New Gold!

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Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 62:25

eMusic Features

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Shorty Rogers and the Migration of the Cool

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

Some good music never goes out of style: Jazz fans everywhere revere the cooking hard bop of the 1950s. So why is the other big '50s trend, cool jazz, barely on modern radar? If you want to know how fresh and airy it still sounds, hear trumpeter/composer/arranger/cool exemplar Shorty Rogers on "Popo," "Didi," "Four Mothers" and "Sam and the Lady" from his first 1951 octet session: tightly arranged, swinging jazz with breezy orchestral colors, and… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Bud Shank assembled a pianoless sextet made up of West Coast musicians for this 1993 studio date, including a front line consisting of the alto saxophonist and leader with trumpeter Conte Candoli, tenor and soprano saxophonist Bill Perkins, baritone saxophonist Jack Nimitz, and a rhythm section that includes bassist and composer John Clayton and drummer Sherman Ferguson. The playing is crisp, the ensembles are a joy to hear, and the solos are consistently adventurous. “Port Townsend” is a lively post-bop vehicle that opens the session, featuring a strong solo by Candoli. The leader contributed the somewhat exotic “Perkolator” (a feature for Perkins’ soprano sax) and the pretty ballad “Linda.” But it is Clayton’s charts that threaten to steal the show, including the strutting “Alternate Root,” the bittersweet “Let Me Tell You Why,” which has some almost mournful solos by Shank, and the funky blues “Funcused Blues.” There are also impressive performances of jazz standards by Thelonious Monk and Benny Golson. Unfortunately, this CD was deleted with the demise of the initial revival of the Candid label. – Ken Dryden

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