Michel Hausser - Michel Hausser - Mr. Vibes. Quartet & Octet Sessions 1958-60 (2020)

  • 07 Nov, 19:11
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Artist:
Title: Michel Hausser - Mr. Vibes. Quartet & Octet Sessions 1958-60
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: Fresh Sound Records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 155:07 min
Total Size: 709 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Blues pour le chat
2. Isn't It Romantic
3. Rue Dauphine
4. Everything Happens to Me
5. Now’s the Time
6. H.E.C Blues
7. Rue Dauphine (2)
8. Michel Hausser Introduces the Musicians
9. These Foolish Things
10. Blues pour le chat (2)
11. Moanin'
12. I Remember Clifford
13. H.E.C Blues (2)
14. Monsieur de…
15. It's the Talk of Town
16. Made in Switzerland
17. Willow Weep for Me
18. Who, You?
19. 4 R
20. Taking a Chance on Love
21. Cliff Cliff
22. Phenil Isopropil Amine
23. Mysterioso
24. Lullaby of the Leaves
25. Waiting for Irene
26. Chasing the Bird
27. Speak Low
28. Up in Hamburg
29. Opus de Funk
30. These Foolish Things
31. Tadd’s Delight
32. Jive at Five
33. Blues a San Pauli
34. Darn That Dream
35. Tune Up
36. These Foolish Things (Live au Festival de Jazz d’Antibes Juan-les-Pins, July 18, 1961)
37. Made in Switzerland (Live au Festival de Jazz d’Antibes Juan-les-Pins, July 18, 1961)
38. Wee Dot (Live at Festival de Jazz de Cannes, July, 11, 1958)


The vibraphone was still a relative novelty in the jazz scene of the 1950s, particularly in Europe. Its leading proponents in the modern jazz field were Belgian Sadi and French Geo Daly during the first half of the decade. It wouldn’t be until 1955 that another vibes player from France irrupted on the scene: his name, Michel Hausser, and his main influence the art of “Bags” Milt Jackson, his imposing skill, and the role it had in the success of the MJQ.

It was at the end of 1956 that Michel’s trio had the opportunity to open “Le Chat qui Pêche,” a new jazz club that would soon become one of the most popular in Paris. His exciting performances were the talk of the town and paired with the exposure that Hausser received recording with Lucky Thompson and such bandleaders as Christian Chevallier and Quincy Jones, they earned him first place in the 1958 Jazz-Hot poll awards, the first of many in his career.

Although the blues-oriented improvisations and emotional content of Jackson’s approach were evident in Michel’s playing, at the core, his style had a more outgoing flair. In this double CD we can listen to Michel Hausser’s recordings from his prolific Parisian years. Although he has never stopped playing, his name seems to vanish from jazz magazines in 1969, when he returned to his native Alsace, but even so, Michel Hausser will forever remain a referent for jazz vibraphonists everywhere.