Herb Geller - The Remasters (All Tracks Remastered) (2021)

  • 01 May, 06:16
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Artist:
Title: The Remasters (All Tracks Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2021
Label: Millennium Digital Remaster
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:55:35
Total Size: 668 / 268 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Nightmare Alley (Remastered 2016)
02. A Room with a View (Remastered 2017)
03. A Cool Day (Remastered 2016)
04. Kahagon (Remastered 2017)
05. The Princess (Remastered 2016)
06. Domestic Harmony (Remastered 2017)
07. It Might as Well Be Spring (Remastered 2016)
08. Happy Go Lucky (Remastered 2017)
09. S'pacific View (Remastered 2016)
10. Alone Together (Remastered 2017)
11. The Fruit (Remastered 2016)
12. Sleigh Ride (Remastered 2017)
13. Here's What I'm Here For (Remastered 2016)
14. Cow Song (Remastered 2016)
15. An Air for an Heir (Remastered 2016)
16. Some People (Remastered 2016)
17. Melrose and Sam (Remastered 2016)
18. Little Lamb (Remastered 2016)
19. Araphoe (Remastered 2016)
20. You'll Never Get Away from Me (Remastered 2016)
21. If I Were a Bell (Remastered 2016)
22. Supper Time (Remastered 2016)
23. Love (Remastered 2016)
24. Patterns (Remastered 2016)
25. Blues in the Night (Remastered 2016)

Herb Geller was a veteran of the Los Angeles jazz scene of the 1950s who played better than ever by the turn of the millennium. Geller played in 1946 with Joe Venuti's Orchestra, and in 1949 he traveled to New York to play with Claude Thornhill. In 1951 he moved back to L.A. and married the excellent bop pianist Lorraine Walsh. Geller was a fixture in L.A., playing with Billy May (1952), Maynard Ferguson, Shorty Rogers, Bill Holman, and Chet Baker, among others; jamming with Clifford Brown and Max Roach (1954); and leading a quartet that included his wife (1954-1955). Lorraine Geller's sudden death in 1958 eventually resulted in the altoist deciding to leave the country to escape his grief. He played with Benny Goodman off and on between 1958-1961, spent time in Brazil, and in 1962 moved to Berlin. Geller worked in German radio orchestras for 30 years, played in European big bands, and continued to grow as a musician, although he was pretty much forgotten in the U.S. From the early '90s into the 2000s, Herb Geller returned to the States on a more regular basis, and he recorded tributes to Al Cohn and Arthur Schwartz for Hep. Geller also recorded as a leader in the 1950s for EmArcy, Jubilee, and Atco, and in his later years for Enja, Fresh Sound, and VSOP. Herb Geller died in Hamburg, Germany on December 19, 2013; he was 85 years old. ~ Scott Yanow