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Count Basie - The Atomic Mr. Basie (Bonus Track Version) (1957/2019)

Count Basie - The Atomic Mr. Basie (Bonus Track Version) (1957/2019)

BAND/ARTIST: Count Basie

  • Title: The Atomic Mr. Basie (Bonus Track Version)
  • Year Of Release: 1957/2019
  • Label: New Jazz Society
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
  • Total Time: 01:13:34
  • Total Size: 169 mb | 312 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

01. Count Basie - The Kid from Red Bank
02. Count Basie - Duet
03. Count Basie - After Supper
04. Count Basie - Flight of the Foo Birds
05. Count Basie - Double-O
06. Count Basie - Teddy the Toad
07. Count Basie - Whirly-Bird
08. Count Basie - Midnite Blue
09. Count Basie - Splanky
10. Count Basie - Fantail
11. Count Basie - Li'l Darlin'
12. Count Basie - Silks and Satins
13. Count Basie - Sleepwalker Serenade
14. Count Basie - The Late Show
15. Count Basie - How Can You Lose? (Bonus Track)
16. Count Basie - Five O'Clock in the Morning (1)
17. Count Basie - Whirly-Bird (Bonus Track)
18. Count Basie - Cute (Bonus Track)
19. Count Basie - Thou Swell (Bonus Track)
20. Count Basie - Five O'Clock in the Morning (Bonus Track)
21. Count Basie - Blee Blop Blues (Bonus Track)
22. Count Basie - One O'Clock Jump (Bonus Track)

The release of this album in late 1957 marked the beginning of a glorious new phase in Count Basie's career. Signed to Roulette Records, the newly formed label owned by Morris Levy, the New York recording entrepreneur, jukebox mogul, club owner, and quasi-underworld figure, it took Basie's core audience and a lot of other people by surprise, as a bold, forward-looking statement within the context of a big-band recording if not as daring as what Duke Ellington had done at Newport in 1956, still a reminder that there was room for fresh, even dazzling improvisation (especially courtesy of Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis's contribution) within the framework of a big-band jazz unit. The band and its key members were all "on" for these two days of sessions, and Neal Hefti's arrangements gave all concerned a chance to show what they could do. Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, stands out from the get-go with his solo on "Flight of the Foo Birds," a rewriting of "Give Me the Simple Life" on which the tenor-man shares the stage with Thad Jones's trumpet solo, but nearly knock Jones off that same stage with his pyrotechnics. Davis plunges into new territory, defining the Basie "Atomic" period with his solo on "Whirly-Birds" (originally less aptly titled "Roller Coaster"), which soars into the air on his break. Joe Newman and Thad Jones's muted trumpets are the featured instruments on "Duet." "The Kid From Red Bank" offers an unusual showcase for Basie himself at the piano, playing the least number of notes possible to surprise and bedazzle the listener, while "Li'l Darlin'" offers the Basie band's answer to Ellington's "Mood Indigo."


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  • Jarre2010
  •  wrote in 22:34
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Merci beaucoup