вторник, 26 августа 2008 г.

Jimmy Smith & Wes Montgomery - Further Adventures Of Jimmy & Wes (1966)

Artist: Jimmy Smith и Wes Montgomery
Album: The Further Adventures Of Jimmy & Wes
Recording Date: Sep 21, 1966-Sep 28, 1966
Label: Verve
Genre: Jazz
Style: Soul-Jazz, Hard Bop
Format/Bitrate: MP3/320
Time: 31:35
Size: 97 MB

Track list:
1. King Of The Road (Miller) 4:13
2. Maybe September (Evans, Faith, Livingston) 6:24
3. OGD (AKA Road Song) (Montgomery) 6:08
4. Call Me (Hatch) 3:13
5. Milestones (Davis) 4:12
6. Mellow Mood (Smith) 8:44
7. 'Round Midnight (Hanighen, Monk, Williams) 7:18

Personel:
Bob Ashton Flute, Sax (Tenor), Woodwind
Danny Bank Flute, Clarinet (Bass), Sax (Baritone), Woodwind
Ray Barretto Percussion
Jimmy Cleveland Trombone
Richard Davis Bass
Dick Hixson Trombone
Quentin Jackson Trombone
Melba Liston Trombone
Jimmy Maxwell Trumpet
Wes Montgomery Guitar, Performer
Aric Lach Morrison Producer, Production Assistant, Assistant Producer
Oliver Nelson Arranger, Conductor
Joe Newman Trumpet
Jerome Richardson Clarinet, Flute, Woodwind
Ernie Royal Trumpet
Gene Santoro Liner Notes
Jon Schapiro Producer, Production Assistant, Assistant Producer
Jimmy Smith Organ, Organ (Hammond), Performer
Tony Studd Trombone (Bass)
Grady Tate Drums
Creed Taylor Producer
Clark Terry Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Shawn Wilson-Bunyan Design, Design Coordinator
Phil Woods Clarinet, Sax (Alto), Woodwind

Продолжение текста / More text
Further Adventures of Jimmy and Wes picks up where Dynamic Duo left off, digging a little further into the one-time-only Wes Montgomery/Jimmy Smith sessions and coming up with more fine music -- mellower in general than Dynamic Duo but first-class nonetheless. Unlike most of the studio sessions from this time, Montgomery gets plenty of room for his single-string work as well as his famous octaves, and both techniques find him in full, mature bloom, needing fewer notes in which to say more (Smith, of course, is precisely the opposite). All but one of the tracks on the original LP find Smith and Montgomery interacting only with themselves, the drums of Grady Tate, and the congas of Ray Barretto; Roger Miller's "King of the Road" (not often covered by jazzers) and Montgomery's "O.G.D." (later known as "Road Song") come off best. Oliver Nelson's big band makes a sole appearance with a swaggering chart of "Milestones." Though Dynamic Duo is probably the priority purchase by a hairsbreadth margin, you'll need to have both that album and Further Adventures eventually.
Richard S. Ginell, AMG

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