music.wikisort.org - CompositionThis Is How I Feel About Jazz is a 1957 album by American musician Quincy Jones,[2] his first full-length album as a bandleader after a recording debut with the 1955 split album Jazz Abroad.
1957 studio album by Quincy Jones
This Is How I Feel About Jazz |
---|
 |
|
Released | February 1957,[1] CD: 1992 |
---|
Recorded | September 14, 19 and 29, 1956; February 25, 1957 |
---|
Studio | Beltone Recording Studios, New York City; Los Angeles |
---|
Genre | Jazz |
---|
Length | 36:32 |
---|
Label | LP: ABC-Paramount CD: Impulse!/GRP |
---|
Producer | Creed Taylor Quincy Jones (CD bonus tracks) |
---|
|
|
Professional ratingsReview scores |
---|
Source | Rating |
---|
Allmusic |     [2] |
Jones arranged and conducted three recording sessions during September 1956, each with a different line-up, from a nonet to a fifteen piece big band. Musicians on the album include Art Farmer, Phil Woods, Lucky Thompson, Hank Jones, Paul Chambers, Milt Jackson, Art Pepper, Zoot Sims, and Herbie Mann. The bonus tracks on the CD release include compositions by Jimmy Giuffre, Lennie Niehaus and Charlie Mariano.
The album was produced by Creed Taylor and released by ABC-Paramount. The digital reissue on CD in 1992 was repackaged with the label Impulse!, ABCs sub-label for contemporary jazz established by Taylor four years after these sessions took place. The Impulse! version has a cover similar to the original but with the Impulse! logo.
Track listing
- "Walkin'" (Richard Carpenter) – 10:47
- "Stockholm Sweetnin' " (Jones) – 5:41
- "Evening in Paris" (Jones) – 4:09
- "Sermonette" (Julian Adderley, Jon Hendricks) – 5:58
- "A Sleepin' Bee" (Harold Arlen, Truman Capote) – 4:42
- "Boo's Blues" (Jones) – 5:15
Additional tracks on CD release (1992) from Go West, Man!'
Personnel
Tracks 1-2, session from September 29, 1956
- Art Farmer, Bernie Glow, Ernie Royal, Joe Wilder - trumpet
- Jimmy Cleveland, Urbie Green, Frank Rehak - trombone
- Phil Woods - alto saxophone
- Jerome Richardson - flute and tenor saxophone
- Lucky Thompson, Bunny Bardach - tenor saxophone
- Jack Nimitz - baritone sax
- Hank Jones - piano
- Paul Chambers - bass
- Charlie Persip - drums
Tracks 3-4, session from September 14, 1956
- Art Farmer - trumpet
- Jimmy Cleveland - trombone
- Herbie Mann - flute
- Gene Quill - alto saxophone
- Zoot Sims (#3), Lucky Thompson (#4) - tenor saxophone
- Jack Nimitz - baritone sax
- Milt Jackson - vibes
- Hank Jones - piano
- Charles Mingus - bass
- Charlie Persip - drums
Tracks 5-6, session from September 19, 1956
- Art Farmer - trumpet
- Jimmy Cleveland - trombone
- Herbie Mann - flute
- Phil Woods - alto saxophone
- Lucky Thompson - tenor saxophone
- Jack Nimitz - baritone sax
- Billy Taylor - piano
- Charles Mingus - bass
- Charlie Persip - drums
Added tracks 7–12, session from February 25, 1957
- Bill Perkins, Buddy Collette and Walter Benton - tenor saxophone
- Pepper Adams - baritone sax (10-12)
- Carl Perkins - piano
- Leroy Vinnegar - bass
- Shelly Manne - drums
- Arrangements by Jimmy Giuffre (7, 10), Lennie Niehaus (8, 9), Charlie Mariano (11)
Production
- The original album tracks were recorded by Irv Greenbaum at Beltone Recording Studios, NYC.
- Originally produced by Creed Taylor
- Added tracks from the album Go West, Man! were originally recorded by John Kraus and produced by Quincy Jones.
- Digital remastering by Erick Labson
- Reissue post-production – Adam Zelinka, Joseph Doughney, Michael Landy
- Reissue Producer – Michael Cuscuna
- Executive Producers – Dave Grusin, Larry Rosen
References
|
---|
|
Albums | |
---|
Compilations |
- Ndeda
- The Best
- From Q with Love
- Q The Musical Biography of Quincy Jones
- Summer In The City - The Soul Jazz Grooves of Quincy Jones
|
---|
Singles | |
---|
Other works | With Michael Jackson | |
---|
With Frank Sinatra | |
---|
Single collaborations | |
---|
|
---|
Films | |
---|
Zoot Sims |
---|
Years given are for the recording(s), not first release, unless stated otherwise. |
As leader or co-leader |
- The Brothers (and Stan Getz, 1949–52)
- Jutta Hipp with Zoot Sims (1956)
- The Modern Art of Jazz by Zoot Sims (1956)
- Tonite's Music Today (and Bob Brookmeyer, 1956)
- Whooeeee (and Bob Brookmeyer, 1956)
- Zoot! (1956)
- Locking Horns (and Joe Newman, 1957)
- Stretching Out (and Bob Brookmeyer, 1958)
- Jazz Alive! A Night at the Half Note (and Al Cohn, Phil Woods, 1959)
- Down Home (1960)
- Two Jims and Zoot/Otra Vez (Jimmy Raney and Jim Hall, 1964)
- Inter-Action (and Sonny Stitt, 1965)
- Waiting Game (1966)
- The Greatest Jazz Concert in the World (multiple leaders, 1967)
- Nirvana (and Bucky Pizzarelli, Buddy Rich, 1974)
- Basie & Zoot (and Count Basie, 1975)
- The Tenor Giants Featuring Oscar Peterson (and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, 1975)
- Zoot Sims and the Gershwin Brothers (and Joe Pass, Oscar Peterson, 1975)
- If I'm Lucky (and Jimmy rowles, 1977)
- Art 'n' Zoot (and Art Pepper, 1981)
|
---|
Recordings with Al Cohn |
- From A to...Z (1956)
- The Sax Section (Cohn led, 1956)
- Tenor Conclave (and Hank Mobley, John Coltrane, 1957)
- The Four Brothers... Together Again! (and Herbie Steward, Serge Chaloff, 1957)
- Al and Zoot (1957)
- Blues and Haikus (Jack Kerouac, 1959)
- SteveIreneo! (and Irene Kral, Steve Allen, 1959)
- Son of Drum Suite (Cohn, 1960)
- You 'n' Me (1960)
- Either Way (1961)
- Jazz Mission to Moscow (Cohn, 1962)
- Body and Soul (1973)
- Motoring Along (1974)
|
---|
With Quincy Jones | |
---|
With Gerry Mulligan | |
---|
With others |
- Pepper Adams Plays the Compositions of Charlie Mingus (1963)
- Encounter! (Pepper Adams, 1968)
- Trigger Happy!/East Coast Sounds (Trigger Alpert/Sims, Cohn, Tony Scott, 1956)
- Chet Baker & Strings (1953–54)
- Chet Baker Plays the Best of Lerner and Loewe (1959)
- The Bosses (Count Basie and "Big Joe" Turner, 1973)
- Louis Bellson Quintet (1954)
- The Genius of Ray Charles (1959)
- Jazz Is Universal (Kenny Clarke/Francy Boland Big Band, 1961)
- Chris Connor (1956)
- The Book Cooks (Booker Ervin, 1960)
- Loose Blues (Bill Evans, 1962)
- The Aztec Suite (Art Farmer, 1959)
- South American Cookin' (Curtis Fuller, 1961)
- Creole Cookin' (Bobby Hackett, 1967)
- The Hawk in Hi Fi (Coleman Hawkins, 1956)
- Portraits on Standards (Stan Kenton, 1953)
- The Kenton Era (Stan Kenton, 1953)
- The Manhattan Transfer (released 1975)
- Profiles (Gary McFarland, 1966)
- Something to Swing About (Carmen McRae, 1959)
- Ms. Jazz (Carmen McRae, 1973)
- Metronome All-Stars 1956 (1956)
- The Complete Town Hall Concert (Charles Mingus, 1962)
- Arranged by Montrose (Jack Montrose, 1954)
- Encyclopedia of Jazz (Oliver Nelson, 1966)
- The Sound of Feeling (Oliver Nelson, 1966)
- Jazzhattan Suite (Oliver Nelson/Jazz Interactions Orchestra, 1967)
- All the Sad Young Men (Anita O'Day, 1962)
- Transition (Buddy Rich, Lionel Hampton, 1974)
- Shorty Rogers Courts the Count (1954)
- Samba Para Dos (Lalo Schifrin, Bob Brookmeyer, 1963)
- Moonlight in Vermont (Johnny Smith, 1952)
- Phoebe Snow (1974)
- Broadway Soul (Sonny Stitt, 1965)
- Vaughan and Violins (Sarah Vaughan, 1958)
- The Duke Ellington Songbook, Vol. 1 (Sarah Vaughan, 1979)
- Linger Awhile: Live at Newport and More (Sarah Vaughan, 1979)
- The Jazz Guitarist (Chuck Wayne, 1953)
- At Newport '63 (Joe Williams, 1963)
|
---|
Authority control  | |
---|
Текст в блоке "Читать" взят с сайта "Википедия" и доступен по лицензии Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike; в отдельных случаях могут действовать дополнительные условия.
Другой контент может иметь иную лицензию. Перед использованием материалов сайта WikiSort.org внимательно изучите правила лицензирования конкретных элементов наполнения сайта.
2019-2025
WikiSort.org - проект по пересортировке и дополнению контента Википедии