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Matthew Gee - Jazz by Gee! Matthew Gee All Stars (Remastered) (2024) [Hi-Res]

Matthew Gee - Jazz by Gee! Matthew Gee All Stars (Remastered) (2024) [Hi-Res]
  • Title: Jazz by Gee! Matthew Gee All Stars (Remastered)
  • Year Of Release: 2024
  • Label: Fresh Sound Records
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Quality: FLAC (tracks) [44.1kHz/24bit]
  • Total Time: 1:06:51
  • Total Size: 704 / 370 MB
  • WebSite:
Tracklist:

1. Matthew Gee – Out Of Nowhere (Remastered) (03:23)
2. Matthew Gee – I'll Remember April (Remastered) (04:15)
3. Matthew Gee – Joram (Remastered) (03:03)
4. Matthew Gee – Sweet Georgia Brown (Remastered) (02:56)
5. Matthew Gee – Lover Man (Remastered) (04:59)
6. Kenny Dorham – Gee! (Remastered) (06:09)
7. Kenny Dorham – Kingston Lounge (Remastered) (08:43)
8. Kenny Dorham – The Boys From Brooklyn (Remastered) (07:55)
9. Kenny Dorham – Moes Bluff (Remastered) (05:08)
10. Kenny Dorham – Caracas (Remastered) (06:00)
11. Art Blakey – The Stroller (Remastered) (05:37)
12. Illinois Jacquet – On Your Toes (Remastered) (03:17)
13. Matthew Gee – Close Quarters (Remastered) (05:19)

Matthew Gee (1925-1979), who belatedly had the opportunity to record this album, “Jazz by Gee!,” his first and only one as a leader, in 1956, was one of many talented jazzmen who earned the solid and lasting respect of his peers without ever achieving the public recognition they clearly deserved. Leonard Feather described Gee as one of the “best and most underrated of bop-influenced trombonists.”

Gee was first influenced—not only in style but in his decision to play the trombone—by hearing Trummy Young, who was playing ahead-of-his-time trombone with the Jimmie Lunceford band. After attending Alabama State College, where he built a musical reputation, Gee arrived in New York. His first big band job was with Erskine Hawkins’s band. After military service, he worked with Dizzy Gillespie in 1946, the Gene Ammons-Sonny Stitt group, Count Basie, and Illinois Jacquet, before freelancing in the New York area. From 1959 to 1963, he played intermittently with the Duke Ellington Orchestra. Later, in the 1960s, he played in small groups with Paul Quinichette and Brooks Kerr, and in big bands with Sonny Stitt and Johnny Griffin.

Gee’s favorite trombonists were J.J. Johnson and Benny Green, and some of his admiration for them could be heard in his work. But there was even more in his driving, plunging style that was uniquely Gee; and it was high time that a lot more people appreciated just how much jazz that was.

The supporting cast here rated his “star” billing. In the septet numbers, tenor sax Frank Foster, trumpet Kenny Dorham, and baritone sax Cecil Payne stood out. The quintet featured Ernie Henry, one of those few altos with a defined sound and his own ideas, in addition to the inevitable debt to Charlie Parker. The rhythm section in both sessions was driven by Art Taylor. Joe Knight, a young pianist from Brooklyn, provided remarkably solid support throughout. Bass was shared by formidable veteran John Simmons and respected Chicago newcomer Wilbur Ware.

Matthew Gee’s limited discography as a leader prompted us to add five bonus tracks from albums by other artists, featuring Matthew as a soloist and sideman.

—Jordi Pujol


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