Lester Young & Nat King Cole - Jazz Volume: Lester Young & Nat King Cole (2022)

  • 23 Nov, 07:41
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Jazz Volume: Lester Young & Nat King Cole
Year Of Release: 2022
Label: UMG Recordings, Inc.
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:08:14
Total Size: 428 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01 Lester Young - There Will Never Be Another You
02 Lester Young - I Cover The Waterfront (12" Version)
03 Lester Young - Little Pee Blues
04 Nat King Cole - Lester Leaps In (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
05 Lester Young - Somebody Loves Me
06 Lester Young - Back To The Land
07 Lester Young - Back To The Land
08 Nat King Cole - Body And Soul (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
09 Lester Young - I've Found A New Baby
10 Lester Young - I Want To Be Happy
11 Lester Young - I Cover The Waterfront (Master Take)
12 Lester Young - Peg O' My Heart
13 Lester Young - Mean To Me
14 Lester Young - The Man I Love
15 Lester Young - Rosetta
16 Nat King Cole - Tea For Two (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
17 Nat King Cole - Blues (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
18 Nat King Cole - Sweet Lorraine (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
19 Nat King Cole - The Man I Love (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
20 Nat King Cole - I've Found A New Baby (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
21 Nat King Cole - Rosetta (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
22 Nat King Cole - Bugle Call Rag (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
23 Nat King Cole - One O'Clock Jump (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)
24 Nat King Cole - Oh, Lady Be Good! (Live at Philharmonic Hall, Los Angeles, 1944)

• Lester Young was one of the true jazz giants, a tenor saxophonist who came up with a completely different conception in which to play his horn, floating over bar lines with a light tone rather than adopting Coleman Hawkins' then-dominant forceful approach. A non-conformist, Young (nicknamed "Pres" by Billie Holiday) had the ironic experience in the 1950s of hearing many young tenors try to sound exactly like him.


• For a mild-mannered man whose music was always easy on the ear, Nat King Cole managed to be a figure of considerable controversy during his 30 years as a professional musician. From the late '40s to the mid-'60s, he was a massively successful pop singer who ranked with such contemporaries as Frank Sinatra, Perry Como, and Dean Martin. He shared with those peers a career that encompassed hit records, international touring, radio and television shows, and appearances in films. But unlike them, he had not emerged from a background as a band singer in the swing era. Instead, he had spent a decade as a celebrated jazz pianist, leading his own small group. Oddly, that was one source of controversy. For some reason, there seem to be more jazz critics than fans of traditional pop among music journalists, and Cole's transition from jazz to pop during a period when jazz itself was becoming less popular was seen as a betrayal. At the same time, as a prominent Black entertainer during an era of tumultuous change in racial relations in the U.S., he sometimes found himself out of favor with different, warring sides. His efforts at integration, which included suing hotels that refused to admit him and moving into a previously all-white neighborhood in Los Angeles, earned the enmity of racists; once, he was even physically attacked on-stage in Alabama. But Civil Rights activists sometimes criticized him for not doing enough for the cause.