|

Click here to expand and collapse the player

Jazz At Massey Hall (Bonus Track Version)

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (5 ratings)
Jazz At Massey Hall (Bonus Track Version) album cover
01
Wee (AKA Allen's Alley)
6:48 $0.99
02
Hot House
9:11 $0.99
03
A Night in Tunisia
8:12 $0.99
04
Drum Conversation
4:41 $0.99
05
I've Got You Under My Skin
3:01 $0.99
06
Embraceable You
4:24 $0.99
07
Sure Thing
2:12 $0.99
08
Cherokee
4:54 $0.99
09
Hallelujah
3:59 $0.99
10
Lullaby of Birdland
2:32 $0.99
11
Perdido
8:17 $0.99
12
Salt Peanuts
7:38 $0.99
13
All the Things You Are
7:14 $0.99
14
52nd Street Theme
0:39 $0.99
15
Bass-Ically Speaking (Bonus Track)
3:54 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 15   Total Length: 77:36

Find a problem with a track? Let us know.

Write a Review 0 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Don Cherry: Pied Piper with a Pocket Trumpet

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

Don Cherry began to make his mark with his first recording session, on February 10, 1958, as foil for freebopping alto saxophonist Ornette Coleman on music recorded for Something Else! Their bebop forebears Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker favored rough-sounding unison melodies, a departure from the swing era's smooth blends, but the Coleman-Cherry mix was scrappier still. As soloist, Don took cues from how Ornette's solos didn't track a tune's harmonies too closely. They didn't… more »

0

Remembering: Von Freeman’s Swing, Bebop, Avant-Garde Thing

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

[Editor's Note: On August 11, jazz saxophonist Von Freeman passed away at 88 years of age. In 2010, Kevin Whitehead wrote a piece about Freeman, which we're featuring here to celebrate his tremendous legacy.] In Chicago, they all but carry him around in a sedan chair: Von Freeman, the tenor saxophonist who's educated umpteen young musicians on the bandstand. In 2002, the city named a stretch of E. 75th Street after him, down by the New… more »

0

Sheila Jordan’s Place in the Sunshine

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

Our story starts in Pennsylvania coal country, 1962. Jazz singer Sheila Jordan had taken her new friend George Russell to visit the hardscrabble hills where she'd spent her early years. At a local beer garden, Jordan performed an impromptu "You Are My Sunshine" with her grandmother on piano. Russell was an ultramodern composer, and the old song as corny as breakfast flakes - but Sheila's version got to him. Back in New York, he arranged… more »

0

Moby Let’s Go

By Robert Phoenix, eMusic Contributor

While Virgo is often considered to be the one sign driven by an almost insane desire for perfection and purity, a fair number of the artists that fall under its arc - from August 23rd to September 22nd - can hardly be called Puritanical. A quick check finds Charlie Parker, the archetypal bebop mainliner, shooting junk while deconstructing the songbook of his day in blistering triple-times. Then there's Gene Simmons. While Simmons has eschewed alcohol… more »

2

The Rise and Fall of Lucky Thompson

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

A few years ago, Italian saxophonist Daniele D'Agaro was visiting Chicago, and a critic friend put on a fairly obscure record to stump him. D'Agaro listened for about three seconds, said: "Lucky." Good ears. He knows the distinctive sound of Lucky Thompson after he started hanging out in Paris and playing sumptuous tenor saxophone ballads recalling old idol Don Byas's Parisian sides. On "Solitude" and "We'll Be Together Again," from Lucky in Paris 1959, his tenor's… more »

1

An Introduction to the Yardbirds

By Lenny Kaye, eMusic Contributor

There were many British bands that swiveled rock's glorious adolescence, but for my nascent psychedelia and guitar drool, the Yardbirds have long held the most resonance. The wonder of first hearing the extended rave-up of "I'm A Man;" the Gregorian chants of "Still I'm Sad;" the eastern swami of "Over Under Sideways Down;" the clarion clang of the harpsichord in "For Your Love" forever changed for me how I would hear rock music. I sometimes think… more »