Charlie Rouse - Charlie Rouse (2025) [Hi-Res]

Artist: Charlie Rouse
Title: Charlie Rouse
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: 2xHD
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet) [176kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 36:49
Total Size: 1.22 GB / 208 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Charlie Rouse
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: 2xHD
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks + booklet) [176kHz/24bit]
Total Time: 36:49
Total Size: 1.22 GB / 208 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
01. NEW DAWN (Alvorada) (1)
02. QUIET PICTURES (Natal No Interior) (2)
03. BACKWOODS ECHO (Sertấo) (3)
04. MEETING HOUSE (4)
05. CINNAMON FLOWER (Cravo Canela) (5)
06. WAITING ON THE CORNER (6)
Even people who barely know Jazz would know the names Parker, Hodges, Coltrane, Wayne Shorter, to name a few. Charlie Rouse is on that level for many but is barely known by comparison.
Until now, Cinnamon Flower has been a forgotten milestone in the history of Brazilian jazz, as well as a high point in the career of its nominal leader, tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse. Prior to 1977, when the album was released, Rouse had spent eleven years as the musical alter ego of Thelonious Monk—a credit that has predictably overshadowed everything else on his resume. For Cinnamon Flower, Charlie enlisted the help of some top crack Brazilian locals. Dom Salvador, Amaury Tristao, Dom Um Romao, Portinho and Claudio Roditi were hooked up with some of NYCs finest-Ron Carter, and Clifford Adams. The initial recording by Resonance president George Klabin was tampered with overdubs, synthesizers and unnecessary coloration. This 2xHD Resonance release of the original recording with all its excitement and enthusiasm gives a fresh chance to revisit a musician who almost from the start was deemed “underrated.”
Until now, Cinnamon Flower has been a forgotten milestone in the history of Brazilian jazz, as well as a high point in the career of its nominal leader, tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse. Prior to 1977, when the album was released, Rouse had spent eleven years as the musical alter ego of Thelonious Monk—a credit that has predictably overshadowed everything else on his resume. For Cinnamon Flower, Charlie enlisted the help of some top crack Brazilian locals. Dom Salvador, Amaury Tristao, Dom Um Romao, Portinho and Claudio Roditi were hooked up with some of NYCs finest-Ron Carter, and Clifford Adams. The initial recording by Resonance president George Klabin was tampered with overdubs, synthesizers and unnecessary coloration. This 2xHD Resonance release of the original recording with all its excitement and enthusiasm gives a fresh chance to revisit a musician who almost from the start was deemed “underrated.”