Wes Montgomery - Road Song
Facts
| Artist(s) | Wes Montgomery |
| Studio | A&M |
| Release Date | October 25, 1990 |
| UPC Code | 075021082229 |
| Buy this item | $11.98 at Amazon.com As of Sep 6 12:16 EDT (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, |
About Wes Montgomery - Road Song
Japanese only SHM-CD (Super High Material CD - playable on all CD players) pressing. Universal. 2008. Album Description
Tracks
- Road Song
- Greensleeves
- Fly Me To The Moon
- Yesterday
- I'll Be Back
- Scarborough Fair (Canticle)
- Green Leaves Of Summer
- Serene
- Where Have All the Flowers Gone?
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User Reviews
Average user review:| Orchestra from hell |
If you are looking classic for Wes albums, skip this one! September 6, 2008
| Yes, it's a Five Star disc! |
Some folks reviewing this disc seem to be afraid to admit that this album is a jazz classic because it had orchestration. I love this album the way it is. This was my first Wes Montgomery album, in fact this is one of the first record albums I ever heard and as a boy and I have fond memories of playing it on my cheap record player over and over again.
Yes, as I got older I bought Wes' other albums, the more "straight" jazz albums, but "Road Song" is my favorite (Smokin' at the Half Note is my second favorite). February 10, 2007
| Jazz Meets Classical |
Considered by many to be one of the greatest jazz guitarists that ever lived. His sound was revolutionary, and often imitated. Many, to this day use his technique of playing the same notes in two different octaves in unison.
Wes doesnt have that much space to demonstrate this technique here. His playing waves through classical arrangements of strings and horns.
I like to think of this album as, Jazz Meets Classical. Most, if not all, the songs on this album start off with classical influenced intros, then float into jazzy renditions of rather, pop tunes, that were popular at the time, with some standards.
Many disregard this as a great album. I beg to difer. Yes the jazz influences here are sometimes over shadowed by classical influences. But then again, if I were a classical fan, I'd think of it the other way, so all in all, the two musical art forms go together well here on this album. They add a little charisma to the music, and its a change from the usual swing and improvisation.
I dont know if Wes was talked into this. Maybe it had something to do with his association with A&M Records. Either way, I like how the end product came out.
Wes Montgomery had died before this album had come out. He also delivered a Hollywood Palace appearence the same year, just weeks before his death. It was a shame because Wes could not deliver any more wonderful music like this wonderful package.
There are two sides of Wes Montgomery. The strictly jazz side of him, and the pop Wes Montgomery. Both sides had wonderful jazz guitar playing, and swang beautiful, no matter what songs he was preforming.
If you like Henry Mancini, or Percy Faith, you'll love this CD. On the flip side, if you're an avid jazz, you might love this CD. I would think so, but from the bad feedback from this album, I'm not so sure.
Critics say Montgomery did not improvise on these A&M releases. This is clearly wrong! Improvisation does not dominate this tunes, but that element is still there.
Anyway you look at it, this is jazz guitar with a twist! Road Song, Fly Me To The Moon, Greensleeves, Where Have All The Flowers Gone, and Scarborough Fair (canticle) stand out for me, but then again, the whole album is a gem!
It was too bad Montgomery died so young. The jazz world lost a guitar legend. His death will be morned for many years to come. Let's just be thankful we have brilliant albums like this one to enjoy for more many years. December 6, 2004
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| Wes' last journey. A Fantastic Voyage. |
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