Showing posts with label Tony Williams. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Williams. Show all posts

Miles Davis Quintet - The Complete Columbia Studio Sessions 1965-68 (6 CD, 1998/FLAC)

 

By 1965 Miles Davis had gone through a handful of stages, from the Birth of the Cool nonet's multihued orchestrations to the development of a hard-bop sound keeled on Davis's midregister wooziness and the band's driving backbone in the "first" great quintet (featuring John Coltrane), to the modal freedom of Kind of Blue. So when the solidly established Davis convened a new quintet, known as his "second" great one, and hired youngsters Wayne Shorter, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams, it seemed a skewed move. 

These six CDs show just how creatively and intelligently skewed the move really was. The material here, which has also been reissued on expanded single CDs of the main full-length original LPs (E.S.P., Miles Smiles, Sorcerer, Nefertiti, Miles in the Sky), is immediately and unceasingly startling. Davis & Co. were quickly discarding their live performance practice of playing loads of standards and were further discarding traditional melodic structures for more rigorous harmonic exercises. Shorter in particular, at times the most prolific composer in the band, was advancing his tunes and his solos in equal proportion. The tunes are increasingly sharp-edged and, with Williams driving the band with a categorical balance of abandon and control, loopily energized. Miles blows with tighter and tighter control of his tone even while the band seems to be finding all kinds of expressive freedoms that easily elongate into lengthier studies. Toward the end of this box, you'll hear the seeds of the Miles that went on to unloose Bitches Brew. Even though the roots of the aggressively electric Miles are in these sessions, there are uncategorizable points of beauty strewn all over the tunes.




 

Tony Williams - Civilization [1987/2014] (24-192)

 

Although he had recorded the year before using trumpeter Wallace Roney and pianist Mulgrew Miller on Foreign Intrigue, Civilization was the debut record by drummer Tony Williams' hard bop quintet, a group also including Billy Pierce on tenor and soprano, and bassist Charnett Moffett (who would later be succeeded by Ira Coleman). The leader's loud and forceful drumming forced the other soloists to use their maximum power, and his eight originals gave his sidemen challenging compositions to play. With Roney emulating Miles Davis as usual, Williams must have been pleased to have his former boss' sound at his disposal. Although none of the songs caught on as standards, this is an excellent effort.


  • Tony Williams, drums
  • Billy Pierce, soprano & tenor saxophones
  • Wallace Roney, trumpet
  • Mulgrew Miller, piano
  • Charnette Moffett, bass

Recorded at Capitol Records, Studio B, on November 24, 25 and 26, 1986

01. Geo Rose (7:26)
02. Warrior (5:34)
03. Ancient Eyes (5:27)
04. Soweto Nights (6:39)
05. The Slump (6:29)
06. Civilization (4:29)
07. Mutants On The Beach (5:56)
08. Citadel (6:43)
  








Ron Carter, Herbie Hancock, Tony Williams - Third Plane (1977-2015) [192-24]

 Third Plane is an album by jazz bassist Ron Carter, released on the Milestone label in 1977. It features performances by Carter, Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams. 



  • Ron Carter – bass
  • Herbie Hancock – piano
  • Tony Williams – drums



01. Third Plane (5:54) 
02. Quiet Times (7:55)
03. Lawra (6:07) 
04. Stella By Starlight (8:26)
05. United Blues (3:02) 
06. Dolphin Dance (8:18)



Miles Davis Quintet - Live At Newport 1966 & 1967 (2010/FLAC)


 It’s one thing hearing about “rare tapes circulating among private collectors” but it’s another thing getting to hear them. Now you can; this is a hugely valuable release, a window into the working life of one of the greatest bands in the history of jazz performing at probably the most famous platform of all during the Golden Era of Jazz (1950s to the late 1960s), the Newport Jazz Festival (plus two bonus tracks taken from a broadcast in Finland on 1 November 1967). The liner notes say “This release contains all of the surviving music from the Miles Davis Quintet’s Newport sets of 1966 and 1967,” and were taken from live broadcasts of the event, complete with Willis Connover announcements, which adds to the atmosphere of the occassion. With the exception of Miles In Berlin and the Plugged Nickel sets, live documentation of this band is thin on the ground, given its (relative) longevity.

  • Miles Davis, trumpet
  • Wayne Shorter, tenor sax
  • Herbie Hancock, piano
  • Ron Carter, bass
  • Tony Williams, drums


    1. Introduction Into Gingerbread Boy
    2. All Blues
    3. Stella By Starlight [Incomplete]
    4. Gingerbread Boy
    5. Footprints
    6. 'Round Midnight [Incomplete]
    7. Introduction Into Footprints
    8. 'Round Midnight [Incomplete]











Miles Davis - The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965 [8 CD, 1995/FLAC]

 


In late December 1965 recordings were made of two nights of performances by Miles Davis´ second great quintet at the Plugged Nickel nightclub in Chicago. Some tracks were available on Miles Davis compilations, but the full recordings were released thirty years later as a box set under the title The Complete Live at the Plugged Nickel 1965. The studio recordings of the quintet consist almost entirely of original compositions by members of the quintet. These club recordings show the group playing tunes which were either standards or had been in Davis's live repertoire for several years. The tunes are performed with substantially more rhythmic and harmonic freedom than on earlier recordings.

Blue Note Works 4000-4100 series [4176-4185]

 
...The Modern Jazz Series continued into the 1970s with the LPs listed below. Many were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 84000 series).  Most of the 4000 series have been reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 4000" series); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-4###


BN.4176- Dexter Gordon- 1964- One Flight Up {RVG Remaster}
BN.4177- Grachan Moncur III- 1964- Some Other Stuff {RVG Remaster}
BN.4178- Blue Mitchell- 1964- The Thing To Do {RVG Remaster}
BN.4179- Jackie McLean- 1964- It's Time
BN.4180- Anthony Williams- 1964- Life Time {RVG Remaster}
BN.4181- Kenny Dorham- 1964- Trompete Toccata {RVG Remaster}
BN.4182- Wayne Shorter- 1964- JUJU {RVG Remaster}
BN.4183- Grant Green- 1964- Talkin' About
BN.4184- Sam Rivers- 1964- Fuchsia Swing Song {RVG Remaster}
BN.4185- Horace Silver- 1964- Song For My Father {RVG Remaster}




Tony Williams discography [1964-2007/FLAC]

 

Tony Williams' death in 1997 of a heart attack after routine gall bladder surgery was a major shock to the jazz world. Just 51, Williams (who could be a very loud drummer) seemed so youthful, healthy, and ageless even though he had been a major drummer for nearly 35 years. The open style that he created while with the Miles Davis Quintet in the mid- to late '60s remains quite influential, and he had a long list of accomplishments during the decades that followed. Williams' father, a saxophonist, took his son out to clubs that gave him an opportunity to sit in; at 11, the youngster already showed potential. He took lessons from Alan Dawson, and at 15 was appearing at Boston-area jam sessions. During 1959-1960, Williams often played with Sam Rivers, and in December 1962 (when he was barely 17), the drummer moved to New York and played regularly with Jackie McLean. Within a few months he joined Miles Davis, where his ability to imply the beat while playing quite freely influenced and inspired the other musicians; together with Herbie Hancock and Ron Carter he was part of one of the great rhythm sections. Williams, who was 18 when he appeared on Eric Dolphy's classic Out to Lunch album, stayed with Davis into 1969, leading his own occasional sessions and becoming a household name in the jazz world.

In addition to his interest in avant-garde jazz, Tony Williams was a fan of rock music, and when he left Miles he formed the fusion band Lifetime, a trio with Larry Young and John McLaughlin. After leading other versions of Lifetime (one of them starring Allan Holdsworth), Williams stuck to freelancing for a time, studied composition, and toured with Herbie Hancock's V.S.O.P. band. By the mid-'80s, he was heading his own all-star hard bop group which featured Wallace Roney as a surrogate Miles Davis and a repertoire dominated by the drummer's originals (including the standard "Sister Cheryl"). After breaking up his longtime quintet in 1995, Williams gigged a bit with a trio, recorded a very interesting set of original music for the Ark 21 label, and seemed to have a limitless future. His premature death makes one grateful that he started his career early and that he was extensively documented. 




1964- Tony Williams - Life Time (1998)
1965- Tony Williams - Spring (2000)
1969- The Tony Williams Lifetime - Emergency!
1971- The Tony Williams Lifetime - Ego (1999)
1971- The Tony Williams Lifetime - Ego (2015)
1972- The Tony Williams Lifetime - The Old Bum's Rush
1976- The New Tony Williams Lifetime - Million Dollar Legs
1997- Tony Williams - The Joy Of Flying
2007- The Tony Williams Lifetime - Turn It Over

Tony Williams - Mosaic Select 24 (3 CD, 2008/FLAC)


 For the 24th Mosaic Select box set of reissues from the Blue Note vaults, series producer Michael Cuscuna has chosen five recordings in a seven-year span from 1985-1991 by drummer/bandleader Tony Williams. Note that this is not the complete Tony Williams on Blue Note, excluding his sessions after having left the Miles Davis Quintet, especially Life Time, Spring, and his sideman work with Jackie McLean, Eric Dolphy, and Sam Rivers. The complete latter-period group recordings included are Foreign Intrigue, Civilization, Angel Street, Native Heart, and The Story of Neptune. All are solidly in the modern mainstream post-bop mode, featuring the forceful, driving drumming of Williams, and all the sets feature the brilliant pianist Mulgrew Miller with Miles devotee trumpeter Wallace Roney. Tenor and soprano saxophonist Bill Pierce is paired on the sides except Foreign Intrigue. Ron Carter, Charnett Moffett, and Ira Coleman are the bassists, with Robert Hurst making a cameo on three tracks. These are individualistic, solid players, giving Williams the opportunity to not only jam with the best, but write music geared toward their personalized sounds and stances. Four of the five sessions were done in New York City; only Civilization was done elsewhere, in Los Angeles. Of the 38 selections, four are unaccompanied drum solos, and three are covers or standards. There are a few waltzes and no ballads as one might expect, though Miller's piano rhapsodically introduces two tracks. The remainder are original compositions of Williams. Give the drummer some credit, as a total musician and composer. The recordings are programmed in chronological order, starting with Foreign Intrigue, which likely is overall the best of the lot. Williams introduces some of these compositions and utilizes his acoustic kit with a drum machine and electronic drums. There are some classics on this one, like the title track, the hard bopper "Clearways," the cool bluesy "Takin' My Time," and the loping by-now standard "Sister Cheryl." Bobby Hutcherson's presence on vibes truly uplifts this session, as does Donald Harrison's alto sax, the only alto on the compilation. 

 

 

V.S.O.P. - The Quintet (1977/FLAC)


The Quintet is an album by V.S.O.P. It was compiled from two concert performances: one at the Greek Theatre, University of California, Berkeley, on July 16, 1977; the other at the San Diego Civic Theatre on July 18, 1977. The musicians were Herbie Hancock on keyboards, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet and flugelhorn, Tony Williams on drums, Ron Carter on bass, and Wayne Shorter on tenor and soprano saxophones. The recording was originally released in October 1977 as a 2-disc LP by Columbia Records. 


 
  • Freddie Hubbard – flugelhorn, trumpet
  • Wayne Shorter – soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone
  • Herbie Hancock – piano, keyboards
  • Ron Carter – double bass
  • Tony Williams – drums

Arcana - Arc of the Testimony (1997/2021 remaster/FLAC)


 Arc of the Testimony is the second and final album by American jazz fusion band Arcana. It was released on bassist Bill Laswell's Axiom label on October 14, 1997. Unlike the trio configuration on the first album, this project features a spacier, slightly less abstract form of fusion music. Bill Laswell and drummer Tony Williams composed and developed the music, and co-produced the album together.

Laswell invited a number of musicians to contribute, including legendary tenor saxophonist Pharoah Sanders. Other contributors included alto saxophonist Byard Lancaster, and electric guitarists Nicky Skopelitis and Buckethead. Tony Williams died suddenly on February 23, 1997 while this album was still in production, and thus it represents his last recorded work. 

- Bill Laswell / bass, producer
- Tony Williams / drums

With:
- Graham Haynes / coronet
- Buckethead / guitar
- Nicky Skopelitis / guitar
- Peter Apfelbaum / sax
- Byard Lancaster / sax
- Pharoah Sanders / sax