Nat King Cole - The Complete After Midnight Sessions (Bonus Track Version) (2020)

  • 20 Feb, 11:25
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Artist:
Title: The Complete After Midnight Sessions (Bonus Track Version)
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: New Jazz Society
Genre: Jazz, Vocal Jazz
Quality: 320 kbps | FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 01:15:25
Total Size: 173 mb | 430 mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Nat King Cole - You Can Depend on Me
02. Nat King Cole - Candy
03. Nat King Cole - Sweet Lorraine
04. Nat King Cole - It'S Only a Paper Moon
05. Nat King Cole - (Get Your Kicks On) Route 66
06. Nat King Cole - Don'T Let It Go to Your Head
07. Nat King Cole - You'Re Looking At Me
08. Nat King Cole - Just You, Just Me
09. Nat King Cole - I Was a Little Too Lonely (And You Were a Little Too Late)
10. Nat King Cole - Caravan
11. Nat King Cole - The Lonely One
12. Nat King Cole - Blame It on My Youth
13. Nat King Cole - What Is There To Say_
14. Nat King Cole - Sometimes I'M Happy
15. Nat King Cole - I Know That You Know
16. Nat King Cole - When I Grow Too Old to Dream
17. Nat King Cole - Two Loves Have I
18. Nat King Cole - You'Re Looking At Me [Alt Tk]
19. Nat King Cole - Don'T Blame Me (Bonus Track)
20. Nat King Cole - It Could Happen to You (Bonus Track)
21. Nat King Cole - I Surrender Dear (Bonus Track)
22. Nat King Cole - Little Girl (Bonus Track)

When this album was recorded in February of 1961, it had been more than year since the Portrait in Jazz was issued, the disc that won the critics over. By the time of this issue, Evans had released four albums in six years, a pace unheard of during that time. Most musicians were issuing two, three, and even four records a year during the same era. Many speculate on Evans' personal problems at the time, but the truth of the matter lies in the recordings themselves, and Explorations proves that the artist was worth waiting for no matter what else was going on out there. Evans, with Paul Motian and Scott LaFaro, was onto something as a trio, exploring the undersides of melodic and rhythmic constructions that had never been considered by most. For one thing, Evans resurrects a number of tunes that had been considered hopelessly played out, and literally reinvents them "How Deep Is the Ocean" and "Sweet and Lovely." His harmonic richness that extends the melodic and color palette of these numbers literally revived them from obscurity and brought them back into the canon. He also introduced "Haunted Heart" into the jazz repertoire, with a wonderfully impressionistic melodic structure, offered space, and depth by the understatement of Motian and extension by LaFaro's canny use of intervals. Also noteworthy is Miles Davis' "Nardis," which Evans first played on a Cannonball Adderley set a couple of years before. The rhythmic workout by the Motian and LaFaro places Evans' own playing in a new context, with shorter lines, chopping up the meter, and a series of arpeggios that open the ground for revelatory solo in counterpoint by LaFaro. Explorations is an extraordinary example of the reach and breadth of this trio at its peak.


  • mufty77
  •  21:38
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Many thanks for lossless.