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The Complete Prestige Recordings: Dexter Gordon

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Download links and information about The Complete Prestige Recordings: Dexter Gordon by Dexter Gordon. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Jazz, Bop genres. It contains 88 tracks with total duration of 13:40:46 minutes.

Artist: Dexter Gordon
Release date: 2004
Genre: Jazz, Bop
Tracks: 88
Duration: 13:40:46
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Move (featuring Wardell Gray) 9:44
2. Home Run 5:04
3. Dolo 6:14
4. Lovely Lisa 7:19
5. Affair In Havana 7:39
6. Jodi 6:37
7. Field Day 6:43
8. Setting the Pace (featuring Booker Ervin) 19:03
9. Dexter's Deck (featuring Booker Ervin) 22:40
10. Montnartre 10:57
11. Lady Bird 10:38
12. Sticky Wicket 7:03
13. Montnartre (Alternate Take) 10:43
14. Lady Bird (Alternate Take) 12:31
15. Sticky Wicket (Alternate Take) 9:40
16. Those Were the Days 8:02
17. Stanley the Steamer 8:02
18. The Rainbow People 8:47
19. Boston Bernie 7:37
20. Meditation 8:26
21. Fried Bananas 6:06
22. Dinner for One Please, James (Alternate Take) 6:05
23. Stanley the Steamer (Alternate Take) 7:13
24. The Rainbow People (Alternate Take) 7:14
25. Boston Bernie (Alternate Take) 8:27
26. Fried Bananas (Alternate Take) 6:19
27. Broadway (Live) 17:22
28. Boston Bernie (Live) 17:46
29. In a Sentimental Mood (Live) 8:48
30. Blues Up and Down (Live) 19:48
31. Rhythm a Ning (Live) 24:02
32. Misty (Live) 10:11
33. Love for Sale (Live) 21:52
34. Fried Bananas (Live) (featuring Junior Mance) 8:11
35. Sophisticated Lady (Live) (featuring Junior Mance) 7:52
36. Rhythm a Ning (Live) (featuring Junior Mance) 8:40
37. Body and Soul (Live) (featuring Junior Mance) 10:14
38. Blue Monk 10:49
39. The Panther (Live) (featuring Junior Mance) 9:26
40. The Panther 6:25
41. Body and Soul 10:57
42. Valse Robin 5:52
43. Mrs. Miniver 7:33
44. The Christmas Song 5:19
45. Blues Walk 7:20
46. Valse Robin (Alternate Take) 5:50
47. Mrs. Miniver (Alternate Take) 7:06
48. Blues Walk (Alternate Take) 6:16
49. Polka Dots and Moonbeams (Live) 10:04
50. Wee Dot (Live) 17:11
51. The Happy Blues (Live) (featuring Gene Ammons) 5:29
52. Lonesome Lover Blues (Alternate Take) 12:38
53. Medley: Lover Man / I Can't Get Started / My Funny Valentine / Misty (Live) (featuring Gene Ammons) 13:58
54. The Chase (Live) (featuring Gene Ammons) 10:29
55. Lonesome Lover Blues 13:24
56. Evergreenish 6:02
57. Rhythm-A-Ning 6:32
58. For Sentimental Reasons 6:50
59. If You Could See Me Now 5:21
60. Star Eyes 6:49
61. The Jumpin' Blues 5:46
62. Evergreenish (Alternate Take) 6:13
63. Rhythm-A-Ning (Alternate Take) 5:56
64. For Sentimental Reasons (Alternate Take) 4:47
65. Star Eyes (Alternate Take) 6:12
66. The Jumpin' Blues (Alternate Take) 5:42
67. Milestones (First Version) 9:00
68. Scared to Be Alone 7:45
69. The Group 6:27
70. Days of Wine and Roses 8:41
71. We See 11:26
72. Milestones (Alternate Take) 7:12
73. Scared to Be Alone (Alternate Take) 7:08
74. The Group (Alternate Take) 6:36
75. Ça'Purange 9:52
76. Tangerine 8:59
77. The First Time I Ever Saw Your Face 5:53
78. What It Was 8:10
79. Airegin 5:07
80. Oh! Karen 12:07
81. Airegin (Altenate Take) 5:32
82. August Blues 9:51
83. Gingerbread Boy 12:46
84. Blues a la Suisse 10:27
85. Some Other Spring 6:06
86. Secret Love 14:32
87. Tivoli 8:07
88. 'Treux Blues (Live) (featuring Gene Ammons) 17:07

Details

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While it's unquestionably true that saxophonist Dexter Gordon is best known for his Blue Note sides made between 1960 and 1965, it is on his Prestige recordings, the vast majority of which were taped between 1969 and 1973, where the full depth and breadth of his gift and contribution are documented. What's more, this box finally sets the historical and chronological record straight as many of Gordon's records were assembled from various sessions. The Complete Prestige Recordings consists of 11 CDs, charting Gordon's rise as a soloist in 1950 as part of the With Wardell Gray memorial album, and his reemergence after a period of drug addiction and imprisonment in 1960 with the album Resurgence. The story drops again as Gordon went on to record his seminal Blue Note sessions and picks up again with Booker Ervin, Jaki Byard, Reggie Workman and Alan Dawson on the electrifying Setting the Pace five years later. Gordon moved to Europe following this date for an extended sojourn there, and isn't heard from again until 1969's Tower of Power and More Power, two albums' worth of material recorded while visiting New York, with Barry Harris, Albert "Tootie" Heath, James Moody and Buster Williams. From these sessions, there are six previously unissued takes of the material in addition to the albums themselves. From 1969 until '73 Gordon's is featured in all sorts of settings, from quartets with Junior Mance, Martin Rivera and Oliver Jackson, as well as with Larry Ridley, Tommy Flanagan and Alan Dawson, to a quintet co-led with Gene Ammons that starred a young Steve McCall on drums! There is also the fine Jumpin' Blues session with Wynton Kelly, Sam Jones and Roy Brooks, as well as a gorgeous quintet with Freddie Hubbard, Cedar Walton, Billy Higgins and Buster Williams that was issued first as Tangerine and then as Generation. The Montreux performances are included here as well. From the quartets with Hampton Hawes, Kenny Clarke and Bob Cranshaw, to the steaming Gene Ammons and friends jam at Montreux with that trio, plus Ammons, Nat and Cannonball Adderley and Kenny Nash in addition to Dex. There are no less than eight unreleased performances from these various outings making for a wealth of previously unavailable Gordon in this box. What it adds up to is one of jazz music's most compelling and labyrinthine stories. One of an expatriate jazzman whose style was moving ever more expressionistically into new expansive harmonic and lyric conceptions informed by a tough, swaggering swinging application of the blues. The sound is phenomenal, the track by track documentation is a bit idiosyncratic in description but is nonetheless complete. There are also many fine and rare photographs, and the liner essay by Ted Panken is both exhaustive and authoritative. This set is long overdue and, combined with the Blue Note box, this gives for all practical and intent purposes, the definitive portrait of Gordon.