Ramsey Lewis - The Complete Recordings 1957-1962 (2013)
Artist: Ramsey Lewis
Title: The Complete Recordings 1957-1962
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Playtime
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 8:54:46
Total Size: 2.56 / 1.22 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Complete Recordings 1957-1962
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Playtime
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 8:54:46
Total Size: 2.56 / 1.22 GB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Carmen (1957)
02. The Wind
03. Bei Mir Bist Du Schön (1957)
04. I'll Remember April (1957)
05. My Funny Valentine
06. Fantasia for Drums
07. Dee's New Blues
08. Trees
09. Limelight
10. Delilah (1957)
11. I Get a Kick out of You
12. Please Send Me Someone to Love
13. Brother John
14. Black Is the Color
15. It Ain't Necessarily So (1957)
16. Seven Valleys
17. On the Street Where You Live
18. Falmouth Recollections
19. The Way You Look Tonight (1958)
20. Foofy for President
21. The Man from Potter's Crossing
22. Dance of the Reluctant Drag
23. Empathy, For Ruth
24. Crackle Hut
25. Speculate
26. That Old Devil Called Love
27. Audio Blues
28. C.M.
29. FOUR-X
30. Joy Spring
31. Where It Is
32. Sandu
33. Once in a While
34. Jordu
35. It Could Happen to You
36. Easy to Love
37. A Message from Boysie
38. Dark Eyes
39. Come Back to Sorrento
40. Soul Mist
41. John Henry
42. Greensleeves
43. We Blue It
44. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
45. Suzanne
46. Billy Boy
47. Decisions
48. Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise
49. C.C. Rider (1959)
50. Love for Sale
51. I Had the Craziest Dream
52. It Ain't Necessarily So (1959)
53. I Love Paris
54. The Way You Look Tonight (1959)
55. Song of India
56. Consider the Source
57. The Ruby and the Pearl
58. Walls of Jericho
59. Angel Eyes
60. Early in the Morning
61. Don't Explain
62. So Long
63. Good Morning Heartache
64. Trouble Is a Man
65. I Ain't Got Nothing but the Blues
66. Baby Don't You Cry
67. Rocks in My Bed
68. I'm Just a Lucky so and So
69. I Almost Lost My Mind
70. Little Liza Jane
71. This Is My Night to Dream
72. Scarlet Ribbons
73. Here 'Tis
74. My Ship
75. Put Your Little Foot Right Out
76. Solo Para Ti
77. These Foolish Things
78. When the Spirit Moves You
79. A Portrait of Jennie
80. Old Devil Moon (Live)
81. What's New (Live)
82. Carmen (1960) [Live]
83. Bei Mir Bist Du Schön (1960) [Live]
84. I'll Remember April (1960) [Live]
85. Delilah (1960) [Live]
86. Folk Ballad (Live)
87. But Not for Me (Live)
88. C.C. Rider (1960) [Live]
89. Around the World in 80 Days
90. Since I Fell for You
91. Hello Cello
92. I'll Wait for Your Love
93. Volga Boatman
94. Blues for the Night Owl
95. Autumn in New York
96. Gonna Set Your Soul on Fire
97. Smoke Gets in Your Eyes
98. The Ripper
99. I Got Plenty of Nothing
100. Waterboy
101. Thanks for the Memory
102. Cielito Lindo
103. You Just Don't Care
104. Never on Sunday
105. You've Changed
106. The Breeze and I
107. Exactly Like You
108. Merry Christmas Baby
109. Winter Wonderland
110. Santa Claus Is Coming to Town
111. Christmas Blues
112. Here Comes Santa Claus
113. The Sound of Christmas
114. The Christmas Song
115. God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen
116. Sleigh Ride
117. What Are You Doing New Year's Eve
118. Sound of Spring
119. Spring Can Really Hang You up the Most
120. Blue Spring
121. Spring Is Here
122. Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year
123. Spring Fever
124. It Might as Well Be Spring
125. Soft Winds
126. There'll Be Another Spring
127. Truly, Truly Spring
128. Your Cheatin' Heart
129. St Louis Blues
130. Blueberry Hill
131. Country Meets the Blues
132. Memphis in June
133. High Noon
134. I Need You So
135. I Just Want to Make Love to You
136. Tangleweed 'Round My Heart
137. My Bucket's Got a Hole in It
138. Samba De Orpheus
139. Maha De Carnaval (The Morning of the Carnaval)
140. As Criancinhas (The Children)
141. A Noite Do Meu Bem (The Night of My Love)
142. O Pato (The Duck)
143. Generique (Happiness)
144. Roda Moinho (Whirlpool)
145. Cara De Palhaco (The Face of the Clown)
146. Canacao Para Geralda (A Song for Geraldine)
Pianist and composer Ramsey Lewis has been a major figure in contemporary jazz since the late '50s, playing music with a warm, open personality that's allowed him to cross over to the pop and R&B charts. Initially emerging with his jazz trio, Lewis broke through with his Grammy-winning 1965 album The In Crowd. He further developed his sound, experimenting with synthesizers and funk grooves on work such as 1974's Sun Goddess. He has remained a crossover icon, hosting his own radio and television programs and issuing albums like 2002's Meant to Be with Nancy Wilson, 2011's Taking Another Look, and 2019's VII with his long-running contemporary jazz collective Urban Knights.
Lewis was born in Chicago on May 27, 1935 and was introduced to music by his father, who directed the choir at a local church and enjoyed the music of Duke Ellington and Art Tatum. He began studying the piano when he was four years old and was soon accompanying the choir at Sunday services. At the age of 15, he joined a jazz combo called the Cleffs, who played at parties and dances. Lewis was interested in a leaner, more bebop-oriented sound, and when the group splintered after several members joined the military, he formed the Ramsey Lewis Trio with two other former Cleffs, bassist Eldee Young and percussionist Redd Holt. The trio became a fixture on the Chicago jazz scene, and they were signed to a deal with Chess Records, releasing their first album, Ramsey Lewis & His Gentlemen of Jazz, in 1956.
Lewis and his trio continued to record and tour steadily over the years, building a sizable audience among jazz fans, but their career received a serious boost in 1965, when they recorded a swinging version of Dobie Gray's hit "The In Crowd" at a gig in Washington, D.C. Chess released the track as a single, and it became a sizable pop hit, earning Lewis his first gold record, as well as a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance. As Lewis' star rose, he returned to the pop charts in 1966 with versions of "Hang on Sloopy" and "Wade in the Water." Meanwhile, Young and Holt left Lewis' trio to form their own group, Young-Holt Unlimited, and the pianist hired a new rhythm section of Cleveland Eaton on bass and Maurice White on drums.
We Meet AgainIn 1970, White resigned to form his own group, and Morris Jennings signed on as the trio's new percussionist. Lewis continued to record for Chess until 1972, when he moved to Columbia, and as his music developed a more contemporary groove, White's group, Earth, Wind & Fire (also on Columbia), was beginning to enjoy considerable success on the R&B charts. White produced Lewis' 1974 album Sun Goddess, in which he experimented with electronic keyboards for the first time, and several members of EWF played on the sessions; it became a major crossover hit and took Lewis to the upper ranks of the smooth jazz/fusion scene. Lewis would record R&B-influenced material throughout the '70s but continued to explore his roots in more traditional jazz sounds as well as Latin rhythms. In 1983, he went into the studio with Eldee Young and Redd Holt for the album Reunion; in 1984, he collaborated with Nancy Wilson on The Two of Us; in 1988, he recorded with London's Philharmonia Orchestra for the album A Classic Encounter, and in 1989, Lewis and Dr. Billy Taylor cut a set of piano duets, We Meet Again.
With One VoiceIn 1992, Lewis signed with the successful jazz label GRP Records, and in 1995, he launched the side project Urban Knights, in which he collaborated with a handful of successful crossover jazz stars, including Grover Washington, Jr., Earl Klugh, and Dave Koz. In 1997, Lewis added disc jockey to his résumé, hosting a popular show on Chicago's WNUA-FM that ran until 2009; the show went into syndication in 2006 under the name Legends of Jazz with Ramsey Lewis, and is still on the air. In 2005, Lewis looked back on his roots in gospel music with the album With One Voice, which earned him the Stellar Gospel Music Award for Best Gospel Instrumental Album. In 2007, he was commissioned to write a jazz ballet for the Joffrey Ballet Company, and "To Know Her..." debuted at Highland Park, Illinois' Ravina Music Festival, where Lewis is artistic director of the festival's jazz series and helped found their Jazz Mentor Program.
Songs from the Heart: Ramsey Plays RamseyLewis has also written several pieces for string ensemble and orchestra that have premiered at Ravina; highlights were featured on the 2009 album Songs from the Heart: Ramsey Plays Ramsey, his first release from Concord Records. In addition to his work as a performer, composer, educator, and disc jockey, Lewis has received five honorary doctorate degrees, won the National Endowment for the Arts' Jazz Master Award in 2007, and is one of the few noted jazz artists to carry the Olympic Torch, having briefly escorted the flame as it passed through Chicago en route to the 2002 Winter Games. In 2011, he delivered Taking Another Look, a reworking of his classic 1974 electric jazz-funk album Sun Goddess. The album was reissued in a deluxe package with bonus tracks in 2015. Two years later, Lewis was a featured guest on pianist Alan Storeygard's trio album New Directions. In 2019, he rejoined Urban Knights for VII, which featured original songs as well as renditions of classics by John Coltrane, Chick Corea, and the Beatles. ~ Mark Deming
Lewis was born in Chicago on May 27, 1935 and was introduced to music by his father, who directed the choir at a local church and enjoyed the music of Duke Ellington and Art Tatum. He began studying the piano when he was four years old and was soon accompanying the choir at Sunday services. At the age of 15, he joined a jazz combo called the Cleffs, who played at parties and dances. Lewis was interested in a leaner, more bebop-oriented sound, and when the group splintered after several members joined the military, he formed the Ramsey Lewis Trio with two other former Cleffs, bassist Eldee Young and percussionist Redd Holt. The trio became a fixture on the Chicago jazz scene, and they were signed to a deal with Chess Records, releasing their first album, Ramsey Lewis & His Gentlemen of Jazz, in 1956.
Lewis and his trio continued to record and tour steadily over the years, building a sizable audience among jazz fans, but their career received a serious boost in 1965, when they recorded a swinging version of Dobie Gray's hit "The In Crowd" at a gig in Washington, D.C. Chess released the track as a single, and it became a sizable pop hit, earning Lewis his first gold record, as well as a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Performance. As Lewis' star rose, he returned to the pop charts in 1966 with versions of "Hang on Sloopy" and "Wade in the Water." Meanwhile, Young and Holt left Lewis' trio to form their own group, Young-Holt Unlimited, and the pianist hired a new rhythm section of Cleveland Eaton on bass and Maurice White on drums.
We Meet AgainIn 1970, White resigned to form his own group, and Morris Jennings signed on as the trio's new percussionist. Lewis continued to record for Chess until 1972, when he moved to Columbia, and as his music developed a more contemporary groove, White's group, Earth, Wind & Fire (also on Columbia), was beginning to enjoy considerable success on the R&B charts. White produced Lewis' 1974 album Sun Goddess, in which he experimented with electronic keyboards for the first time, and several members of EWF played on the sessions; it became a major crossover hit and took Lewis to the upper ranks of the smooth jazz/fusion scene. Lewis would record R&B-influenced material throughout the '70s but continued to explore his roots in more traditional jazz sounds as well as Latin rhythms. In 1983, he went into the studio with Eldee Young and Redd Holt for the album Reunion; in 1984, he collaborated with Nancy Wilson on The Two of Us; in 1988, he recorded with London's Philharmonia Orchestra for the album A Classic Encounter, and in 1989, Lewis and Dr. Billy Taylor cut a set of piano duets, We Meet Again.
With One VoiceIn 1992, Lewis signed with the successful jazz label GRP Records, and in 1995, he launched the side project Urban Knights, in which he collaborated with a handful of successful crossover jazz stars, including Grover Washington, Jr., Earl Klugh, and Dave Koz. In 1997, Lewis added disc jockey to his résumé, hosting a popular show on Chicago's WNUA-FM that ran until 2009; the show went into syndication in 2006 under the name Legends of Jazz with Ramsey Lewis, and is still on the air. In 2005, Lewis looked back on his roots in gospel music with the album With One Voice, which earned him the Stellar Gospel Music Award for Best Gospel Instrumental Album. In 2007, he was commissioned to write a jazz ballet for the Joffrey Ballet Company, and "To Know Her..." debuted at Highland Park, Illinois' Ravina Music Festival, where Lewis is artistic director of the festival's jazz series and helped found their Jazz Mentor Program.
Songs from the Heart: Ramsey Plays RamseyLewis has also written several pieces for string ensemble and orchestra that have premiered at Ravina; highlights were featured on the 2009 album Songs from the Heart: Ramsey Plays Ramsey, his first release from Concord Records. In addition to his work as a performer, composer, educator, and disc jockey, Lewis has received five honorary doctorate degrees, won the National Endowment for the Arts' Jazz Master Award in 2007, and is one of the few noted jazz artists to carry the Olympic Torch, having briefly escorted the flame as it passed through Chicago en route to the 2002 Winter Games. In 2011, he delivered Taking Another Look, a reworking of his classic 1974 electric jazz-funk album Sun Goddess. The album was reissued in a deluxe package with bonus tracks in 2015. Two years later, Lewis was a featured guest on pianist Alan Storeygard's trio album New Directions. In 2019, he rejoined Urban Knights for VII, which featured original songs as well as renditions of classics by John Coltrane, Chick Corea, and the Beatles. ~ Mark Deming