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Coleman Hawkins - Henderson Days
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Coleman Hawkins - Henderson Days

Facts

Artist(s)Coleman Hawkins
StudioSaga Jazz France
Release DateFebruary 3, 2003
UPC Code044006644226
 

About Coleman Hawkins - Henderson Days

2003 compilation highlights the jazz giant's illustrious career with 24 digitally remastered tracks (75 minutes) packaged in a digipak. Saga Jazz. Album Description

Tracks

  1. The Stampede
  2. Shake Your Feet
  3. Money Blues
  4. Carolina Stomp
  5. Clarinet Marmalade
  6. Tozo
  7. St Louis Shuffle
  8. Whiteman Stomp
  9. Blazin
  10. Wherever Theres A Will Theres A Way
  11. Hello Lola
  12. One Hour
  13. Chinatown My Chinatown
  14. Cloudy Skies
  15. Got Another Sweetie Now
  16. Bugle Call Rag
  17. Dee Blues
  18. Sugar Foot Stomp
  19. Arabesque
  20. Donegal Cradle Song
  21. Queer Notions
  22. Can You Take It
  23. Its The Talk Of The Town
  24. Ive Got To Sing A Torch Song

User Reviews

Average user review: 5.0 (1 reviews)

rating: 5 Quote3 Minute SymphoniesQuote
This is more of a Fletcher Henderson than a Coleman Hawkins disk. Fletch, in case you didn't know, had one of the best bands ever. If you like big band swing at all, you've probably heard his arrangements played by the likes of Benny Goodman, but they never sounded as good as when his own band played them. Unfortunately, as a poor businessman, his band never achieved the fame he deserved. And The Hawk, despite his being considered the inventor of jazz tenor sax playing, is still shamefully underappreciated by jazz fans.

These recordings, made from 1923 to 1933, capture some of the best "old timey" big band jazz you'll ever hear. On the surface, these are happy little tunes with virtuoso musicians, especially featuring the (then) groundbreaking tenor sax solos of Coleman Hawkins. Also included are: Chu Berry, Benny Carter, Buster Bailey, Louis Armstrong, Fats Waller, Peewee Russell, Glen Miller, just to hit some highlights.

Repeated in-depth listening reveals amazingly complex arrangements that well utilize the considerable skills of the assembled. You are aided in such attentive hearing by the amazing quality of the remastering job. I listen to a lot of music from this era, and I've never heard a better disc from the direct-to-disk recording era before tape was used in the studio.

75 minutes of upbeat music guaranteed to raise a smile, an intricate cross-current of melody below the surface, a vital historical document of the birth of swing and of jazz tenor sax, a clear and hiss/scratch-free recording that you'll listen to hundreds of times. Order now! December 8, 2004

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