Ben Webster & Coleman Hawkins - Compact Jazz (1987)
BAND/ARTIST: Ben Webster & Coleman Hawkins
- Title: Compact Jazz
- Year Of Release: 1987
- Label: Verve
- Genre: Jazz, Bop
- Quality: MP3/320 kbps
- Total Time: 55:22
- Total Size: 132 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
1 Blues For Yolanda 6:44
2 It Never Entered My Mind 5:46
3 Don't Get Around Much Anymore 3:05
4 I'll Never Be The Same 3:28
5 Budd Johnson 9:02
6 La Rosita 5:01
7 De-Dar 4:35
8 Like Someone In Love 3:54
9 That's All 2:54
10 You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To 4:15
11 Maria 6:28
The two fierce but gentle lions of the jazz saxophone bring more than four combined decades of experience to the table here, from both juke joint and concert hall, European café and New York recording studio. Ably supported by Oscar Peterson's quartet featuring Herb Ellis and Ray Brown, Bean and Ben trade solos full of burnished warmth and proud articulation: Hawkins with his deep, opaque tone and chunky phrasing and Webster piping melodious and genteel, ready for any blues battle thanks to a sweaty and suggestive tone. The '50s may have been for the scions of bebop, but for these two hip veterans the days were still ripe for new ideas, all anchored by valuable skills picked up in the swing-era ranks. That ease of expression and assured sense of song is heard from choice ballads ("It Never Entered My Mind") and wide-open blues ("Budd Johnson") to bop-tinged swingers ("De-Dar") and breezy strollers ("I'll Never Be the Same"); plus, there's one of the all-time great jazz performances: the dusky Latin gem "La Rosita." So, relax and sit a spell while two masters show how it's done.
1 Blues For Yolanda 6:44
2 It Never Entered My Mind 5:46
3 Don't Get Around Much Anymore 3:05
4 I'll Never Be The Same 3:28
5 Budd Johnson 9:02
6 La Rosita 5:01
7 De-Dar 4:35
8 Like Someone In Love 3:54
9 That's All 2:54
10 You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To 4:15
11 Maria 6:28
The two fierce but gentle lions of the jazz saxophone bring more than four combined decades of experience to the table here, from both juke joint and concert hall, European café and New York recording studio. Ably supported by Oscar Peterson's quartet featuring Herb Ellis and Ray Brown, Bean and Ben trade solos full of burnished warmth and proud articulation: Hawkins with his deep, opaque tone and chunky phrasing and Webster piping melodious and genteel, ready for any blues battle thanks to a sweaty and suggestive tone. The '50s may have been for the scions of bebop, but for these two hip veterans the days were still ripe for new ideas, all anchored by valuable skills picked up in the swing-era ranks. That ease of expression and assured sense of song is heard from choice ballads ("It Never Entered My Mind") and wide-open blues ("Budd Johnson") to bop-tinged swingers ("De-Dar") and breezy strollers ("I'll Never Be the Same"); plus, there's one of the all-time great jazz performances: the dusky Latin gem "La Rosita." So, relax and sit a spell while two masters show how it's done.
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