A recovery from the Crypt but with a different review and in FLAC.
Tubby Hayes - Return Visit! 1962
Fontana, 1962
1. Afternoon In Paris 5:46
2. I See My Third "I" 9:27
3. Lady "E" 3:15
4. Stitt's Tune 9:51
5. Medley: If I Had You; Alone Together; For Heaven's Sake 7:24
Tubby Hayes tenor sax, vibes; Roland Kirk tenor sax, manzello, flute, nose flute, stritch; Jimmy Gloomy tenor sax, flute; Walter Bishop Jr. piano; Sam Jones bass; Louis Hayes drums
"A Saturday morning in June 1962 and Tubby Hayes arrives at the recording studio on West 48th Street in New York City. A session has been slated for later that day with a pick-up group. None of the group has been aware of the date until the night before. One by one they wander in. All have been playing spots in various clubs until the early hours. Introductions are made. One member wonders who Tubby Hayes is, asks if he's a rock `n' roll singer. This is Jimmy Gloomy, not his real name, as he probably shouldn't be there at all - contractual reasons. Memories of Louis Armstrong: "It wasn't me, sir. I won't do it again".
Midday
arrives and producer Quincy Jones suggests maybe they get started. But
what to play? They don't have a play list, have never rehearsed. Apart
from pianist Walter Bishop Jnr, Tubbs has never met any of them. Quincy
suggests they warm up with a blues, and they choose `Stitt's Tune`, the
theme of Tubb's old band The Jazz Couriers - Tubbs and Gloomy on tenor
sax, Roland Kirk providing counter melody on manzello and stritch, his
customary hybrid horns. Next it's a minor blues - a Kirk original `I See
With My Third "I"', then a ballad medley, including `Alone Together',
one of Tubbs' favourites. Next Tubbs switches to vibes for `Afternoon In
Paris', with solos from Kirk and Gloomy on tenors and Bishop on piano,
and an unrehearsed coda from one-man brass section Kirk on tenor,
manzello and stritch. They round off the session with another Kirk
original `Lady "E"', with Tubbs still on vibes and Kirk on flute. And
then they're through. Just time for bassist and drummer Sam Jones and
Louis Hayes to get to Birdland and Kirk to the Five Spot for their first
sets, and for Tubbs to return to the UK. In the space of just a few
short hours they've recorded an exciting and memorable jazz album.
That's how it was and them were the days."
By David Baxter.
By David Baxter.
http://www.embedupload.com/?d=8OREFUMXBY
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wonderful to get this in flac! thanks a bunch
ReplyDeleteJust great! thanks kc
ReplyDeleteAppreciate the upgrade...thanks KC
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ReplyDeleteThanks KC for the FLAC of this great album
ReplyDeleteThanks KC for the FLAC of this great album
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot. I haven't heard this before. :)
ReplyDeleteThanks!
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