Jazz
CDアルバム

Meets Oscar Peterson

0.0

販売価格

¥
1,990
税込
ポイント15%還元

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2017年09月上旬
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルState Of Art
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 81197
SKU 8436569190890

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:00:00
Personnel: Louis Armstrong (vocals, trumpet); Oscar Peterson (piano); Herb Ellis (guitar); Ray Brown (bass); Louie Bellson (drums). All tracks have been digitally remastered. This is part of the Verve Master Edition series. Since Louis Armstrong just about invented jazz vocals if not popular singing itself, it was inevitable (and fortunate) that someone like producer Norman Granz would set Armstrong down in the studio with a modern '50s combo like Oscar Peterson's trio and watch the seminal musician strut his stuff. Aside from the Dixieland-derived All-Stars live show, Armstrong spent most of the late '40s and early '50s singing it straight for Milt Gabler at Decca Records. Here at Verve in 1957, Satchmo finally gets to ease up a little and stretch those famous gravelly vocal chords on a collection of romantic standards. Unlike Fats Waller, Armstrong rarely undermined the message of a love song with virtuoso clowning. For instance, he provided a wonderfully romantic foil to Ella Fitzgerald on their essential duet sessions. On his own, he proves to be a rhythmically adept contemporary troubadour with such deeply melodic material as "I'll Never Be the Same," "Moon Song," and "You Go to My Head." It should be noted that the earthy Louis gets the last word on the eight-minute version of Cole Porter's "Let's Do It" that closes the set.

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      That Old Feeling
    2. 2.
      Let's Fall In Love
    3. 3.
      I'll Never Be The Same
    4. 4.
      Blues In The Night
    5. 5.
      How Long Has This Been Going On?
    6. 6.
      I Was Doing All Right
    7. 7.
      What's New?
    8. 8.
      Moon Song
    9. 9.
      Just One Of Those Things
    10. 10.
      There's No You
    11. 11.
      You Go To My Head
    12. 12.
      Sweet Lorraine
    13. 13.
      Indiana
    14. 14.
      Let's Fall In Love (Alternate Version)
    15. 15.
      I Get A Kick Out Of You(ボーナストラック)
    16. 16.
      Makin' Whoopee(ボーナストラック)
    17. 17.
      Willow Weep For Me(ボーナストラック)
    18. 18.
      Let's Do It (Let's Fall In Love)(ボーナストラック)

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Louis Armstrong & Oscar Peterson

その他
アーティスト: Louis ArmstrongOscar Peterson

商品の紹介

サッチモとオスカー・ピーターソン。二人の巨匠がガッチリタッグを組んだ名盤。特にサッチモのヴォーカルが素晴らしい。ボーナス・トラックは、同セッションからの別テイク2曲と、同メンバーによる別セッションからの4曲(『Ella and LouisAGAIN』等のアルバムに収録)となっている。
発売・販売元 提供資料(2017/08/07)

By 1957, hard bop was firmly established as the "jazz of now," while pianist Oscar Peterson and his ensemble with bassist Ray Brown and guitarist Herb Ellis were making their own distinctive presence felt as a true working band playing standards in the swing tradition. Louis Armstrong was more recognizable to the general public as a singer instead of the pioneering trumpet player he was. But popularity contests being the trend, Armstrong's newer fans wanted to hear him entertain them, so in retrospect it was probably a good move to feature his vocalizing on these tracks with Peterson's band and guest drummer Louie Bellson sitting in. The standard form of Armstrong singing the lead lines, followed by playing his pithy and witty horn solos based on the secondary melody, provides the basis for the format on this charming but predictable recording. What happens frequently is that Armstrong and Peterson play lovely ad lib vocal/piano duets at the outset of many tunes. They are all songs you likely know, with few upbeat numbers or obscure choices. It is, however, the familiarity of songs like the midtempo "Let's Fall in Love," with Armstrong's gravelly scat singing, and his marvelous ability to riff off of the basic songs, that make these offerings endearing. A classic take of "Blues in the Night" is the showstopper, while choosing "Moon Song" is a good, off-the-beaten-path pick as the trumpeter plays two solo choruses, and he leads out on his horn for once during the slightly bouncy, basic blues "I Was Doing All Right." Some extremely slow tunes crop up on occasion, like "How Long Has This Been Going On?," an atypically downtempo take of "Let's Do It," and "You Go to My Head," featuring Peterson's crystalline piano. There are the dependable swingers "Just One of Those Things," "I Get a Kick Out of You," and "Sweet Lorraine," with Peterson at his accompanying best. There's a ramped-up version of the usually downtrodden "Willow Weep for Me" and a duet between Armstrong and Ellis on the sad two-minute ditty "There's No You." All in all, it's difficult to critique or find any real fault with these sessions, though Peterson is subsumed by the presence of Armstrong, who, as Leonard Feather notes, really needs nobody's help. That this was their only collaboration speaks volumes to how interactive and communal the session really was, aside from the fairly precious music. ~ Michael G. Nastos|
Rovi

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