Wes Montgomery - Movin': The Complete Verve Recordings (Limited Edition) (2011)
BAND/ARTIST: Wes Montgomery
- Title: Movin': The Complete Verve Recordings
- Year Of Release: 2011
- Label: Verve Select
- Genre: Jazz, Soul Jazz
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
- Total Time: 06:23:12
- Total Size: 959 Mb / 2,3 Gb
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
CD 1:
01. Caravan
02. People
03. Movin' Wes (Part 1)
04. Moca Flor
05. Matchmaker
06. Movin' Wes (Part 2)
07. Senza Fine
08. Theodora
09. In and Out
10. Born To Be Blue
11. West Coast Blues
12. Bumpin'
13. Tear It Down
14. A Quiet Thing
15. Con Alma
16. Love Theme from ''The Sandpiper''/The Shadow of Your Smile
17. Mi Cosa
18. Here's That Rainy Day
19. Musty
20. Just Walkin' (Bonus Track)
21. My One and Only Love (Bonus Track)
22. Just Walkin' (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track)
CD 2:
01. No Blues
02. If You Could See Me Now
03. Unit 7
04. Four On Six
05. What's New
06. Willow Weep For Me
07. Portrait of Jennie
08. Surrey With The Fringe On Top
09. Oh, You Crazy Moon
10. Misty
11. Impressions
CD 3:
01. Goin' Out of My Head
02. O Morro
03. Boss City
04. Chim Chim Cheree (from Walt Disney's ''Marry Poppins'')
05. Naptown Blues
06. Twisted Blues
07. End of A Love Affair
08. It Was A Very Good Year
09. Golden Earrings
10. Tequila
11. Little Child (Daddy Dear)
12. What The World Needs Now Is Love
13. The Big Hurt
14. Bumpin' On Sunset
15. How Insensitive (Insensatez)
16. The Thumb
17. Midnight Mood
18. Wives and Lovers (Bonus Track)
19. Tequila (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track)
CD 4:
01. California Dreaming
02. Sun Down
03. Oh You Crazy Moon
04. More, More, Amor
05. Without You
06. Winds of Barcelona
07. Sunny
08. Green Peppers
09. Mr. Walker
10. South of The Border
11. Sunny (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track)
12. Down By The Riverside
13. Night Train
14. James and Wes
15. 13 (Death March)
16. Baby, It's Cold Outside
CD 5:
01. King of The Road
02. Maybe September
03. O.G.D. (A.K.A. Road Song)
04. Call Me
05. Milestones
06. Mellow Mood
07. 'Round Midnight (Bonus Track)
08. O.G.D. (A.K.A. Road Song) (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track)
09. The Big Hurt (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track)
10. Bumpin' On Sunset (Alternate Take) (Bonus Track)
11. Willow Weep For Me (Overdubbed Version) (Bonus Track)
12. Portrait of Jennie (Overdubbed Version) (Bonus Track)
13. Oh, You Crazy Moon (Overdubbed Version) (Bonus Track)
14. Misty (Overdubbed Version) (Bonus Track)
All eight of the albums Wes Montgomery issued on Verve in the mid-'60s (including the two he did with organist Jimmy Smith) are on this limited-edition, five-CD box set. With the addition of 20 bonus tracks (none previously unreleased, some of them alternate takes or overdubbed versions) and a 76-page booklet that includes readable reproductions of the original LP sleeves, it's the definitive compilation of his work for the label. By its very size, of course, its appeal might be limited to completists and serious collectors. But its no-stone-unturned thoroughness can't be faulted, and it sensitively separates the purest straight-ahead jazz material (all of the cuts recorded in 1965 for Smokin' at the Half Note) onto one CD, as well as placing the Montgomery-Smith albums so that they're heard in succession on the last half of disc four and the first half of disc five.
Montgomery's Verve period is the source of some contention among critics and fans. Numerous jazz authorities are of the opinion that Wes by far did his finest work when he operated with standard, straight-ahead small jazz groups early in his recording career, and declined substantially when he moved to Verve, primarily owing to increasingly commercial material and orchestrated arrangements. Most listeners with some open-mindedness, however, will find at least some material here to value -- not just the all-out straight jazz sessions on Smokin' at the Half Note, but also on the cuts with more pop-oriented backing. First, it should be pointed out that the pop and rock covers for which Montgomery's Verve releases are most often derided -- particularly "Goin' Out of My Head" and "California Dreaming" -- are a fairly small minority of the songs he recorded for the label. Of more importance, the combination of Montgomery's always excellent guitar playing with orchestrated arrangements (variously by Johnny Pate, Don Sebesky, Oliver Nelson, and Claus Ogerman) actually works well much of the time. At its best, the blend achieves a cinematic sense of drama, as well as a form of jazz that many more pop-oriented listeners will find more accessible than much of conventional jazz.
That also means, of course, that a good number of jazz specialists will find that material unpalatable, and there are some tracks where the embellishments verge upon becoming too sweet and middle of the road. But there are at least as many such cuts that even jazzheads should enjoy, both for Montgomery's playing and the effective, and at times adventurous addition of big-band elements. Quite a few tracks, in fact, are downright excellent. Standouts include the Montgomery-Smith recording "13 (Death March)"; the superb soul-jazz of another Montgomery-Smith highlight, "O.G.D. (aka Road Song)"; the simmering groove of "Bumpin' on Sunset"; or the unfettered, bluesy strut "Just Walkin'." Ultimately, Montgomery's Verve output must be considered more a success than a failure, and more worthy than embarrassing. And while his shifting approaches ensures that almost everyone will find this box an inconsistent listen, it's ultimately quite a worthy collection of a notable period in his career.
Montgomery's Verve period is the source of some contention among critics and fans. Numerous jazz authorities are of the opinion that Wes by far did his finest work when he operated with standard, straight-ahead small jazz groups early in his recording career, and declined substantially when he moved to Verve, primarily owing to increasingly commercial material and orchestrated arrangements. Most listeners with some open-mindedness, however, will find at least some material here to value -- not just the all-out straight jazz sessions on Smokin' at the Half Note, but also on the cuts with more pop-oriented backing. First, it should be pointed out that the pop and rock covers for which Montgomery's Verve releases are most often derided -- particularly "Goin' Out of My Head" and "California Dreaming" -- are a fairly small minority of the songs he recorded for the label. Of more importance, the combination of Montgomery's always excellent guitar playing with orchestrated arrangements (variously by Johnny Pate, Don Sebesky, Oliver Nelson, and Claus Ogerman) actually works well much of the time. At its best, the blend achieves a cinematic sense of drama, as well as a form of jazz that many more pop-oriented listeners will find more accessible than much of conventional jazz.
That also means, of course, that a good number of jazz specialists will find that material unpalatable, and there are some tracks where the embellishments verge upon becoming too sweet and middle of the road. But there are at least as many such cuts that even jazzheads should enjoy, both for Montgomery's playing and the effective, and at times adventurous addition of big-band elements. Quite a few tracks, in fact, are downright excellent. Standouts include the Montgomery-Smith recording "13 (Death March)"; the superb soul-jazz of another Montgomery-Smith highlight, "O.G.D. (aka Road Song)"; the simmering groove of "Bumpin' on Sunset"; or the unfettered, bluesy strut "Just Walkin'." Ultimately, Montgomery's Verve output must be considered more a success than a failure, and more worthy than embarrassing. And while his shifting approaches ensures that almost everyone will find this box an inconsistent listen, it's ultimately quite a worthy collection of a notable period in his career.
Jazz | FLAC / APE | Mp3
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