Archive for March, 2005
stanley turrentine ( 1966 )

A legend of the tenor saxophone, Stanley Turrentine was renowned for his distinctively thick, rippling tone, an earthy grounding in the blues, and his ability to work a groove with soul and imagination. Turrentine recorded in a wide variety of settings, but was best-known for his Blue Note soul-jazz jams of the ’60s, and also underwent a popular fusion makeover in the early ’70s.
jay and kay

Trombonist James Lewis “J.J.” Johnson, one of the luminaries of bebop in the ’40s and ’50s, brought an extraordinary fluency of expression to his polished playing. He almost single-handedly obliterated the idea that the trombone belonged only to the old swing and New Orleans jazz styles, and he dispelled the notion that his instrument was less spry and articulate than the saxophone. Johnson’s Blue Note album The Eminent Jay Jay Johnson, Vol. 1, from 1953 with young trumpeter Clifford Brown and other notables, is widely regarded as a milestone in modern jazz.
Bron: homepage.ntlworld.com




