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The Complete RCA Victor Recordings: Dizzy Gillespie (1994 Remastered)

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Download links and information about The Complete RCA Victor Recordings: Dizzy Gillespie (1994 Remastered) by Dizzy Gillespie. This album was released in 1995 and it belongs to Jazz, Latin, Bop genres. It contains 43 tracks with total duration of 02:07:35 minutes.

Artist: Dizzy Gillespie
Release date: 1995
Genre: Jazz, Latin, Bop
Tracks: 43
Duration: 02:07:35
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Manteca 3:06
2. Anthropology (Take 2) 2:53
3. King Porter Stomp (featuring Teddy Hill, His NBC Orchestra) 3:04
4. Yours and Mine 2:41
5. Blue Rhythm Fantasy 2:42
6. Hot Mallets (featuring Lionel Hampton, Lionel Hampton And His Orchestra) 2:17
7. 52nd Street Theme (Take 1) 3:13
8. 52nd Street Theme (Take 2) 3:05
9. Night In Tunisia 3:07
10. Night In Tunisia (Incomplete Take) 2:05
11. Ol' Man Rebop 2:44
12. Anthropology (Take 1) 2:37
13. Ow! 2:56
14. Oop-Pop-A-Da 3:12
15. Two Bass Hit 2:46
16. Stay On It 3:13
17. Algo Bueno (Woody'n You) 2:59
18. Cool Breeze (featuring Kenny Hagood) 2:48
19. Cubana Be 2:41
20. Cubana Bop 3:17
21. Ool-Ya-Koo 2:52
22. Minor Walk 2:44
23. Good Bait 2:46
24. Guarachi Guaro 3:12
25. Duff Capers 3:10
26. Lover, Come Back to Me 3:32
27. I'm Beboppin' Too (Take 1) 2:18
28. Swedish Suite 2:56
29. St. Louis Blues 3:07
30. I Should Care (featuring Johnny Hartman) 3:03
31. That Old Black Magic (featuring Johnny Hartman) 2:40
32. You Go to My Head (featuring Johnny Hartman) 3:01
33. Jump Did-Le Ba 2:28
34. Dizzier and Dizzier 3:06
35. I'm Beboppin' Too (Take 2) 2:22
36. Hey Pete! Let's Eat More Meat (featuring Joe Carroll, The Ensemble) 3:01
37. Jumpin' With Symphony Sid 3:03
38. If Love Is Trouble 3:43
39. In the Land of Oo-Bla-Dee (featuring Joe Carroll) 2:36
40. Overtime (Shorter Take) 3:06
41. Overtime (Longer Take) 4:31
42. Victory Ball (Shorter Take) 2:40
43. Victory Ball (Longer Take) 4:12

Details

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Although the sheer scope of this double-CD roundup of all of Dizzy's Victor sessions places it most obviously within the evolution of bebop, it is absolutely essential to Latin jazz collections as well. Here listeners find the discographical launching pad of Afro-Cuban jazz on December 22, 1947, when Cuban conguero Chano Pozo added his galvanic congas and bongos to Gillespie's big band for the first time on record. One can feel the explosive effect of Pozo's subdivisions of the beat, rhythmic incantations, and grooves on the band's bebop charts. Though the musicians' styles aren't much affected, and Pozo does most of the adapting to bebop rather than vice versa, the foundation has clearly shifted. Alas, aside from recorded live gigs, Pozo only made eight tracks with the band — four on December 22 and four more eight days later, just before the second Musicians Union recording ban kicked in. Yet even after Pozo's murder the following year, Gillespie continued to expand his Latin experiments, using two Latin percussionists who brought more rhythmic variety to the sound of tunes like "Guarachi Guaro" (later popularized by Cal Tjader as "Soul Sauce") and even commercial ballads like "That Old Black Magic." The reprocessing of these recordings from late in the 78 rpm era through the CEDAR process sounds a bit harsh, though less so than most of RCA's earlier desecrations of vault material using NoNOISE. Even so, this remains the best way to acquire these seminal Latin jazz tracks. ~ Richard S. Ginell, Rovi