Nocturnes & Serenades

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ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 55:23

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Timeless

DJwaters

This has been such a great collection of sax music. Scott Hamilton was one of those rare finds I came across on chance. And now I can't get enough of him. Whenever there is a party or gathering at my home, I always have him playing. Everyone always wants to know who it is so they can buy the cd when they leave. Can't recommend his music enough to all.

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amazing

lavieenrose

It's just too good to be true! But it is true and leaves you with amazement, because the sound of this sax carries you away into such a special mood and world, leaving you speechless with an overwhelming emotional impact. Hear it, feel it, enjoy it.

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They Say All Media Guide

The black-and-white cover photo of a neon-lit street harks back to an earlier era on Scott Hamilton’s Nocturnes & Serenades. Depending on the viewer, it may conjure up images of the jazz clubs lining the street in 1940s New York, or perhaps classic film noir. Either way, the photo and title promise the kind of lazy, romantic jazz that pours from tiny, smoke-filled rooms at three a.m. to an audience of three. This isn’t surprising, due to tenor Hamilton’s rep as a committed neo-traditionalist. The 55-minute set kicks off with a fine, relaxed take on “Man with a Horn,” with Hamilton’s resonant, silky sax work outlining the contours of the piece. Hamilton is joined on Nocturnes & Serenades by pianist John Pearce, bassist Dave Green, and drummer Steve Brown. Pearce and Hamilton’s gentle styles mingle well on “Man with a Horn” and on the follow-up, “Autumn Nocturne,” while Green and Brown anchor the mellow pacing. With perhaps one exception (“By the River Sainte Marie”), Hamilton and his bandmates maintain a dreamy, late-night groove. Save for the recording technology, this could’ve been recorded in the ’40s, and mainstream jazz fans, well aware of Hamilton’s work, will appreciate Nocturnes & Serenades’ connection with the past. – Ronnie D. Lankford, Jr.

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