John Lewis - Impeccable (2018)

  • 21 Jan, 05:17
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Artist:
Title: Impeccable
Year Of Release: 2018
Label: nagel heyer records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:40:58
Total Size: 534 / 233 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Little Girl Blue
02. The Bad and the Beautiful
03. Almost Like Being in Love
04. I Should Care
05. 2 Degrees East, 3 Degrees West I
06. I Can't Get Started
07. If You Could See Me Now
08. Easy Living
09. Warmeland
10. Love Me or Leave Me
11. It Never Entered My Mind
12. Harlequin
13. Two Lyric Pieces: Pierrot, Colombine
14. D & E
15. 2 Degrees East, 3 Degrees West II
16. Midsommer
17. I Remember Clifford

The musical director of the Modern Jazz Quartet for its entire history, John Lewis found the perfect outlet for his interest in bop, blues, and Bach. Possessor of a "cool" piano style that (like Count Basie's) makes every note count, Lewis with the MJQ has long helped make jazz look respectable to the classical music community without watering down his performances.

After serving in the military, Lewis was in the Dizzy Gillespie big band (1946-1948). He recorded with Charlie Parker during 1947-1948 (including "Parker's Mood"), and played with Miles Davis' Birth of the Cool Nonet, arranging "Move" and "Rouge." He worked with Illinois Jacquet (1948-1949) and Lester Young (1950-1951), and appeared on many recordings during the era. In 1951, Lewis recorded with the Milt Jackson Quartet which by 1952 became the Modern Jazz Quartet. Lewis' musical vision was fulfilled with the MJQ and he composed many pieces, with "Django" being the best-known. In addition to constantly touring with the MJQ during 1952-1974, Lewis wrote the film scores to Odds Against Tomorrow, No Sun in Venice, and A Milanese Story, recorded as a leader (including the 1956 cool classic "Two Degrees East, Three Degrees West," collaborations with Gunther Schuller, and records with Svend Asmussen and Albert Mangelsdorff), and worked with Orchestra U.S.A. in the mid-'60s. When the MJQ broke up in 1974, Lewis worked as an educator and occasionally recorded as a leader. With the MJQ's rebirth in 1981, he has resumed his former role as its guiding spirit until his death in 2001. Most of Lewis' own projects were recorded for Atlantic. ~ Scott Yanow