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Keep On Keepin' On

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (1 ratings)
Keep On Keepin' On album cover
01
Light My Fire
3:34
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02
Keep On Keepin' On
4:17
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03
Impressions Of Strayhorn
3:24
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04
Pontieo
3:44
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05
I Say A Little Prayer
Artist: Woody Herman & His Thundering Herd
3:32
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06
Hush
4:15
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07
My Cherie Amour
Artist: Woody Herman & His Thundering Herd
2:45
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08
Catch That Bird
2:51
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09
I Can't Get Next To You
Artist: Woody Herman & His Thundering Herd
2:54
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10
Aquarius
4:29
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11
Blues In The Night
13:41
12
A Time For Love
6:48
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13
Smiling Phases
5:24
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14
The Indigenous Artifact
6:24
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Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 68:02

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Good and Groovy Woody

chucketal

Woody kept up in the late '60s and '70s, ala Buddy Rich and Maynard Ferguson. The tracks arranged by Richard Evans, mostly pop tunes, have a great, spacious feel with a touch of reverb on the recording. The charts are slightly dated but imaginative, especially considering some of the source materials. This is very enjoyable, grooving stuff for the most part.

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They Say All Music Guide

After the period of the Young Thundering Herd (documented by Philips and Columbia) and prior to his projects for Fantasy, Woody Herman recorded three generally commercial albums for Cadet. Herman always believed in having his band stay updated and modern, and he supported his younger musicians in their quest to perform new and current music. His output for Cadet, however, was quite streaky, ranging from worthwhile new originals to covers of pop and rock tunes that sometimes sounded a bit awkward. This single CD from 1998 has six of the ten selections originally on Light My Fire, four of the ten tunes from Heavy Exposure, and three of the six numbers (plus a previously unreleased “The Indigenous Artifact”) from 1970′s Woody. Completists will want to search for the three earlier LPs but should be warned that they are quite erratic and often dated. Even in this best-of collection, there are some throwaways (such as “My Cherie Amour” and “Aquarius”), but the better selections (“Keep On Keepin’ On” which has some heated Sal Nistico tenor; “Impressions of Strayhorn,” and Alan Broadbent’s massive everything-but-the-kitchen-sink reworking of “Blues in the Night”) make the set overall better than expected. – Scott Yanow

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