Annie Ross & Pony Poindexter with The Berlin All Stars - Recorded At The Tenth German Jazz Festival In Frankfurt (1967/2016) [Hi-Res]

  • 15 Aug, 07:11
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Artist:
Title: Recorded At The Tenth German Jazz Festival In Frankfurt
Year Of Release: 1967/2016
Label: MPS Records
Genre: Vocal Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks): 24/88,2
Total Time: 43:33
Total Size: 802 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Saturday Night Fishfry (4:35)
02. All Blues (11:41)
03. Home Cookin' (4:54)
04. Jumpin' At The Woodside (6:23)
05. Moody's Mood For Love (3:40)
06. Goin' To Chicago (4:01)
07. Twisted (8:18)

Personnel:
Annie Ross - vocals
Pony Poindexter - alto and soprano saxophone, vocals
Fritz Pauer - piano
Leo Wright - flute, alto saxophone
André Condouant - guitar
Carmell Jones - trumpet
Jimmy Woode - bass
Joe Nay - drums

Annie Ross is a British-American singer and actress, best known as a member of the jazz vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. On this set Annie Ross sits in with saxophonist Pony Poindexter's band during a 1966 concert in Frankfurt, Germany, with delightful results. The sound is impeccable, as the audience is not at all audible during most of the performances, though it is clear from the audio that this is not a studio album disguised as a live one.
Lauded for her 1952 underground hit ‘Twisted’, the Englander Annie Ross achieved enduring fame when she joined up to form the iconic vocal trio Lambert, Hendricks & Ross. Pony Poindexter was one of the top-flight saxophonists of his era, recording with the likes of Charlie Parker, Dexter Gordon, and Eric Dolphy. The back-up band, the Berlin All-Stars, consists of the cream of the American ex-patriot crop, as well as two top European players. Annie and Pony are rockin’ as they sing the crazy story of Louis Jordan’s Saturday Night Fish Fry. Pony sings Oscar Brown’s poignant lyrics to All Blues, followed by a series of outstanding solos. Jon Hendrick’s scrumptious lyrics on Horace Silver’s Home Cooking has Annie taking the melody as well as practicing some vocalise. Pony scats a solo that should make you hungry for more. Annie and Pony sing the Basie classic Jumpin’ at the Woodside in unison, with stand-out solos from Carmell Jones and Leo Wright. The 1952 classic Moody’s Mood for Love became a part of jazz history when Eddie Jefferson put words to James Moody’s 1949 sax solo on I’m in the Mood for Love. Miss Ross takes on this beautiful tongue-twister with aplomb. Annie and Pony stroll through the blues on Basie’s Goin’ to Chicago, as Saxophonist Wardell Gray’s Twisted brings the session to an end. Ross’s lyrics to Gray’s solo have become a sharp-witted tongue-in-cheek jazz classic. Annie, Pony, and the gang have serious fun on some of the hippest vocal jazz standards. If you dig jazz singing and vocalese, it’s an album ya gotta have.




  • ValveBone
  •  18:41
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Thanks so much for hi res