Don Byas - Chronological Classics: 1946 (1998)
BAND/ARTIST: Don Byas
- Title: Chronological Classics: 1946
- Year Of Release: 1998
- Label: Classics[1009]
- Genre: Jazz, Bop, Swing
- Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log,scans)
- Total Time: 61:23
- Total Size: 155 MB(+3%)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist
01 - I Don't Know Why
02 - London Donnie (Danny Boy)
03 - Old Folks
04 - Cherokee
05 - September In The Rain
06 - Living My LIfe
07 - To Each His Own
08 - They Say It's Wonderful
09 - Cynthia's In Love
10 - September Song
11 - St. Louis Blues
12 - I've Found A New Baby
13 - Marie
14 - You Go To My Head
15 - Don't You Know I Care
16 - Gloomy Sunday
17 - More Than A Mood
18 - Working Eyes
19 - Gloria
20 - Peanut Butter Blues
21 - The Mohawk Special
This fourth volume in the complete recordings of tenor saxophonist Don Byas opens with 13 sides recorded for the Savoy label in May of 1946. On the opening session, three gorgeous ballads are chased with a blistering version of Ray Noble's "Cherokee" and a mellow stroll through "September in the Rain." About three months later the saxophonist resumed recording for Savoy, now backed by a tougher rhythm section in drummer Max Roach, bassist Leonard Gaskin, and pianist Sanford Gold. These deservedly famous sides represent Byas at the very peak of his early maturity. A rare parcel of four recordings originally issued on the Gotham label finds Byas accompanied by a trio including pianist Beryl Booker. A rather ominous reading of the notoriously suicidal "Gloomy Sunday" is colored so darkly as to suggest the subterranean. By December of 1946 Byas was in Europe making records for the Swing label with a group of musicians from Don Redman's entourage. "Working Eyes," which came out under trombonist Tyree Glenn's name, was written by Glenn but popularized by Duke Ellington under the titles "Sultry Serenade" and "How Could You Do That to Me?" "Peanut Butter Blues," sung in the manner of Roy Eldridge by trumpeter Peanuts Holland, was issued under his name, while the two remaining tracks -- a lush ballad and the feisty "Mohawk Special" -- appeared under the heading of Don Byas & His Orchestra.
01 - I Don't Know Why
02 - London Donnie (Danny Boy)
03 - Old Folks
04 - Cherokee
05 - September In The Rain
06 - Living My LIfe
07 - To Each His Own
08 - They Say It's Wonderful
09 - Cynthia's In Love
10 - September Song
11 - St. Louis Blues
12 - I've Found A New Baby
13 - Marie
14 - You Go To My Head
15 - Don't You Know I Care
16 - Gloomy Sunday
17 - More Than A Mood
18 - Working Eyes
19 - Gloria
20 - Peanut Butter Blues
21 - The Mohawk Special
This fourth volume in the complete recordings of tenor saxophonist Don Byas opens with 13 sides recorded for the Savoy label in May of 1946. On the opening session, three gorgeous ballads are chased with a blistering version of Ray Noble's "Cherokee" and a mellow stroll through "September in the Rain." About three months later the saxophonist resumed recording for Savoy, now backed by a tougher rhythm section in drummer Max Roach, bassist Leonard Gaskin, and pianist Sanford Gold. These deservedly famous sides represent Byas at the very peak of his early maturity. A rare parcel of four recordings originally issued on the Gotham label finds Byas accompanied by a trio including pianist Beryl Booker. A rather ominous reading of the notoriously suicidal "Gloomy Sunday" is colored so darkly as to suggest the subterranean. By December of 1946 Byas was in Europe making records for the Swing label with a group of musicians from Don Redman's entourage. "Working Eyes," which came out under trombonist Tyree Glenn's name, was written by Glenn but popularized by Duke Ellington under the titles "Sultry Serenade" and "How Could You Do That to Me?" "Peanut Butter Blues," sung in the manner of Roy Eldridge by trumpeter Peanuts Holland, was issued under his name, while the two remaining tracks -- a lush ballad and the feisty "Mohawk Special" -- appeared under the heading of Don Byas & His Orchestra.
Jazz | FLAC / APE | CD-Rip
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads