Louis Armstrong & Ella Fitzgerald - Porgy and Bess (Bonus Track Version) (1958/2020)
Artist: Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald
Title: Porgy and Bess (Bonus Track Version)
Year Of Release: 1958/2020
Label: New Jazz Society
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:18:45
Total Size: 178 mb | 463 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Porgy and Bess (Bonus Track Version)
Year Of Release: 1958/2020
Label: New Jazz Society
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:18:45
Total Size: 178 mb | 463 mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Overture
02. Summertime
03. I Wants to Stay Here
04. My Man's Gone Now
05. I Got Plenty O' Nuttin'
06. Buzzard Song
07. Bess, You Is My Woman Now
08. It Ain´T Necessarily So
09. What You Want Wid Bess_
10. A Woman Is a Sometime Thing
11. Oh, Doctor Jesus
12. Medley: Here Come the Money Man / Crab Man / Oh, Dey's so Fresh and Fine (Starwberry Woman)
13. There's a Boat Dat's Leavin' Soon for New York
14. Bess, Oh Where's My Bess?
15. Oh, Lawd, I'm on My Way
16. Red-Headed Woman (Bonus Track)
17. A Woman Is a Somentime Thing [Alternative Mono Master] (Bonus Track)
18. I Got Plenty O' Nuttin' [Alternative Mono Master] (Bonus Track)
Producer Norman Granz oversaw two Porgy & Bess projects. The first involved Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, and came together during the autumn of 1957 with brassy big band and lush orchestral arrangements by Russ Garcia. This is the classic Verve Porgy & Bess, and it's been reissued many, many times. The second, recorded during the spring and summer of 1976 and issued by RCA, brought Ray Charles together with versatile British vocalist Cleo Laine, backed by an orchestra under the direction of Frank DeVol. A comparison of these two realizations bears fascinating fruit, particularly when the medleys of street vendors are played back to back. Those peasant songs, used in real life to purvey honey, strawberries, and crabs, were gathered and notated by George Gershwin and novelist Du Bose Heyward in 1934 during a visit to Folly Island, a small barrier island ten miles south of Charleston, SC, known today as Folly Beach. As Charleston Harbor had been one of the major ports during the importation of slaves from Africa, the waterfront was mostly populated by Gullahs, a reconstituted community that retained and preserved its ancestral cultures and languages to unusual degrees. Gershwin, who even learned to chant with the Gullah, absorbed the tonalities of the street cries he heard and wove them along with all of the other impressions stored within his sensitive mind into the fabric of his opera. What's really great about the Ella and Louis version is Ella, who handles each aria with disarming delicacy, clarion intensity, or usually a blend of both. Her take on "Buzzard Song" (sung 19 years later by Ray Charles) is a thrilling example of this woman's intrinsic theatrical genius. Pops sounds like he really savored each duet, and his trumpet work not a whole lot of it, because this is not a trumpeter's opera is characteristically good as gold. This marvelous album stands quite well on its own, but will sound best when matched with the Ray Charles/Cleo Laine version, especially the songs of the Crab Man, of Peter the Honey Man, and his wife, Lily the Strawberry Woman.