John Handy - The Essential John Handy: The Columbia Years (2017)

  • 12 Jul, 11:39
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Artist:
Title: The Essential John Handy: The Columbia Years
Year Of Release: 2017
Label: Columbia - Legacy
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 3:33:14
Total Size: 1.12 GB / 495 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. If Only We Knew (Live)
02. Spanish Lady (Live)
03. Dancy, Dancy
04. Blues for a Highstrung Guitar
05. Dance for Carlo B
06. Scheme #1
07. Theme X
08. Right On the Line
09. Debonair
10. Tears of Ole Miss
11. What's New
12. New Theme
13. A Bad Stroke of Luck
14. Blues for a Highstrung Guitar (Alternate Take)
15. Spanish Lady (Mono Single)
16. If Only We Knew (Mono Single)
17. The Thing
18. Senora Nancye (Live)
19. Three In One
20. Projections
21. A Song of Uranus
22. Senora Nancye
23. Dance to the Lady
24. Sanpaku
25. Eros
26. All the Way to the West, By God, Virginia

A talented and adventurous altoist whose career has gone through several phases, John Handy started playing alto in 1949. After moving to New York in 1958, he had a fiery period with Charles Mingus (1958-1959) that resulted in several passionate recordings that show off his originality; he also recorded several dates as a leader for Roulette. Handy led his own bands during 1959-1964, and played with Mingus at the 1964 Monterey Jazz Festival, but it was at the following year's festival that he was a major hit, stretching out with his quintet (which included violinist Michael White and guitarist Jerry Hahn) on two long originals. Soon, Handy was signed to Columbia, where he recorded his finest work (three excellent albums) during 1966-1968. Since that time, he has performed world music with Ali Akbar Khan, recorded the R&B hit "Hard Work" for Impulse in 1976, gigged and recorded with Mingus Dynasty, and in the late '80s led a group (called Class) featuring three female violinists who sing. John Handy (no relation to the Dixieland altoist Capt. John Handy) remains a strong soloist who can hit high notes way above his horn's normal register with ease, but he has mostly maintained a low profile, teaching in the San Francisco Bay Area. ~ Scott Yanow