Showing posts with label Clifford Brown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clifford Brown. Show all posts

VA - Membran Music's Jazz Ballads Series Vol. 1-5 (10 CD, 2004) [FLAC+320]


 A CD sets with the most beautiful ballads in the history of jazz.

Lyrical, imaginative, sensuous and melodic jewels from the art of music.

Precisely for those people who have maintained their taste for lasting musical values.

Jazz in its most gentle form.

Irrestible...


Jazz Ballads 1: Chet Baker & Gerry Mulligan
Jazz Ballads 2: Ben Webster
Jazz Ballads 3: Lester Young
Jazz Ballads 4: Clifford Brown & Sonny Rollins
Jazz Ballads 5: Don Byas







Verve Jazz Masters series Vol. 41-50


 Jazz Masters is a series of mainly single artist compilations released by Polygram/Verve between 1994 and 1996. The compilations collect material that was originally released on Verve or on one of the labels that became part of the Polygram group. The 20th and 60th releases in the series were various artist collections.


VJM 41 - Tal Farlow
VJM 42 - Sarah Vaughan - The Jazz Sides
VJM 43 - Ben Webster
VJM 44 - Clifford Brown And Max Roach
VJM 45 - Kenny Burrell
VJM 46 - Ella Fitzgerald - The Jazz Sides
VJM 47 - Billie Holiday Sings Standards
VJM 48 - Oliver Nelson
VJM 49 - Anita O'Day
VJM 50 - Sonny Stitt


 

Blue Note Works 1500 series Vol.1521-1530

 

Blue Note Records is an American jazz record label, owned by Universal Music Group and currently operates in conjunction with Decca Records. Established in 1939 by Alfred Lion and Max Margulis, it derives its name from the characteristic "blue notes" of jazz and the blues. Originally dedicated to recording traditional jazz and small group swing, from 1947 the label began to switch its attention to modern jazz. While the original company did not itself record many of the pioneers of bebop, significant exceptions are Thelonious Monk, Fats Navarro and Bud Powell.

Many great jazz musicians recorded for Blue Note, but the man responsible for the quality of label’s recordings – their high dynamic and tonal range and lifelike presence – was sound engineer, Rudy Van Gelder. It was his recording equipment, choice and placement of microphones, the work at the mixing desk, the selection and rejection of takes, and the active supervision of the whole recording process from monitoring the dials through to cutting of the master lacquer, that created the “Blue Note sound”.

Van Gelder always sought to be at the forefront of recording technology – the Scully lathe he used for cutting lacquer masters was the first to feature variable pitch/depth control to optimise groove-width and loudness. He deployed the newest Neumann/ Telefunken U-47 condenser microphone, which he had specially modified for use very close to instruments. His recordings were made on the latest Ampex tape recorders.

Blue Note made the switch to 12" LPs late in 1955. The Modern Jazz Series continued with the following 12" LPs. Many of these were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 81500 series), sometimes in electronically rechanneled stereo. In certain cases, the stereo versions of recordings from 1957 onwards only appeared many years later. Beginning in 1956 with BLP 1509, Reid Miles designed most of the Blue Note LP covers. The 1500 series has been systematically reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 1500" series, 20-bit 88.2 kHz CDs); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-1501, etc.


BN.1521- Art Blakey- 1954- A Night At Birdland Vol.1 {RVG Remaster} (5037)
BN.1522- Art Blakey- 1954- A Night At Birdland Vol.2 {RVG Remaster} (5038)
BN.1523- Kenny Burrell- 1956- Introducing Kenny Burrell
BN.1524- Kenny Dorham- 1956- Complete 'Round About Midnight At The Cafe Bohemia (2CD) {RVG Remaster}
BN.1525- Jimmy Smith- 1956- The Incredible Jimmy Smith at the Organ, Vol.3
BN.1526- Clifford Brown- 1953- Memorial Album {RVG Remaster}
BN.1527- Thad Jones- 1956- The Magnificent Thad Jones {RVG Remaster}
BN.1528- Jimmy Smith- 1956- Live At The Club Baby Grand, Vol. 1 {RVG Remaster}
BN.1529- Jimmy Smith- 1956- Live At The Club Baby Grand, Vol. 2 {RVG Remaster}
BN.1530- Jutta Hipp- 1956- Jutta Hipp With Zoot Sims {RVG Remaster}



Clifford Brown – The Complete Blue Note And Pacific Jazz Recordings (4 CD, 1995/FLAC)

 

This four-CD set has the exact same music as an earlier Mosaic five-LP box, but is highly recommended to those listeners not already possessing the limited-edition set. Trumpeter Clifford Brown is heard on the most significant recordings from the first half of his tragically brief career. Whether co-leading a date with altoist Lou Donaldson, playing as a sideman with trombonist J.J. Johnson, interacting with an all-star group of West Coast players, or jamming with the first (although unofficial) edition of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (a two-disc live performance with a quintet that also includes the drummer/leader, Donaldson and pianist Horace Silver), Brown is the main star. Highlights are many, including versions of "Brownie Speaks," Elmo Hope's "De-Dah," "Cherokee," "Get Happy," "Daahoud" and "Joy Spring." The attractive packaging, with its 40 pages of text and many rare pictures, is an added bonus. 

Clifford Brown - Brownie: The Complete EmArcy Recordings [11 CD, 1989]

  


The remarkable but short-lived trumpeter Clifford Brown has the second half of his career fully documented (other than his final performance) and he is showcased in a wide variety of settings. The bulk of the numbers are of Brownie's quintet with co-leader and drummer Max Roach, either Harold Land or Sonny Rollins on tenor, pianist Richie Powell, and bassist George Morrow (including some previously unheard alternate takes), but there is also much more. Brown stars at several jam sessions (including a meeting with fellow trumpeters Clark Terry and Maynard Ferguson), accompanies such singers as Dinah Washington, Helen Merrill, and Sarah Vaughan, and is backed by strings on one date. Everything is here, including classic versions of "Parisian Thoroughfare," "Joy Spring," "Daahoud," "Coronado," a ridiculously fast "Move," "Portrait of Jenny," "Cherokee," "Sandu," "I'll Remember April," and "What Is This Thing Called Love?"