Dizzy Gillespie - Plays The Blues (2025)

  • 04 Dec, 08:51
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Artist:
Title: Plays The Blues
Year Of Release: 2025
Label: UMG Recordings, Inc
Genre: Jazz, Blues
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:51:49
Total Size: 530 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Dizzy Gillespie – Birk's Works (03:05)
2. Dizzy Gillespie – Blue 'N' Boogie (02:58)
3. Benny Carter & Dizzy Gillespie – Constantinople (09:00)
4. Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gillespie – Bloomdido (Master Take) (03:27)
5. Dizzy Gillespie – The Bluest Blues (02:56)
6. Dizzy Gillespie, Oscar Peterson, Freddie Hubbard, Clark Terry & Joe Pass – Chicken Wings (09:32)
7. Dizzy Gillespie – Dizzy's Boogie (03:10)
8. Oscar Peterson & Dizzy Gillespie – Mozambique (07:05)
9. Dizzy Gillespie – Bopsie's Blues (02:34)
10. Charlie Parker & Dizzy Gillespie – Mohawk (Master Take) (03:35)
11. Dizzy Gillespie – School Days (03:10)
12. Oscar Peterson & Dizzy Gillespie – Blues for Bird (12:30)
13. Dizzy Gillespie – Boppin' The Blues (03:05)
14. Dizzy Gillespie – The Diamond Jubilee Blues (feat. Benny Golson & David Sánchez) [Live At The Blue Note, New York City, NY / January 24, 1992] (04:14)
15. Dizzy Gillespie – We Love To Boogie (02:53)
16. Dizzy Gillespie – St. Louis Blues (05:56)
17. Dizzy Gillespie – Good Dues Blues (02:59)
18. Dizzy Gillespie – Billie's Bounce (feat. Benny Golson & David Sánchez) [Live At The Blue Note, New York City, NY / January 24, 1992] (15:27)
19. Dizzy Gillespie – Nobody Knows (02:37)
20. Dizzy Gillespie – Straight No Chaser (feat. Wynton Marsalis & Charlie Sepulveda) [Live At The Blue Note, New York City, NY / January 29 To February 1, 1992] (11:26)

Dizzy Gillespie's contributions to jazz were huge. One of the greatest jazz trumpeters of all time (some would say the best), Gillespie was such a complex player that his contemporaries ended up copying Miles Davis and Fats Navarro instead, and it was not until Jon Faddis' emergence in the 1970s that Dizzy's style was successfully recreated. Somehow, Gillespie could make any "wrong" note fit, and harmonically he was ahead of everyone in the 1940s, including Charlie Parker. Unlike Bird, Dizzy was an enthusiastic teacher who wrote down his musical innovations and was eager to explain them to the next generation, thereby insuring that bebop would eventually become the foundation of jazz.