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Horace Silver And Jazz Messengers, The - Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers FLAC

Horace Silver And Jazz Messengers, The - Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers FLAC
Performer:
Horace Silver And Jazz Messengers, The
Album:
Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers
Style:
Hard Bop
Country:
Japan
Label:
Blue Note
Catalog:
BLP 1518
FLAC size:
1998 mb
MP3 size:
2243 mb
WMA size:
2377 mb


Tracklist


1Doodlin'
Written-By – Silver
2The Preacher
Written-By – Silver
3Creepin' In
Written-By – Silver
4Stop Time
Written-By – Silver
5Hippy
Written-By – Horace Silver
6Room 608
Written-By – Horace Silver
7Hankerin'
Written-By – Hank Mobley
8To Whom It May Concern
Written-By – Silver


Credits


  • BassDoug Watkins
  • Design [Cover]Reid K. Miles
  • DrumsArt Blakey
  • Liner NotesIra Gitler
  • Photography ByFrancis Wolff
  • PianoHorace Silver
  • ProducerAlfred Lion
  • Recorded ByRudy Van Gelder
  • Tenor SaxophoneHank Mobley
  • TrumpetKenny Dorham


Notes


Recorded on November 13, 1954 & February 6, 1955.


Companies


  • Recorded At – Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey


Album


Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers is a 1956 repackage of 1954 and 1955 releases by jazz pianist Horace Silver with drummer Art Blakey as well as Hank Mobley on saxophone, Kenny Dorham on trumpet, and Doug Watkins on bass. By the time of this repackage, this quintet had named themselves the Jazz Messengers, and the band name on the re-release reflected that. These recordings helped establish the hard bop style. Originally released as an LP. Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers - Horace Silver. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. In 1954, pianist Horace Silver teamed with drummer Art Blakey to form a cooperative ensemble that would combine the dexterity and power of bebop with the midtempo, down-home grooves of blues and gospel music. The results are what would become known as hard bop, and the Jazz Messengers were one of the leading exponents of this significant era in jazz history. Before Silver's departure and Blakey's lifetime of leadership, this first major session by the original Jazz Messengers set the standard by which future incarnations of the group would be measured. The tunes here are all Silver&a. But it was the first Messengers pianist, Horace Silver, who debuted the group under his own name in 1954, issuing two 10-inch records called Horace Silver Quintet before this 1956 set brought all the music together on one 12-inch LP. Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers stands as the immortal units very first foray, consisting entirely of Silver originals save for the modern uptempo bop vehicle Hankerin, by the bands tenor saxophonist, Hank Mobley. Listen free to Horace Silver Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers Room 608, Creepin' In and more. 8 tracks 43:24. Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers is a 1956 album by jazz pianist Horace Silver with drummer Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers. It was recorded November 13, 1954 1-3, 8 and February 6, 1955 4-7 and released by Blue Note in October 1956. Songs in album Horace Silver - And The Jazz Messengers 1955. Horace Silver - Room 608. Horace Silver - Creepin' In. Horace Silver - Stop Time. Horace Silver - To Whom It May Concern. Horace Silver - Hippy. Horace Silver - The Preacher. Horace Silver - Hankerin'. Horace Silver - Doodlin'. Total votes: 1. Other albums by Horace Silver. Horace Silver. The Best Of Horace Silver. Complete your Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers collection. Vendi questa versione. WU 4018, BST-81518. Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers. Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers - Horace Silver And The Jazz Messengers LP, Album, Comp. World Record Club, Blue Note. Released 1955. Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers Tracklist. The preacher Lyrics. About Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers. Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers Q&A. More Horace Silver albums. Its Got to Be Funky. but one thing that is beyond dispute is reputation, calibre, talent and style that The Jazz Messengers name would come to mean under the direction of Art Blakey who of course is here pounding skins with his current bass player of the time Doug Watkins. Album: Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers Year: 1955 Label: Blue Note Horace Silver - piano Kenny Dorham - trumpet Hank Mobley - tenor saxophone Doug