Slide Hampton & The World Of Trombones - Spirit Of The Horn (2003)

  • 27 Jun, 18:04
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Artist:
Title: Spirit Of The Horn
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: MCG Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Quality: Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 66:41 min
Total Size: 151 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01. Cherokee
02. Tocache
03. A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
04. Lament Basin Street Blues
05. April In Paris
06. Lester Leaps In
07. Moment's Notice
08. Dolphin Dance
09. Walkin'-N-Rhythm
10. Maya
11. Blues For Eric


Slide Hampton, leader, trombone; Jay Ashby, Michael Boschen, Steve Davis, Hugh Fraser, David Gibson, Andre Hayward, Benny Powell, Isaac Smith, trombone; Tim Newman, Douglas Purviance, Max Seigel, David Taylor, bass trombone; Marty Ashby, guitar, banjo; Larry Willis, piano; John Lee, bass; Victor Jones, drums. Special guest soloist -- Bill Watrous (1, 3. 11).

I wish my friend Bill Swanson were alive to hear this. Bill loved the trombone, and would have greatly admired this picturesque performance by Slide Hampton’s World of Trombones in concert at the Manchester Craftsmen’s Guild in Pittsburgh. This is wall-to-wall ‘bones, as Slide leads a dozen of the country’s finest through their paces and welcomes guest soloist Bill Watrous on Ray Noble’s “Cherokee,” Billy Strayhorn’s “A Flower Is a Lovesome Thing” and his own “Blues for Eric.”

Hampton, who turned seventy last year, is not only a marvelous player himself but knows how to bring out the best in a king-size section with diaphanous charts that accentuate the range and natural beauty of the horns and also swing. Slide scored the first seven numbers and “Blues for Eric” with the other arrangements by Todd Bashare (Herbie Hancock’s “Dolphin Dance”), bass trombonist Max Siegel (“Walkin’-N-Rhythm”) and David Gibson (his own composition, "Maya").

As a reward for their earnestness and artistry, everyone in the ensemble is given blowing space (and makes the most of it) on the breakneck finale, “Blues for Eric.” Hampton is featured on J.J. Johnson’s “Lament” and the ensemble’s tribute to Charlie Parker, “April in Paris,” and engages in horn-to-horn combat with Watrous on “Cherokee” and old hand Benny Powell on “Basin Street Blues.” Watrous, a master at using the horn’s upper register, is a triple-tongueing monster on “Cherokee,” an ardent romantic on “Flower.” He and the other ‘bones are supported by a supple rhythm section comprised of Willis, guitarist Marty Ashby, bassist John Lee and drummer Victor Jones. More than two decades after its first album (on which Slide used eight horns and rhythm), the World of Trombones has made a triumphant reappearance, as luminous and entrancing as ever. Let’s hope it won’t be another twenty years or more before Slide’s World collides again with ours. ~Jack Bowers


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