Lester Bowie - All The Magic! / The One And Only (1983)
Artist: Lester Bowie
Title: All The Magic! / The One And Only
Year Of Release: 1983
Label: ECM
Genre: Jazz, Avant-Garde
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:20:32
Total Size: 493 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist: Title: All The Magic! / The One And Only
Year Of Release: 1983
Label: ECM
Genre: Jazz, Avant-Garde
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 01:20:32
Total Size: 493 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
CD 1: All The Magic!
01. For Louie 12:15
02. Spacehead 06:47
03. Ghosts 03:10
04. All The Magic! / Everything Must Change / T. Jam Blues (Trans Traditional Suite) 15:52
05. Let The Good Times Roll 06:47
CD 2: The One And Only
01. Organic Echo 03:19
02. Dunce Dance 02:07
03. Charlie M. (Part II) 02:51
04. Thirsty? 03:37
05. Allmost Christmas 03:53
06. Down Home 02:42
07. Okra Influence 04:43
08. Miles Davis Meets Donald Duck 01:43
09. Deb Deb's Face 02:05
10. Monkey Waltz 01:52
11. Fradulent Fanfare 01:04
12. Organic Echo (Part II) 05:28
Personnel:
Bass – Fred Williams
Drums – Phillip Wilson
Piano – Art Matthews
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Ari Brown
Vocals – David Peaston, Fontella Bass
Trumpet, Other Sounds – Lester Bowie
Two very different sessions are combined on this two-LP set. Trumpeter Lester Bowie and a quintet also including Ari Brown on tenor and soprano, pianist Art Matthews, bassist Fred Williams, and drummer Phillip Wilson, are often used to accompany the soulful and gospel-oriented vocals of Fontella Bass and David Peaston (in addition to taking colorful solos). The 12-minute "For Louie" and a suite that is dominated by an emotional version of "Everything Must Change" are highlights; also memorable is a brief version of Albert Ayler's "Ghosts." The second album is quite a bit different, a set of unaccompanied trumpet solos by Bowie that are often quite humorous. On "Miles Davis Meets Donald Duck," the meeting does seem to take place; "Thirsty?" is a funny joke, and some of the other pieces (including "Organic Echo," "Dunce Dance" and "Fraudulent Fanfare") are brief but effective wisecracks. All in all, this two-fer shows off both Lester Bowie's playing abilities and his sense of humor.