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Johnny Griffin - The Complete Recordings: 1960-1962 (2014)

Johnny Griffin - The Complete Recordings: 1960-1962 (2014)

BAND/ARTIST: Johnny Griffin

  • Title: The Complete Recordings: 1960-1962
  • Year Of Release: 2014
  • Label: Playtime
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
  • Total Time: 7:45:57
  • Total Size: 2.78 / 1.05 GB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Tickle Toe
02. Save Your Love for Me
03. Twins
04. Funky Fluke
05. Imagination
06. Soft Winds
07. Last Train from Overbrook
08. Hey, Lock!
09. Midnight at Minton's
10. Second Balcony Jump
11. I'll Remember April (1960)
12. Good Bait
13. Billie's Bounce (Live)
14. Epistrophy (January 1961) [Live]
15. Well, You Needn't (January 1961) [Live]
16. In Walked Bud (January 1961) [Live]
17. Light and Lovely (Live)
18. Straight, No Chaser (Live)
19. Woody'n You (Live)
20. Bingo Domingo (Live)
21. I'll Remember April (1961) [Live]
22. In Walked Bud (February 1961)
23. Well, You Needn't (February 1961)
24. Ruby, My Dear
25. Rhythm-a-Ning
26. Epistrophy (Febuary 1961)
27. 'Round Midnight
28. Stickball (I Mean You)
29. Soft & Furry
30. In the Still of the Night
31. The Last of the Fat Pants
32. Same to You
33. Connie's Bounce
34. Situation
35. Nocturne
36. Why Not
37. As We All Know
38. Camp Meeting
39. Blues up and Down
40. Nice and Easy
41. Oh, Gee
42. Walkin'
43. Leapin' on Lenox
44. Layin' on Mellow
45. Gloomy Sunday
46. That Old Devil Called Love
47. White Gardenia
48. God Bless the Child
49. Detour Ahead
50. Good Morning Heartache
51. Don't Explain
52. Travelin' Light
53. No More
54. Left Alone
55. The Kerry Dancers
56. Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair
57. Green Grow the Rushes
58. The Londonderry Air
59. 25½ Daze
60. Oh, Now I See
61. Hush-a-Bye
62. Ballad for Monsieur
63. Mamma-Daddy
64. Body and Soul
65. Desert Sands
66. 31st and State
67. Lullaby of the Leaves
68. Latin Quarter
69. Be-Ware
70. The Man I Love
71. Bahia
72. Blue Lou
73. How Am I to Know
74. Ow!
75. I Wished on the Moon
76. Tin Tin Deo
77. From This Moment On
78. Grab This!
79. 63rd Street Theme
80. Don't Get Aroung Much Anymore
81. Offering Time
82. These Foolish Things
83. Cherry Float

One of the all-time great tenor saxophonists, Johnny Griffin will go down in the annals of jazz as a performer easily able to negotiate the tricky harmonic changes and swift tempos of modern music. He'll also be remembered as a player who could masterfully interpret tender ballads, rivaling Ben Webster in that regard.

Born John Arnold Griffin III in Chicago, Illinois, on April 24, 1928, he resided on the South Side of the Second City with his mother, who was a singer, and father, who played cornet. An adolescent Griffin heard Gene Ammons play in the big band of King Kolax. Two years later he picked up an alto saxophone, and soon thereafter was working with bluesman T-Bone Walker. A student at DuSable High School, he was tutored by the legendary band director Captain Walter Dyett. Upon graduation, he toured with Lionel Hampton's big band, switched to the tenor sax, and moved to New York City. The late '40s saw Griffin honking his share of R&B with Joe Morris up to 1950, alongside the band of Jo Jones in 1950, and with Arnett Cobb in 1951. He enlisted in the armed services stationed in Hawaii, and played in an Army band.

Introducing Johnny GriffinAfter his military commitment, he returned to Chicago and was in the company of Thelonious Monk's various ensembles up to the mid-'60s. Griffin cut his Blue Note album Introducing Johnny Griffin in 1958, and that year formed a sextet with Detroiters Pepper Adams and Donald Byrd. He collaborated with pianists Bud Powell and Elmo Hope, was enlisted by Art Blakey briefly as a member of the Jazz Messengers, energized his solo recording career for the Riverside label, and obtained his nickname, The Little Giant, with that eponymously titled LP in 1959. His most famous and popular teaming was with fellow saxophonist Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis. Griffin also recorded the legendary A Blowin' Session for the Blue Note label with John Coltrane and Hank Mobley.

But Griffin grew weary of the U.S. and its apathy regarding jazz, so he became an expatriate. He was living in Paris, France, by 1963, and did many albums with European rhythm sections for the Storyville, Black Lion, and Steeplechase labels. He was also a charter member and chief soloist for many years in the Kenny Clarke-Francy Boland Big Band alongside American and Continental standouts. The year 1975 was an important one for Griffin, who was featured with the bands of Dizzy Gillespie and Count Basie as documented in recordings of their sets at the Montreux Jazz Festival. He also collaborated with German saxophonist Klaus Doldinger and his fusion band Passport. In the late '70s, Griffin returned to the States to record for the Galaxy label, and toured with fellow expatriate tenor saxophonist Dexter Gordon.

The CatHe left Paris for the countryside of the Netherlands to live on a farm, then headed to the Côte d'Azur in 1980, and in 1984 to rural Availles-Limouzine. In 1986 he was a member of the Paris Reunion Band with Woody Shaw, Dizzy Reece, Slide Hampton, and Kenny Drew, making one album for the Sonet label. During his time in France, Griffin recorded for the Antilles and Verve labels, including The Cat in 1991 and Chicago, New York, Paris in 1994. On the weeks of his birthday, Griffin made regular appearances at the Jazz Showcase back home in Chicago. In his later years he collaborated with pianist Martial Solal and saxophonist Steve Grossman. Griffin passed away at age 80 on July 25, 2008, at his home in Availles-Limouzine. ~ Michael G. Nastos


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