Feel the Blues with all that Jazz
English (United Kingdom)Polish (Poland)
Home Jazz Charlie Parker Charlie Parker - Very Best of the Dial Years (2005)

Charlie Parker - Very Best of the Dial Years (2005)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Charlie Parker - Very Best of the Dial Years (2005)


01. A Night in Tunisia (3:05)		ziddu
02. Yardbird Suite (2:56)
03. Ornithology (3:01)
04. Moose the Mooche (3:04)
05. Bebop (aka Be Bop) (2:58)
06. Lover Man (3:22)
07. Bird's Nest (2:44)
08. Cool Blues (3:10)
09. Relaxin' at Camarillo (3:08)
10. Cheers (3:06)
11. Stupendous (2:57)
12. Bird of Paradise (3:13)
13. Embraceable You (3:26)
14. Klact-oveeseds-tene (3:08)
15. Scrapple from the Apple (2:42)
16. My Old Flame (3:18)
17. Out of Nowhere (3:09)
18. Don't Blame Me (2:50)
19. Quasimodo (2:55)
20. Crazeology (2:59)
21. Donna Lee (2:36)
22. Chasin' the Bird (2:46)		ziddu
23. Cheryl (2:59)

Personnel: 
Charlie Parker (alto saxophone); 
Charlie Parker ; Arv Garrison (guitar); Jimmy Bunn (piano); 
Red Callender, Tommy Potter (double bass); 
Don Lamond, Harold "Doc" West (drums); 
Barney Kessel (guitar); 
Lucky Thompson, Wardell Gray (tenor saxophone); 
Howard McGhee, Miles Davis (trumpet); 
J.J. Johnson (trombone); 
Dodo Marmarosa, Duke Jordan, Erroll Garner, Bud Powell (piano); 
Max Roach, Roy Porter (drums).

 

The 20th century was full of musical geniuses who made tremendous contributions despite being highly dysfunctional and living dark, tragic lives. That was true of Marvin Gaye, Hank Williams Sr., Chet Baker, Billie Holiday and Kurt Cobain, and it was most certainly true of Charlie "Bird" Parker. One need only examine some of the song titles on Very Best of the Dial Years to see some evidence of Bird's dysfunction; "Moose the Mooche," as singer Athan Maroulis points out in his insightful liner notes, was named after Bird's heroin dealer in Los Angeles, and the title "Relaxin' at Camarillo" was inspired by the six months he spent in a California mental hospital. But Bird's demons didn't prevent him from recording a lot of brilliant, incredibly influential music, including the 78s he made for Dial Records in 1946 and 1947. Despite all the bad things that happened during Bird's visit to California (setting a hotel room on fire, suffering a nervous breakdown, the time at Camarillo), Bird's West Coast sessions for Dial were truly historic -- and many of the bebop treasures he recorded in Hollywood became standards, including "Ornithology," "Yardbird Suite" and "Cool Blues" (all of which are on this excellent CD). But not all of Bird's Dial sides were made in L.A.; for example, "Bird of Paradise" and "Scrapple From the Apple" (which are also on this album) were recorded after he returned to New York City. And it should be noted that this release's three bonus tracks ("Donna Lee," "Chasin' the Bird" and "Cheryl") were recorded for Savoy instead of Dial, which is why those 1947 gems are offered as bonus tracks. This 23-song, 69-minute CD isn't the last word on Bird's Dial output, but it's a fairly generous, nicely assembled collection that is enthusiastically recommended to anyone with even a casual interest in '40s bebop. --- Alex Henderson, allmusic.com

download: uploaded yandex 4shared mediafire solidfiles mega zalivalka cloud.mail.ru filecloudio anonfiles oboom

back

Last Updated (Friday, 15 August 2014 22:41)

 

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:
  • 211 guests
Content View Hits : 227542372