 |
The Complete Jazz At The Philharmonic On Verve: 1944-1949
Music CD CoverEdition: Music CD Format: Box set, Live CD Release Date: 1998-10-27 Music Label: Polygram Records Soundtracks: Music CD 1- Lester Leaps In
- Tea For Two
- Blues
- Body And Soul
- Yancey Special
- Fast Boogie
- DuPree Blues
- Honky Tonk Train Blues
- C-Jam Blues
- Sweet Lorraine
- The Man I Love
- I've Found A New Baby
Music CD 2- Rosetta
- Bugle Call Rag
- One O'Clock Jump
- Oh, Lady, Be Good!
- Introuduction By Radio Host Al Jarvis
- Stompin' At The Savoy
- I've Found A New Baby
- Body And Soul
- Body And Soul
- Strange Fruit
- (I Don't Stand) A Ghost Of A Chance (With You)
- Oh, Lady, Be Good!
- How High The Moon?
- Announcement By Al Jarvis
Music CD 3- Opera In Vout (Groove Juice Symphony)
- Blues For Norman
- Oh, Lady, Be Good!
- I Can't Get Started
- After You've Gone
- Stompin' At The Savoy
- Idaho
- Crazy Rhythm
Music CD 4- The Man I Love
- Sweet Georgia Brown
- Blues De Lux
- Encore Announcement By Norman Granz
- Honky Tonk Blues
- Announcement By Norman Granz
- JATP Blues
- I Got Rhythm
- I Surrender, Dear
- I've Found A New Baby
Music CD 5- Bugle Call Rag
- Philharmonic Blues
- Oh, Lady, Be Good
- I Can't Get Started
- Sweet Georgia Brown
- The Man I Love
- Slow Drag
- The Man I Love
- Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good To You?
- All Of Me
- Billie's Blues
- Intermission Commentary
Music CD 6- Opening Announcement By Radio Hosts
- Tea for Two
- Intermission Announcement By Radio Hosts
- It's The Talk Of The Town
- Norman Granz Announcement, My Honey's Lovin' Arms
- Boogie Woogie Cocktail
- Norman Granz Announcement, D.B. Blues
- Saxobebop
- Lester Blows Again
- I Cried For You
- Fine And Mellow
- He's Funny That Way
- Blues
- Blues (Pres)
- Just You, Just Me
- I Got Rhythm
- My Blue Heaven
- Play, Fiddle, Play
- Flying Home
- Trav'lin' Light
- He's Funny That Way
- How High The Moon?
Music CD 7- Bell Boy Blues
- Boogie Woogie Cocktail
- Sweet Lorraine
- Blues
- Norman Granz Announcement Of Billy Holiday And Intermission
- You'd Better Go Now
- You're Driving Me Crazy
- There Is No Greater Love
- I Cover The Waterfront
- Norman Granz Announcement
- Perdido
- Mordido
Music CD 8- I Surrender, Dear
- Endido
- Norman Granz Introduction
- The Opener
- Lester Leeps In
- Embraceable You
- The Closer
- Norman Granz Introduction Of Ella Fitzgerald
- Robbins' Nest
- A New Shade Of Blues
Music CD 9- Old Mother Hubbard
- I'm Just A Lucky So-And-So
- Somebody Loves Me
- Basin Street Blues
- Ow!
- Norman Granz Announcement
- Flying Home
- Norman Granz Introduction Of Oscar Peterson
- Fine And Dandy
- I Only Have Eyes For You
- Norman Granz Announcement
- Carnegie Blues
- Norman Granz Introduction Of Coleman Hawkins
- Body And Soul
- Rifftide
- The Big Head
- Stuffy
- Applause And Chatter
- Sophisticated Lady
- Norman Granz Introduction Of The Rhythm Section
- Ol' Man River
- Air Mail Special
- Norman Granz Introduction Of Ella Fitzgerald
- Oh, Lady, Be Good
- Black Coffee
Music CD 10- A-Tisket, A-Tasket
- Norman Granz Announcement
- How High The Moon?
- Norman Granz Announcement
- Perdido
- Norman Granz Announcement
- Announcements
- Stompin' At The Savoy
- Body And Soul
- Dark Eyes
- Characteristically B.H.
- Summertime
- Sid Flips His Lid
- Medley: Lover, Come Back Too Me/(I Don't Stand) A Ghost Of A Chance (With You)/Just You, Just Me
- Untitled
- Untitled
Free Music Notes for The Complete Jazz At The Philharmonic On Verve: 1944-1949Free Music Review: Comprehensive, and a good representation of 1940's Jazz Hit: 5 StarsI have to thank my father for introducing me to Jazz when I was 5 or 6 years. He got my interest by playing some of the recordings that are contained in this CD box set. Included are the classic volumes that were originally released on labels such as Norgran and Clef. Also included are unreleased concerts, and although the recording quality sometimes suffers, those concerts are still quite enjoyable. From the very beginning, Norman Granz always hired the brightest of Jazz stars for his concerts. Some reviewers in past years have complained that, by mixing swing musicians and boppers, sometimes the chemistry suffers. But when one listens, for example, to the 1949 Carnegie Hall concert, even when trombonist Tommy Turk is followed by Charlie "Bird" Parker, or when bebop trumpeter Howard McGhee is sandwiched between the cooking (as illustrated by a stove on an original David Stone Martin album cover included in the box) tenor saxes of Flip Phillips and Illinois Jacquet at the 1947 Carnegie Hall session, nothing seems out of place. In fact, the riffing brings the temperature up a few more degrees. Speaking of the 1947 Carnegie Hall set, we heard "Perdido" and "Mordido" on the VSP (Verve Special Products) cutout label in the middle 1960's. Another album in the VSP series had "I Can't Get Started" along with the 1947 versions of "How High the Moon" and "Bellboy Blues". Since we only had a few of the VSP albums, I didn't even know about "Endido" until I had a conversation with another collector in the middle 70's. I had to wait until the release of this box set to finally hear Endido, over 20 years later. I'm certain my experience is not unique, so the release of this box set will help others who have been searching for their favorite JATP set. Included in the box is a book with photos, lists of concert dates, and notes about these recordings. At first, I thought this box set was a bit pricey (for 10 CDs), but afterwards I realized the box set is well worth the almost-$200 list price. For those who are more casual fans of Norman Granz' JATP, one might purchase instead the "Best of" CD "sampler" which contains selections from the box, including favorites such as the 1947 "Perdido", 1946 "Philharmonic Blues", the 1946 "Oh, Lady Be Good" with the classic Bird solo, and Ella Fitgerald and the JATP All-Stars on the 1949 "Flying Home", along with other selections. Some of the concerts (such as the 1944 sets with Nat King Cole, Les Paul, J. J. Johnson and Illinois Jacquet) are available for purchase separately. And, like the back cover of the classic albums declared, "produced under the personnel supervision of Norman Granz", so you know you won't be disappointed!
The Complete Jazz At The Philharmonic On Verve: 1944-1949 PosterEver wonder what a 1940s-era jam session sounded like? Well, not much gets closer to the real thing than the music on these 10 CDs. Norman Granz, founder of the Norgran and Clef labels before launching Verve in the mid-1950s, brought together dozens of musicians for the popular Jazz at the Philharmonic series, taking the ad hoc bands to delighted crowds. The bands cook, taking on scores of well-known tunes and using them as the basis for loose-limbed improvisations that play off the crowd's energy--often audible after solos. With a frequent audio v?rit? feel to the proceedings, this set moves through all-star sessions galore. The opening session features J.J. Johnson, Illinois Jacquet, Les Paul, and Nat "King" Cole, and one of the later sessions plays Charlie Parker off Lester Young, Flip Phillips, and Roy Eldridge in heated (though always fun) exchanges. Not surprisingly, great moments crop up amid some faltering jams, places where saxophonists stumble through phrases in high spirits to find a vocalist or another soloist already cutting in on the developments. Billie Holiday does a fine turn on "Fine and Mellow" with a supertrio of tenor saxes, including Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, and Illinois Jacquet. A running thread throughout the 12-plus hours of music is the crosshatching of bebop and swing, which here work together in excited displays of expertise and imagination. The musical detail on this issue is especially welcome, given the recording ban that complicated the documentation of the bebop revolution in its earliest days. Oh, and nearly all this music is on CD for the first time, and for that reason (and others), the set is a full-on winner. --Andrew Bartlett
|
 |