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Bob Brookmeyer - 7 X Wilder (1961) [Jazz][Flac][schon55]

Size:181.14 MbSeeders:12
last updated: Apr 17, 2010
Category:AudioFLACLeechers:8
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Bob Brookmeyer - 7 X Wilder (1961) [Jazz][Flac][schon55]
Scans
Brookmeyer-wilder-back.jpg1.08 Mb
Brookmeyer-wilder-front.jpg628 Kb
tracked_by_h33t_com.txt23 Bytes
01 - While We're Young.flac33.38 Mb
02 - That's The Way It Goes.flac27.19 Mb
03 - The Wrong Blues.flac22.09 Mb
04 - It's So Peaceful In The Country.flac19.69 Mb
05 - Blues For Alec.flac30.60 Mb
06 - I'll Be Around.flac24.14 Mb
07 - Who Can I Turn To.flac22.34 Mb
1961 7 x Wilder f info.txt2 Kb
h33t - Torrents by [schon55].url263 Bytes

Description

Bob Brookmeyer - 7 x Wilder 
Recorded in NYC, June 29, 1961
Vinyl Rip - Mono
Label: Verve Records
Quality: flac

"Although he never really received much of the recognition due to him at the time, valve trombonist Bob Brookmeyer developed a distinctive catalog in the late ‘50s and early ‘60s that asserted the lighter strains of West Coast ‘cool’, but below the surface burned with a hale and hearty flame that owed just as much to the bebop language. What has hampered Brookmeyer these days from getting any kind of residual acclaim is the fact that so many of his early masterpieces are simply unavailable. His spate of activity for Verve Records alone includes the mainstream brilliance of The Blues, Hot and Cold and the wistfully melodic strains of Trombone Jazz Samba. In addition, one would have to add the United Artists release Kansas City Revisited to the list of quintessential Brookmeyer sides yet to see the light of day on CD.

Working in a quartet setting, Brookmeyer matches personalities flawlessly with guitarist Jim Hall, bassist Bill Crow, and drummer Mel Lewis, while paying homage to iconoclast composer Alec Wilder. One of the best and most memorable tunes from the Wilder cannon is “While We’re Young,” treated here as a waltz and finding Brookmeyer playing piano with a minimalist approach. The other line which might be familiar is “It’s So Peaceful In the Country,” rendered ever so delicately this time with our leading man on trombone. Not lost on today’s astute musicians, this melodic jewel can also be heard in a more recent version by pianist Bill Charlap.

Brookmeyer would pen “Blues For Alec” and it serves as one of the lengthier cuts, Hall and the trombonist stretching out in a bluesy vein that brings out the best solos of the set. It’s also here that you really notice the way this ensemble breathes as one, Lewis and Crow never intruding on the generally restrained mood, but not failing either to support the soloists firmly. A sublime gem that deserves a reissue, along with the rest of his Verve sides, 7 x Wilder is Brookmeyer at his finest with an obscure performance from Jim Hall to boot." ~ all about jazz.com

Personnel:
Bob Brookmeyer (vtb, p)
Jim Hall (g)
Bill Crow (b)
Mel Lewis (d)

Bob Brookmeyer - 7 x Wilder Tracks:
01 While We're Young (Wilder-Emvick-Palitz) 6:17
02 That's The Way It Goes (Wilder-Robin) 4:49
03 The Wrong Blues (Wilder-Envick) 4:39
04 It's So Peaceful In The Country (Wilder) 4:10
05 Blues For Alec (Brookmeyer) 6:13
06 I'll Be Around (Wilder) 4:36
07 Who Can I Turn To? (Wilder-Envick) 4:32

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