Victor Feldman - Don't Blame Me (2018)
BAND/ARTIST: Victor Feldman
- Title: Don't Blame Me
- Year Of Release: 2018
- Label: nagel heyer records
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
- Total Time: 1:55:20
- Total Size: 636 / 277 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Flamingo
02. The Gypsy
03. There Is No Greater Love
04. It Ain't Necessarily So
05. Too Blue
06. Satin Doll
07. Deep in a Dream
08. Together / Darn That Dream / I Surrender, Dear / I've Lost Your Love
09. S'posin' I Should Fall in Love
10. One Momentum
11. Minor Lament
12. Wailing Wall
13. Easy to Love
14. Serpent's Touch
15. Four
16. Waltz
17. Jennie
18. Bebop
19. Suite Sixteen: Monody / Minore / Habanera / Epilogue
20. Chasing Shadows
21. Time Will Tell
22. Stomp
23. Short Circuit
01. Flamingo
02. The Gypsy
03. There Is No Greater Love
04. It Ain't Necessarily So
05. Too Blue
06. Satin Doll
07. Deep in a Dream
08. Together / Darn That Dream / I Surrender, Dear / I've Lost Your Love
09. S'posin' I Should Fall in Love
10. One Momentum
11. Minor Lament
12. Wailing Wall
13. Easy to Love
14. Serpent's Touch
15. Four
16. Waltz
17. Jennie
18. Bebop
19. Suite Sixteen: Monody / Minore / Habanera / Epilogue
20. Chasing Shadows
21. Time Will Tell
22. Stomp
23. Short Circuit
Victor Feldman was a child prodigy who was a professional from the age of seven and sat in on drums with Glenn Miller's Army Air Force Band in 1944 when he was ten. He was active in his native England through the bebop years (mostly on drums), debuting as a leader in 1948. By 1952, Feldman was getting better-known for his vibes playing and he recorded extensively during the 1950s. After touring with Woody Herman (1956-1957), he decided to move to the U.S. in 1957, where he worked at the Lighthouse with Howard Rumsey. Feldman recorded (on vibes and piano) for Mode, Contemporary, and Riverside during 1957-1961, a period in which he became a busy studio musician. Feldman was with Cannonball Adderley's Quintet (mostly as a pianist) for six months in 1960-1961 and recorded with Miles Davis in 1963 (who offered him a job with his new quintet and recorded his original "Seven Steps to Heaven"), but remained in L.A. and the studios. He cut jazz dates for Choice, Concord, Palo Alto, and TBA and in the 1980s up until his death he led a soulful crossover group (the Generation Band) that often featured his son, Trevor Feldman, on drums. ~ Scott Yanow
Year 2018 | Jazz | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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