Kenny Dorham - The Complete Recordings: 1959-1962 (2014)
BAND/ARTIST: Kenny Dorham
- Title: The Complete Recordings: 1959-1962
- Year Of Release: 2014
- Label: Tritone
- Genre: Jazz
- Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
- Total Time: 5:54:27
- Total Size: 1.88 GB / 817 MB
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Lotus Blossom
02. My Ideal
03. Blue Friday
04. Alone Together
05. Blue Spring Shuffle
06. I Had the Craziest Dream
07. Old Folks
08. Mack the Knife
09. Stage West
10. I'm an Old Cowhand
11. Stella by Starlight
12. Delilah
13. Butch's Blues
14. Lazy Afternoon
15. Six Bits
16. When Sunny Gets Blue
17. Turbo
18. A Waltz
19. Monk's Mood
20. In Your Own Sweet Way
21. Horn Salute
22. Tonica
23. This Love of Mine
24. So in Love
25. Triple Trouble
26. Slowly
27. On a Little Street in Singapore
28. Okay Blues
29. Why Do I Love You
30. Nobody Else but Me
31. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
32. Make Believe
33. Ol' Man River
34. Bill
35. Philly Twist
36. Buffalo
37. Sunset
38. Whistle Stop
39. Sunrise in Mexico
40. Windmill
41. Dorham's Epitaph
42. Us
43. It Could Happen to You
44. Let's Face the Music
45. No Two People
46. Lover Man
47. San Francisco Beat
48. Osmosis
49. Soul Support
50. Grand Street
51. Like Someone in Love
52. Oscar for Oscar
53. B.T. Express
54. Just Friends
55. El Matador
56. Melanie
57. Smile
58. Beautiful Love
59. There Goes My Heart
60. Prelude
01. Lotus Blossom
02. My Ideal
03. Blue Friday
04. Alone Together
05. Blue Spring Shuffle
06. I Had the Craziest Dream
07. Old Folks
08. Mack the Knife
09. Stage West
10. I'm an Old Cowhand
11. Stella by Starlight
12. Delilah
13. Butch's Blues
14. Lazy Afternoon
15. Six Bits
16. When Sunny Gets Blue
17. Turbo
18. A Waltz
19. Monk's Mood
20. In Your Own Sweet Way
21. Horn Salute
22. Tonica
23. This Love of Mine
24. So in Love
25. Triple Trouble
26. Slowly
27. On a Little Street in Singapore
28. Okay Blues
29. Why Do I Love You
30. Nobody Else but Me
31. Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man
32. Make Believe
33. Ol' Man River
34. Bill
35. Philly Twist
36. Buffalo
37. Sunset
38. Whistle Stop
39. Sunrise in Mexico
40. Windmill
41. Dorham's Epitaph
42. Us
43. It Could Happen to You
44. Let's Face the Music
45. No Two People
46. Lover Man
47. San Francisco Beat
48. Osmosis
49. Soul Support
50. Grand Street
51. Like Someone in Love
52. Oscar for Oscar
53. B.T. Express
54. Just Friends
55. El Matador
56. Melanie
57. Smile
58. Beautiful Love
59. There Goes My Heart
60. Prelude
Kenny Dorham had a deeply moving, pure tone on trumpet; his sound was clear, sharp, and piercing, especially during ballads. He could spin out phrases and lines, but when he slowly and sweetly played the melody it was an evocative event. Dorham was a gifted all-round trumpeter, but seldom showcased his complete skills, preferring an understated, subtle approach. Unfortunately, he never received much publicity, and though a highly intelligent, thoughtful individual who wrote insightful commentary on jazz, he's little more than a footnote to many fans.
Afro-CubanDorham studied and played trumpet, tenor sax, and piano. He was a bandmember in high school and college; a college bandmate was Wild Bill Davis. Dorham started during the swing era, but was recruited by Dizzy Gillespie and Billy Eckstine to join their bands in the mid-'40s. He even sang blues with Gillespie's band. He recorded with the Be Bop Boys on Savoy in 1946. After short periods with Lionel Hampton and Mercer Ellington, Dorham joined Charlie Parker's group in 1948, staying there until 1949. He did sessions in New York during the early and mid-'50s, making his recording debut as a leader on Charles Mingus and Max Roach's Debut label in 1953. He then cut Afro-Cuban for Blue Note with Cecil Payne, Hank Mobley, and Horace Silver in 1955.
Coltrane TimeDorham was a founding member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers in 1954, and also led a short-lived similar band, the Jazz Prophets. Dorham played on the soundtrack of A Star Is Born in 1954, then spent two years with Max Roach from 1956 to 1958. There were dates for Riverside in the late '50s with Paul Chambers, Tommy Flanagan, and Art Taylor, plus other sessions with ABC-Paramount, three volumes for Blue Note done live at the Cafe Bohemia, and an intriguing but uneven session with John Coltrane and Cecil Taylor, Coltrane Time, in 1958.
Whistle StopDorham taught at the Lenox School of Jazz in 1958 and 1959, and wrote scores for the films Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Un Témoin dans la Ville in 1959. During the mid-'60s, he co-led a band with tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson that was shamefully neglected. There were such classic Blue Note releases as Whistle Stop, Una Mas, and Trumpet Toccata. Dorham made one album for Cadet in 1970, Kenny Dorham Sextet, with Muhal Richard Abrams. He died in 1972. Several of his Blue Note albums have been reissued, while his Prestige and Riverside dates have come out in sporadic fashion, some in two-record samplers. Other material for Pacific Jazz, United Artists, Steeplechase, Xanadu, and Time isn't as widely available. ~ Ron Wynn
Afro-CubanDorham studied and played trumpet, tenor sax, and piano. He was a bandmember in high school and college; a college bandmate was Wild Bill Davis. Dorham started during the swing era, but was recruited by Dizzy Gillespie and Billy Eckstine to join their bands in the mid-'40s. He even sang blues with Gillespie's band. He recorded with the Be Bop Boys on Savoy in 1946. After short periods with Lionel Hampton and Mercer Ellington, Dorham joined Charlie Parker's group in 1948, staying there until 1949. He did sessions in New York during the early and mid-'50s, making his recording debut as a leader on Charles Mingus and Max Roach's Debut label in 1953. He then cut Afro-Cuban for Blue Note with Cecil Payne, Hank Mobley, and Horace Silver in 1955.
Coltrane TimeDorham was a founding member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers in 1954, and also led a short-lived similar band, the Jazz Prophets. Dorham played on the soundtrack of A Star Is Born in 1954, then spent two years with Max Roach from 1956 to 1958. There were dates for Riverside in the late '50s with Paul Chambers, Tommy Flanagan, and Art Taylor, plus other sessions with ABC-Paramount, three volumes for Blue Note done live at the Cafe Bohemia, and an intriguing but uneven session with John Coltrane and Cecil Taylor, Coltrane Time, in 1958.
Whistle StopDorham taught at the Lenox School of Jazz in 1958 and 1959, and wrote scores for the films Les Liaisons Dangereuses and Un Témoin dans la Ville in 1959. During the mid-'60s, he co-led a band with tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson that was shamefully neglected. There were such classic Blue Note releases as Whistle Stop, Una Mas, and Trumpet Toccata. Dorham made one album for Cadet in 1970, Kenny Dorham Sextet, with Muhal Richard Abrams. He died in 1972. Several of his Blue Note albums have been reissued, while his Prestige and Riverside dates have come out in sporadic fashion, some in two-record samplers. Other material for Pacific Jazz, United Artists, Steeplechase, Xanadu, and Time isn't as widely available. ~ Ron Wynn
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