Boss Tenors: Straight Ahead From Chicago 1961

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Boss Tenors: Straight Ahead From Chicago 1961 album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 38:52

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Sweet harmonies from sax masters

mr. mark

Short but sweet release by these soulful modernists, on one of their three joint releases.("All-Star Sessions" combines two long cuts with Art Farmer from 1955, with some tunes from 78's cut in '51. The follow-up to this disc is "Boss Tenors In Orbit". All three are on e-music, and all are recommended. A blowing session, sure, but mellower and more melodic than most be-bop. The stars do have an affinity for each other, on both standards and their own comps. This and "In Orbit" will fit on one CD, with room to spare.

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They Say All Music Guide

Tenor saxophonists Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt co-led a small group in 1950, and this follow-up, taped in the studio in 1961, finds the two picking up where they left off. The highlight of the date is the jointly written “Blues up and Down,” a classic jam which has since inspired a number of other tenor match ups to record it, especially Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis and Johnny Griffin. Ammons’ repetitious one-note melody within “The One Before This,” like Duke Ellington’s deceptively simple two-note theme “C Jam Blues,” leads to some inspired improvising by both men. Stitt switches to alto sax for a loping take of “There Is No Greater Love,” during which Ammons’ tenor provides the perfect foil. The rhythm section includes bassist Buster Williams, along with the somewhat obscure pianist John Houston and drummer George Brown. This rewarding date has become hard to find since this 1992 CD reissue lapsed from print. – Ken Dryden

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