16 resultat (0,15953 sekunder)

Märke

Butik

Pris (EUR)

Nollställ filter

Produkter
Från
Butiker

Count Basie: The Jubilee Shows No. 55/200

Don Byas: Featuring Sir Charles Thompson

The Golden Years Of Revival Jazz Volume 2

Bent Jædig: From Jædig's Galaxy

Hey Everybody It's Louis Jordan and His Tympany Five

The Golden Years Of Revival Jazz Volume 1

The Golden Years Of Revival Jazz Volume 4

Hank Jones: With Mads Vinding And Al Foster

Rolf Billberg: Rare Danish Recordings

June Christy And The Johnny Guarnieri Quintet 1949

The Golden Years Of Revival Jazz Volume 5: Papa Bue

Karsten Vogel/Per Aage Brandt: Cry!

Karsten Vogel/Per Aage Brandt: Cry!

Released in the year of the 50th anniversary of Per Aage Brandt and Karsten Vogel ’s joint record debut in 1966, ten freshly recorded pieces of music are issued on Storyville Records. The pieces featured on Cry! represent Danish avant-garde jazz in its original form. In the late 1950s and early 1960s, Per Aage Brandt and Karsten Vogel were high profile musicians in the avant-garde jazz environment that had found a growth centre in Copenhagen, a movement which likes were only found and practiced in New York at the time. In 1963, they won the “Danish Jazz Championships” and in the years hereafter they were often heard on both the TV and the radio. In the second half of the 1960s Karsten Vogel dedicated himself to his work with Burnin’ Red Ivanhoe (which in many ways took off from the musical experiences earned in avant-garde jazz) and later the band Secret Oyster. Per Aage Brandt slowly became absorbed in poetry and philosophy of language – areas in which he has made a name for himself in many parts of the world and where he has earned professorships in California and Ohio among other places. For lack of time the collaboration between the two pioneers unfortunately could not continue. Short after the millennium it was nevertheless resumed, and together they have played concerts in both Villeneuve sur Yonne near Paris, where Per Aage Brandt now lives, and in Copenhagen. On Karsten Vogel ’s initiative, they took op playing again in October 2015 along with Danish drummer Klaus Menzer and the France-based Italian bassist Flavio Perrella. The outcome is 50 minutes of ecstatic jazz, beautiful passages and lots of original Piano, convincing Saxophone and an iconic style frame.

SEK 188.00
1

Duke Ellington: The Duke Box 2

Duke Ellington: The Duke Box 2

The Duke Box 2 picks up the story of the great Duke Ellington band in the early 1950s and spans the next twenty years or so of a remarkable output. This collection is to some extent shaped by the advent of the LP and the longer tracks it enabled and encouraged. That technological shift came in a period when Ellington would lose the three of his stellar sidemen: Johnny Hodges, Lawrence Brown and Sonny Greer. As it turned out, their replacements (Willie Smith, Britt Woodman and Louie Bellson) and other new blood only served to re-energise the band as it approached the 25th anniversary of its initial engagement at The Cotton Club. The box set includes a high-quality 27-page booklet including a large selection of never before seen photos of The Duke and his band members in their prime time. Spanning the years in which Ellington regularly toured Europe and Scandinavia, The Duke Box 2 offers a rich selection of performances illustrating a tirelessly inventive musical spirit on tour with changing personnel and occasional guest artists. CD3 features never before released live recordings from a 1963 concert in Gröna Lund, Stockholm—a veritable treasure for the committed Ellington fan. The box also includes the well-renowned Jaywalker (CD5) and Piano Player (CD4) albums whose music always deserves a re-visiting. Among other gems are late 1970s recordings from New York, some of the last music Ellington ever put out. The bonus DVD combines a series of short films of the Ellington band in action and despite the sound being recorded first and the performances showing the band miming, this curiosum offers a fascinating glimpse of The Duke in action, and the audio is of course technically excellent. The achievement of Duke Ellington exists on a variety of levels. The closer you examine it, the more complex and multi-faceted it appears to be. The first great composer of jazz, the most popular African-American bandleader, the influential pianist, who made light of his piano contribution, the magician who assisted the musical formation of several key individual contributors but who nevertheless retained the identity of his band over a 50-year period. As a portrait of a sublime and inexhaustible musician thriving in the second half of a long and distinguished career, The Duke Box 2 is surely a must-have collection for all true admirers of the inimitable Duke Ellington !

SEK 575.00
1

Duke Ellington: The Treasury Shows - Vol. 25

Duke Ellington: The Treasury Shows - Vol. 25

Storyville Records presents: Volume 25 in the Duke Ellington Treasury Shows series, the final volume of this collectors’ special broadcast series. In April 1945, to promote the sale of war bonds, the US Treasury Department contacted Duke Ellington to do a series of 55 min public broadcasts. These sessions would give Ellington a wide choice of material to perform including his older work; new instrumentals and pop tunes and his extended works as well. And now it is 2018, and we have made the home run: This volume is the final one of this series of 50 CDs altogether, with all the known Treasury shows from 1945 to 1953, and new, hitherto mostly unreleased bonus broadcast material from the 1940s.   In his liner notes to vol. 1 (in 2000), Bob Bamberger quoted the late Klaus Stratemann who in ”Day By Day and Film By Film” wrote that the release of these unedited Treasury broadcasts represented ”the most dedicated effort ever to preserve for posterity a musician’s achievements of a specific era and make them available…Its documentary value is inestimable… it provides a vivid portait of the band and it’s leader…” And Bob Bamberger commented: ”It is no exaggeration. And just think. This is only the beginning.” This final double CD contains a series of different radio NBC broadcasts from the famous Blue Note club in Chicago, Illinois and The Hurricane Club in New York from the summer of 1953. The CD set also incudes bonus recordings from The Hurricane Restaurant from the spring of 1943 and 1944. The broadcasts are featured complete with radio speaks and encouragements to buy bonds read by The Duke himself, plus bonus material and liner notes.   The Second World War had ended, and the “swing era” was also coming to a halt, as musical tastes had changed. Many big bands disbanded, and in 1953, Ellington was the only big band leader still playing, but the emergence of jazz clubs like Blue Note, Birdland and Storyville helped him find engagements and play for a more listening than dancing audience. Furthermore, the clubs were well-connected with radio stations and networks, allowing for the Treasury Show tapes to come to life. The departure in 1951 of some of the long time members of the band, notably Johnny Hodges and Lawrence Brown did not in any way mean the decline of the Ellington band, that some feared. On the contrary Ellington took advantage of the new situation by hiring great musicians of a younger generation, like Clark Terry on trumpet and Britt Woodman on trombone, building a new band, and a renewed repertoire.   CD 1 begins with the last known Treasury broadcast. It is from The Blue Note in Chicago, recorded in June 1953, and broadcast on August 1st 1953, as part of the series ”All Star Parade of Bands”, launched by NBC to promote bonds sales. From April 1st, 1943 Duke Ellington had an engagement in New York’s Hurricane Club at 49th and Broadway, originally meant to last 6 weeks. But it wound up to last no less than 6 months, with 6 weekly radio broadcasts. Some of these feature as bonus material on this volume. They were broadcasts on Sunday nights at 7 p.m. and called the Pastel Period, and featured the band playing slower numbers, mood pieces, ballads etc. for listening more than for dancing. 6 months later, Duke Ellington was at the club again, t

SEK 210.00
1