Harold Land - Four Classic Albums (Harold in the Land of Jazz / The Fox / West Coast Blues / Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (Digitally Remastered) (2019)

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Artist:
Title: Four Classic Albums (Harold in the Land of Jazz / The Fox / West Coast Blues / Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (Digitally Remastered)
Year Of Release: 2019
Label: AVID Jazz
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 2:39:22
Total Size: 902 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Speak Low (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (05:40)
2. Delirium (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (06:45)
3. You Don't Know What Love Is (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (04:00)
4. Nieta (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (04:39)
5. Grooveyard (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (07:07)
6. Lydia's Lament (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (05:51)
7. Smack up (Harold in the Land of Jazz) (07:13)
8. The Fox (The Fox) (05:34)
9. Mirror-Mind Rose (The Fox) (06:32)
10. One Second Please (The Fox) (05:50)
11. Sims A-Plenty (The Fox) (06:16)
12. Little Chris (The Fox) (05:09)
13. One Down (The Fox) (07:22)
14. Ursula (West Coast Blues) (07:08)
15. Klactoveedsedstene (West Coast Blues) (10:00)
16. Don't Explain (West Coast Blues) (04:55)
17. West Coast Blues (West Coast Blues) (06:03)
18. Terrain (West Coast Blues) (07:48)
19. Compulsion (West Coast Blues) (06:51)
20. So in Love (Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (06:01)
21. Triple Trouble (Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (05:48)
22. Slowly (Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (07:05)
23. On a Little Street in Singapore (Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (07:09)
24. Okay Blues (Eastward Ho! Harold Land in New York) (12:24)

AVID jazz continues its mission to re-instate some of the lesser known or perhaps under-appreciated jazz musicians from the golden age of jazz. Here we feature tenor sax giant, Harold Land who started his musical career as a fiercely hard be-bop player with the Clifford Brown / Max Roach quintet of the early 1950s. Moving out to the west coast he hooked up with bassist Curtis Counce for a series of Counce led albums in the late 1950s (AMSC1196). He can also be heard as sideman alongside such names as Elmo Hope, Herb Geller, Gerald Wilson, Gerald Wiggins, Victor Feldman, Shorty Rogers and Thelonious Monk. Our featured “Land-mark” albums come from his late 1950s, early 1960s period and include such fine jazz players as Elmo Hope, Leroy Vinnegar, Frank Butler, Carl Perkins, Wes Montgomery, Louis Hayes, Joe Gordon, Kenny Dorham and another fine trumpet player, the rarely heard and enigmatic Dupree Bolton.