Charles Mingus - The Essential Charles Mingus: The Columbia & RCA Years (2013)

  • 17 Aug, 14:11
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Artist:
Title: The Essential Charles Mingus: The Columbia & RCA Years
Year Of Release: 2013
Label: Columbia - Legacy
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 2:34:57
Total Size: 897 / 359 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Better Git It in Your Soul
02. Goodbye Pork Pie Hat
03. Fables of Faubus
04. Boogie Stop Shuffle
05. Far Wells, Mill Valley
06. Mood Indigo
07. Song with Orange
08. Strollin'
09. Ysabel's Table Dance (1957/62 Master Takes)
10. Flamingo (1957/62 Master Takes)
11. A Colloquial Dream
12. Revelations (First Movement)
13. The Shoes of the Fisherman's Wife Are Some Jive Ass Slippers
14. Adagio Ma Non Troppo
15. The I of Hurricane Sue
16. Ecclusiastics (Live)
17. Jumpy Monk (Live)
18. Mingus Blues (Live)
19. Peggy's Blue Skylight
20. Ballad (In Other Words, I Am Three)

Bassist, composer, arranger, and bandleader Charles Mingus cut himself a uniquely iconoclastic path through jazz in the middle of the 20th century, creating a musical and cultural legacy that became universally lauded. As an instrumentalist he had few peers -- he was blessed with a powerful tone and pulsating sense of rhythm, capable of elevating the instrument into the frontline of a band. Intensely ambitious yet often earthy in expression, simultaneously politically radical and deeply traditional spiritually, Mingus' music took elements from everything he had experienced -- from gospel and blues, New Orleans jazz, swing, bop, Latin music, modern classical music, and even the jazz avant-garde, and adapted it for ensembles ranging from trios and quartets to sextets and orchestras. His touchstone was the advanced harmonic and timbral swing palette pioneered by Duke Ellington. Mingus took the maestro's harmonic innovations to a different sphere, grafting on gutbucket blues, abrasive dissonances, and introducing abrupt changes in meter and rhythm. While his early works were written out in classical fashion, during the 1950s, influential albums such as Pithecanthropus Erectus, The Clown, and Ah-Um offered a new method of getting his unconventional vision across: he dictated various parts of a composition to his sidemen, all the while allowing room for their individual musical personalities and ideas. This continued throughout the '60s and '70s. His transition from bebop to his pioneering place in hard bop brought to the fore an exciting array of future jazz luminaries including Jackie McLean, Eric Dolphy, Dannie Richmond, and Jimmy Knepper, to mention a few of the musicians he mentored. Mingus was also a formidable pianist, easily capable of playing that role in a group -- which he did in his 1961-1962 bands, hiring another bassist to fill in for him.