Herb Ellis & Ray Brown - Softshoe (1974) 320 kbps
BAND/ARTIST: Herb Ellis & Ray Brown
- Title: Softshoe
- Year Of Release: 1974
- Label: Concord Jazz
- Genre: Jazz, Mainstream Jazz
- Quality: MP3/320 kbps
- Total Time: 32:00
- Total Size: 86 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
1. Inka-Dinka-Doo
2. Soft Shoe
3. Edison Lights
4. Easter Parade
5. Green Dolphin Street
6. Ellis Original
7. The Flinstones Theme
personnel :
Bass – Ray Brown
Drums – Jake Hanna
Guitar – Herb Ellis
Piano – George Duke
Trumpet – Harry "Sweets" Edison
This early Concord recording (which is available on CD) is unusual in a couple of ways. Guitarist Herb Ellis and bassist Ray Brown (who are the co-leaders) are joined not only by trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison (who is in colorful form) and drummer Jake Hanna but pianist George Duke in one of his very few mainstream records. Their repertoire includes jazz versions of such unlikely tunes as "Inka-Dinka-Doo," "Easter Parade" and "The Flintstones Theme"; the latter version (which is based on the familiar "I Got Rhythm" chord changes) was the first of many to turn that cartoon melody into jazz. In addition Brown ("Soft Shoe"), Edison and Ellis contribute a song apiece plus there is a brief rendition of "Green Dolphin Street" that is taken as a Brown-Ellis duet. Recommended.~ Scott Yanow
1. Inka-Dinka-Doo
2. Soft Shoe
3. Edison Lights
4. Easter Parade
5. Green Dolphin Street
6. Ellis Original
7. The Flinstones Theme
personnel :
Bass – Ray Brown
Drums – Jake Hanna
Guitar – Herb Ellis
Piano – George Duke
Trumpet – Harry "Sweets" Edison
This early Concord recording (which is available on CD) is unusual in a couple of ways. Guitarist Herb Ellis and bassist Ray Brown (who are the co-leaders) are joined not only by trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison (who is in colorful form) and drummer Jake Hanna but pianist George Duke in one of his very few mainstream records. Their repertoire includes jazz versions of such unlikely tunes as "Inka-Dinka-Doo," "Easter Parade" and "The Flintstones Theme"; the latter version (which is based on the familiar "I Got Rhythm" chord changes) was the first of many to turn that cartoon melody into jazz. In addition Brown ("Soft Shoe"), Edison and Ellis contribute a song apiece plus there is a brief rendition of "Green Dolphin Street" that is taken as a Brown-Ellis duet. Recommended.~ Scott Yanow
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads