Jazz Messengers - Classic Albums 1956-1963 (2020)

  • 19 Jan, 10:09
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Classic Albums 1956-1963
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Enlightenment
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 5:16:30
Total Size: 1.74 GB / 735 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Infra-Rae
02. Nica's Dream
03. It's You Or No One
04. Ecaroh
05. Carol's Interlude
06. The End Of A Love Affair
07. Hank's Symphony
08. Cranky Spanky
09. Stella By Starlight
10. My Heart Stood Still
11. Little Melonae
12. Stanley's Stiff Chickens
13. I Could Have Danced All Night
14. On The Street Where You Live
15. There But For You Go I
16. They Call The Wind Maria
17. I Talk To The Trees
18. Almost Like Being In Love
19. Woody 'n You
20. Sakeena
21. Shorty
22. Dawn On The Desert
23. Evidence
24. In Walked Bud
25. Blue Monk
26. I Mean You
27. Rhythm-A-Ning
28. Purple Shades
29. À La Mode
30. Invitation
31. Circus
32. You Don't Know What Love Is
33. I Hear A Rhapsody
34. Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You
35. Backstage Sally
36. Contemplation
37. Bu's Delight
38. Reincarnation Blues
39. Shaky Jake
40. Moon River
41. Caravan
42. Sweet 'N' Sour
43. In The Wee Small Hours Of The Morning
44. This Is For Albert
45. Skylark
46. Thermo

The origin of the Jazz Messengers goes back to 1954 or 1955, when the first recordings credited to the band appeared. The Jazz Messengers formed as a collective, nominally led by Horace Silver or Art Blakey on various studio dates. Blakey credits Silver with reviving the Messengers name. Blakey formed a new line-up in 1956 that would prove to be somewhat more stable. The most notable name at the time was Jackie McLean. At just 25 he had already recorded with Miles Davis and Charles Mingus. Bill Hardman, Sam Dockery and Jimmy Spanky DeBrest filled out the band. They recorded another record for Columbia, Hard Bop, then went on to work for several different labels including RCA subsidiary Vik Records, Pacific Jazz, Elektra, Cadet, Jubilee, Bethlehem and a date on Atlantic featuring Thelonious Monk. Over this time the band's moniker evolved to include Blakey's name, starting with The Jazz Messengers featuring Art Blakey, then, Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers on several other releases and, for Cu-Bop (Jubilee, 1957), Art Blakey and his Jazz Messengers The Jazz Messengers remained a major jazz collective right through until Art Blakey's death in 1990, but the group's golden years were, by that juncture, long past, and it remains this seminal act's records from the mid-1950s through the mid-1960s for which the Jazz Messengers remain so fondly remembered. This superb collection features eight of the Jazz Messengers' finest records from this era, which feature, alongside maniman Art Blakey, the cream and most renowned players of the time.