Shirley Scott - Trio Classics, Vol. 1 (1958/2004)

  • 26 Aug, 09:44
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Artist:
Title: Trio Classics, Vol. 1
Year Of Release: 1958/2004
Label: Prestige
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / 320 kbps
Total Time: 01:09:21
Total Size: 463 / 163 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01 - The Scott 03:10
02 - All Of You 03:24
03 - Goodbye 05:01
04 - Four 03:53
05 - Nothing Ever Changes 04:39
06 - Trees 06:58
07 - Cherokee 05:22
08 - Brazil 02:27
09 - It Could Happen To You 04:34
10 - Summertime 03:58
11 - There Will Never Be Another You 03:22
12 - Bye Bye Blackbird 06:39
13 - S’Posin 04:18
14 - Baby Won't You Please Come Home 04:02
15 - Indiana 03:23
16 - I Can't See For Lookin' 04:11

R
ecorded for Prestige in May 1958 Tracks 1 to 8 originally released as "Great Scot!" (Prestige 7143). Tracks 9 to 16 originally released as "Shirley's Sounds" (Prestige 7195)
Although the title gets you geared for a compilation, in fact all 16 of the tracks on this CD came from a single session on May 23, 1958. It was Scott's first session as a leader, in fact, yielding her two albums Great Scott! and Shirley's Sounds, and everything from those two LPs is on this single-disc reissue. Recorded with the rhythm section of George Duvivier on bass (except for "Bye Bye Blackbird," where George Tucker plays the instrument) and Arthur Edgehill on drums, it's sleek, swinging stuff that might not be as well known as Jimmy Smith's early work, but was similarly important in establishing the format and popularity of organ jazz. Scott is a virtuoso here, adept at spinning off speedy riffs, quickly gliding to exclamatory notes, and making the instrument swirl and swell, but never at the expense of a soulful feel. The shortage of original material is a bit disappointing, with just one track ("The Scott") composed by Scott, the rest being covers, often of standards such as "Summertime," "Bye Bye Blackbird," and "All of You." Despite that imbalance, it's a good mixture, at times bopping along frenetically ("[Back Home Again In] Indiana"), at others adopting a bluesy walk ("I Can't See for Lookin'") or a Latin lilt ("Brazil"), and also mellowing down into some slow ballads.
Richie Unterberger /TiVo




  • mufty77
  •  15:07
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