Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
English (United Kingdom)Polish (Poland)
Home Jazz Lee Morgan Lee Morgan - Indeed! (1957)

Lee Morgan - Indeed! (1957)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Lee Morgan - Indeed! (1957)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


1 	Roccus	8:15
2 	Reggie Of Chester	4:51
3 	The Lady	6:44
4 	Little T (a.k.a. The New Message)	8:20
5 	Gaza Strip	3:52
6 	Stand By	5:48
7 	Little T (Alternate Take)	8:07

Alto Saxophone – Clarence Sharpe
Bass – Wilbur Ware
Drums – "Philly" Joe Jones
Piano – Horace Silver
Trumpet – Lee Morgan

Originally Recorded on November 4, 1956 at the Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey
Originally issued in 1956 as Blue Note BLP 1538 

 

Lee Morgan hadn’t even celebrated his 20th birthday when he ventured into Rudy Van Gelder’s recording studio at Hackensack, New Jersey, on 29 September 1957, to record The Cooker. Originally from Philadelphia, Morgan (1938-1972) was a wunderkind trumpeter who idolised Clifford Brown (the groundbreaking hard bop horn blower who had perished in a car accident in 1956) and served his musical apprenticeship playing in the horn section of a short-lived big band led by another notable trumpeter – a puff-cheeked wind machine who went by the name of Dizzy Gillespie. That was in 1956, when Morgan was just 18.

Later the same year, he was offered a recording contract by New York’s Blue Note Records, then the leading jazz indie label, and recorded his inaugural LP for them, Lee Morgan Indeed!. There followed a spate of intense recording activity that saw the young trumpet prodigy record five more LPs within a period of ten and a half months. But as well as leading his own projects, news of Morgan’s prodigious, preternatural talent spread fast and he found himself recording as the trumpet foil to tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley, who was also signed to Blue Note. And, perhaps more significantly, just four days before he went to record what became The Cooker, Morgan was in Van Gelder Studio playing alongside rising tenor star and fellow Philadelphian John Coltrane, featuring on what is universally acknowledged as the saxophonist’s first truly great album, Blue Train. ---Charles Waring, udiscovermusic.com

download (mp3 @320 kbs):

yandex mediafire ulozto gett bayfiles

 

back

 

Before downloading any file you are required to read and accept the
Terms and Conditions.

If you are an artist or agent, and would like your music removed from this site,
please e-mail us on
abuse@theblues-thatjazz.com
and we will remove them as soon as possible.


Polls
What music genre would you like to find here the most?
 
Now onsite:
  • 290 guests
Content View Hits : 251432460