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Lester Young With Roy Eldridge - The Jazz Giants '56
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Lester Young With Roy Eldridge - The Jazz Giants '56

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The Jazz Giants '56
Music Price: $14.98 $10.97
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Artist(s)Lester Young With Roy Eldridge
StudioPolygram Records
Release DateJuly 1, 1991
UPC Code042282567222
Buy this item$10.97 at Amazon.com
As of Sep 3 18:55 EDT (details)
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About Lester Young With Roy Eldridge - The Jazz Giants '56

Japanese 24-bit remastered reissue of 1956 album features 5 tracks with guests musicians Teddy Wilson, Roy Eldridge, Vic Dickenson, Jo Jones, Freddie Greene & Gene Ramey, packaged in a miniature LP sleeve. Verve. 2004. Album Description

Tracks

  1. I Guess I'll Have To Change My Plan
  2. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
  3. Gigantic Blues
  4. This Year's Kisses
  5. You Can Depend On Me

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User Reviews

Average user review: 5.0 (7 reviews)

rating: 5 QuoteTrue GiantsQuote
What a gigantic group!

Still very much in their prime, many of these jazz giants are old musical and personal friends. For instance, Jo Jones (dm) and Freddie Greene (g) were a vital part of Basie's rhythm machine in the hay-day of Young's tenure with the orchestra; Eldridge (tp) and Young both participated in beautiful Teddy Wilson-Billie Holiday recordings, Young made a perfect quartet album with Wilson (p), Ramey (b) and Jones (Pres and Teddy); Jones and Young (at one number joined by Eldridge) were guests on Count Basie rightly famous "At Newport" reunion album (Count Basie at Newport, Roy played with Young on numerous other occasions as well (including JATP encounters and Young's swan song "Laughin' to keep from cryin'" ( Laughin' to Keep from Cryin') ...

Lester Young had some of his peaks in the 50s (check out also his work with Oscar Peterson from the period - With the Oscar Peterson Trio, particularly when surrounded by the likeminded jazz giants of the previous era and Vic Dickenson is another reason to get this gem: he plays really beautifully throughout this fantastic album... If you're into hot and gentle mainstream, into swing, Lester Young, Roy Eldridge, Vic Dickenson...YOU MUST HAVE THIS!

Why did I wait so long to buy it, I keep asking myself in disbelief. Lyrical and ballad-oriented component of this album prevails and, since these artists have beautiful sound, this will make this album quite accessible to audiences who otherwise don't necessarily concentrate on jazz (for instance to the Diana Krall and Norah Jones crowd). May 5, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteSoulful to the last dropQuote
Lester Young was the kind of rare musician that could convey an entire world of emotion in just a couple of phrases and I fell in love with this CD the moment I heard the beginning of "I guess I'll have to change my plan". My growing Jazz CD collection numbers in the dozens now but this is one CD I always keep going back to. April 13, 2008

rating: 5 QuoteOne of the best Pres albumsQuote
This is one of the best later-Pres albums out there. People who say that the Pres of the 50's was just a shell of the Pres of the 30's and early 40's with Basie are proven wrong by this recording and many others. Pres has rarely sounded better and the fire that he plays with on "Gigantic Blues" and the soul that he puts into songs like "I Didn't Know What Time It Was" is simply awesome.
This is Pres at his best. Highly recommended. February 11, 2005

rating: 5 QuoteThe best Jazz album ever madeQuote
This is simply the best jazz album ever made..
If you dig the style of Lester in the best shape since 1943 and add the unsurpassed efforts by Vic Dicenson, Roy Eldridge, Teddy Wilson and Jo Jones. Besides Lester the group plays the best they ever did. Wilson has never svung as hard, Roy has never been so precise and hard svung "in control" as here. You will never hear harder swing as in Gigantic Blues or as beautifull and hartbreaking as I didn't know what time is was.
If I only had one album this would be it..
August 20, 2004

rating: 5 QuoteWonderful and PerfectQuote
There are not many cuts on this CD, but this is worth it. It is a rare occaision, a group of contest winners, who happen to jibe together as a real functing band who work well together because their past experience of working together and current styles mesh. They create some great music like a band that had practiced together for years.

About 20 years ago a friend of mine found the LP version of this in a thrift store in Los Angeles. When I visited and he played the opening selection I think I'm going to Change My plans, it was one of the most beautiful tasteful and wonderful things I have ever heard. I still go by that. There is something magnificent about that cut that makes me wonder why I don't just play it all day every day, something I did do, once I got a CD player about 12 years ago and got this CD. It is that good.

What works here is that Lester is recorded with a set of SWING musicians who have the same approach to time and variation that he had, although Lester is obviously the master here. In fact, this recording was always one that people like Buck Clayton and other Old Testament Basie survivors pointed to as proof that none of Lester's skills had declined in the 1950s, he just needed a rhythm section like the one here composed of Teddy Wilson (with whom he recorded scores of records for Billie Holiday in the 30s, and his former Basie band mates Freddie Greene and Jo Jones and Gene Ramey who is of the same generation of Southwestern Swing as Lester and Basie.

Vic Dickenson really shines here. Smooth and cremey hot and swinging. It is unfortunate that very few people these days understand the greatness of Little Jazz, Mr. Roy Eldrige whose trumpet provides the necessary contrast to Lester's great sax playing. By 1956 Roy had been appearing with Lester and sometimes with Dickenson for years in Jazz at the Philharmonic's great jams. Listening to these cuts will help you want to hear more of him. February 17, 2004

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