Keep Swingin'

Rate It! Avg: 3.5 (6 ratings)
Keep Swingin' album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 36:00

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A real performer

rene.leemans

This debut album of Priester is edged with shadows, it's basically a straight-ahead blowing set, short, well-crafted tunes with nicely defined shapes. The three on which Heath sits out give the leader a little more space. The closing 'Julian's Tune' is perhaps the clearest indication of Priester as a real performer. Highly recommended.

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Great lineup.

Radness

Sam Jones, Elvin Jones, Tommy Flanagan, this album has a really great lineup. I'm rather new when it comes to jazz trombonists, but Julian Priester is sounds good. His solos are interesting, and his playing is really lyrical.

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They Say All Music Guide

Trombonist Julian Priester sounds very much under the influence of J.J. Johnson during his debut as a leader, a Riverside date reissued on CD in the Original Jazz Classics series. The repertoire is comprised of four Priester originals, one apiece by Jimmy Heath (whose tenor makes the group a quintet on five of the eight songs) and baritonist Charles Davis, and two standards. Priester is heard in his early prime on a warm version of “Once in a While” and plays solid hard bop with pianist Tommy Flanagan, bassist Sam Jones, drummer Elvin Jones, and sometimes Heath on this swinging, modern, mainstream session. – Scott Yanow