Bob Zieff - The Music of Bob Zieff (2016)
Artist: Bob Zieff, Chet Baker, Jack Nimitz, Dick Wetmore
Title: The Music of Bob Zieff
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Fresh Sound Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 2:36:08
Total Size: 820 / 360 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Music of Bob Zieff
Year Of Release: 2016
Label: Fresh Sound Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 2:36:08
Total Size: 820 / 360 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
DISC 1
01. Piece Caprice
02. Just Duo
03. Pomp
04. Sad Walk
05. Brash
06. Re-Search
07. Shiftful
08. Rondette
09. Mid-Forte
10. Slightly Above Moderate
11. Medium Rock
12. Four to Four
13. Cinderella's Curfew
14. Patting
15. Twenties Late
16. A Minor Benign
17. Ponder
DISC 2
01. X
02. I Can't Get Started
03. I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You
04. Long Ago and Far Away
05. A Handful of Stars
06. You and Me and the Night and the Music
07. Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise
08. The Love Nest
09. Autumn Nocturne
10. Somebody Loves Me
11. Lean on Me
12. Shine
13. Rondette
14. Sad Walk
15. Re-Search
16. Just Duo
17. Piece Caprice
18. Pomp
19. Brash
Bob Zieff was born June 4th, 1927, in Lynn, Massachussetts, about 9 miles north of Boston University, where he studied harmony, composition and musicology. In 1953, at the request of modern violinist Dick Wetmore, he composed an eight-section suite, full of open spaces for improvisation. The stimulating compositions Zieff wrote were built of fresh, intriguing lines, interesting harmonic routes, and a sense for the whole rather than a succession of parts. His challenging charts were happily recorded by Wetmore’s quartet for Bethlehem, but the label didn't release them until two years later on a 10-inch album. Unfortunately Dick Wetmore did not have much commercial appeal, and despite the good reception of the music, Zieff’s compositional style was far too complex for the American market. Compounding the matter, 10-inch records were being rapidly replaced by the new 12-inch vinyls, and so the release was a flop.
Zieff’s imaginative writing and individual musical mind attracted his friend pianist Dick Twardzik, who asked Bob to give him private lessons in composition. When in 1955 Dick went with Chet Baker’s quartet to Europe, he took with him several of Zieff tunes. Most of them were recorded by the trumpeter in Paris, and back in the U.S. Chet introduced a couple of Zieff’s tunes to the repertoire of his new crew. About them, jazz authority Nat Hentoff said in 1956: “Zieff is a writer from whom more should be heard.”
Keeping Hentoff’s suggestion to heart, Fresh Sound has put together, sixty years later, this 2-CD set including all available recordings of his finest compositions and arrangements, featuring in some cases unusual instrumentations. This intriguing portrait of Bob Zieff’s music is highly complemented by a fascinating essay written by the composer himself.
Zieff’s imaginative writing and individual musical mind attracted his friend pianist Dick Twardzik, who asked Bob to give him private lessons in composition. When in 1955 Dick went with Chet Baker’s quartet to Europe, he took with him several of Zieff tunes. Most of them were recorded by the trumpeter in Paris, and back in the U.S. Chet introduced a couple of Zieff’s tunes to the repertoire of his new crew. About them, jazz authority Nat Hentoff said in 1956: “Zieff is a writer from whom more should be heard.”
Keeping Hentoff’s suggestion to heart, Fresh Sound has put together, sixty years later, this 2-CD set including all available recordings of his finest compositions and arrangements, featuring in some cases unusual instrumentations. This intriguing portrait of Bob Zieff’s music is highly complemented by a fascinating essay written by the composer himself.