones (guitar), Benjamin Brown (bass), Mickey Roker (drums), special guest: Leo Wright (alto saxophone)
Year 2020 | Year 2017 | Jazz | FLAC / APE
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