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Pow Wow

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Download links and information about Pow Wow by Ken Peplowski, Howard Alden. This album was released in 2007 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 01:01:20 minutes.

Artist: Ken Peplowski, Howard Alden
Release date: 2007
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 13
Duration: 01:01:20
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Pow Wow 4:02
2. Dream Dancing 6:42
3. Did I Remember ? 6:27
4. Very Early 5:37
5. Who Knows 2:39
6. After All 5:39
7. Bossango 5:56
8. I See Your Face Before Me 3:37
9. Tempus Fugit 3:02
10. The Land of the Loon 1:56
11. The Things We Did Last Summer 5:24
12. Panama 6:11
13. Lucky to Be Me 4:08

Details

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Howard Alden and Ken Peplowski have previously appeared on a number of each other's CDs and this is hardly their first opportunity to play as a duo. Both Alden and Peplowski are equally at home in bop and swing with a vast shared repertoire between them. They are among the best on their respective instruments, with intuitive minds that work together in daring jointly improvised flights. Alden switched to playing seven-string electric guitar a number of years prior to these 2006 sessions after playing with fellow masters George Van Eps and Bucky Pizzarelli, gaining the ability to play a bassline with the extra string. Peplowski is a solid tenor saxophonist and a lyrical clarinetist. With Peplowski on clarinet, they come up with an extended, humorous rendition of "Did I Remember" and offer a creative interpretation of Bud Powell's still demanding "Tempus Fugit." Pianist Bill Evans' "Very Early" was often played by its composer at a brisk tempo during the latter part of his career, but the duo chose a relaxed setting to better showcase this lovely waltz. Peplowski switches to tenor sax for several songs, including a pair of Joe Puma compositions "Pow Wow" (a thinly disguised "Cherokee" and the exotic Brazilian/Latin flavored "Bossango"), a lush take of "The Things We Did Last Summer," and a swinging "Dream Dancing." Alden is heard unaccompanied for the forgotten Eastwood Lane chestnut "The Land of the Loon."