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Structurally Sound

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Download links and information about Structurally Sound by Booker Ervin. This album was released in 1966 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:01:43 minutes.

Artist: Booker Ervin
Release date: 1966
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 12
Duration: 01:01:43
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Berkshire Blues 5:32
2. Dancing In the Dark 5:00
3. Stolen Moments 5:01
4. Franess 5:10
5. Boo's Blues 5:35
6. You're My Everything 4:48
7. Deep Night 5:00
8. Take the a Train 3:46
9. Shiny Stockings 4:50
10. White Christmas 4:30
11. Franess (Alternate Take) 5:14
12. Deep Night (Alternate Take) 7:17

Details

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Mixing the dusky romanticism of Dexter Gordon and the progressive tonal ideology of John Coltrane, Booker Ervin is often filed under "A" for amalgam alongside other overlooked tenor masters such as Tina Brooks and Hank Mobley. Structurally Sound is perhaps not Ervin's most provocative album, but a solid and tasty endeavor featuring the "suspended" chord sounds popularized by McCoy Tyner during the late '60s. Here, the chords come via the brilliant pianist John Hicks, who opens the album with funky high-end triplet figures on Randy Weston's "Berkshire Blues." Joining in is a well-selected roster of musicians, many of whom were also overshadowed by their more well-known contemporaries, including Charles Tolliver on trumpet, Red Mitchell on bass, and Lenny McBrowne on drums. Tolliver contributes the original composition "Franess," a Wayne Shorter-influenced affair that features his fat and burnished tone. They also cover Oliver Nelson's blissful standard "Stolen Moments" to good effect. Originally ending with an athletic up-tempo version of "Take the 'A' Train," the Blue Note Connoisseur Series reissue includes a sparkling "Shiny Stockings," featuring an especially inspired chorus by Ervin. An oddball version of "White Christmas" also makes it onto the disc, as do alternate takes of "Franess" and "Deep Night."