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Dimensions: A Compendium of the Pablo Years

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Download links and information about Dimensions: A Compendium of the Pablo Years by Oscar Peterson. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Jazz, Bop genres. It contains 46 tracks with total duration of 04:57:17 minutes.

Artist: Oscar Peterson
Release date: 2003
Genre: Jazz, Bop
Tracks: 46
Duration: 04:57:17
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. That Old Black Magic (featuring The Oscar Peterson Trio) 4:48
2. Tenderly (featuring The Oscar Peterson Trio) 5:00
3. How High the Moon? (Live) (featuring The Oscar Peterson Trio) 3:22
4. The Way You Look Tonight (Live) (featuring The Oscar Peterson Trio) 4:40
5. You Are Too Beautiful (Live) (featuring The Oscar Peterson Trio) 3:40
6. Smedley 4:47
7. Someday My Prince Will Come 5:08
8. Daytrain 6:03
9. Moonglow 3:32
10. Sweet Georgia Brown 4:36
11. C-Jam Blues 6:24
12. Wes' Tune 6:39
13. Okie Blues 8:43
14. You Can Depend On Me 6:52
15. You Are My Sunshine (Live) 8:41
16. Caravan (featuring Dizzy Gillespie) 6:58
17. Stella By Starlight (Live) (featuring Joe Pass) 7:10
18. Little Jazz (featuring Roy Eldridge) 4:44
19. Soft Winds 5:28
20. Mean to Me (featuring Harry Edison) 6:31
21. Oh, Lady Be Good! (featuring Milt Jackson) 7:53
22. On a Slow Boat to China (featuring Clark Terry) 4:21
23. Summertime (featuring Joe Pass) 4:26
24. Blues for Birks (featuring Jon Faddis) 7:19
25. How Long Has This Been Going On (featuring Ella Fitzgerald) 4:56
26. Hogtown Blues (Live) 5:35
27. Blues Etude (featuring Joe Pass) 5:23
28. Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans? (Live) 3:37
29. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You (featuring Joe Pass, Ray Brown) 7:20
30. Reunion Blues 6:45
31. I'm Confessin' (That I Love You) (featuring Count Basie) 4:48
32. Goodbye (Live) 6:24
33. Falling In Love With Love (Live) 6:26
34. Nigerian Marketplace (featuring The Oscar Peterson Big 4) 7:13
35. Sometimes I'm Happy (featuring Oscar Peterson Quartet) 6:30
36. Perdido / Caravan (Edit) 13:14
37. Cool Walk (Edit) 8:27
38. Take the "A" Train (Edit) (featuring The Duke Ellington Orchestra) 5:27
39. 5400 North (Live) 12:58
40. Exactly Like You (featuring Count Basie) 6:16
41. Au Privave (Live) (featuring The Oscar Peterson Big 6) 11:19
42. If I Were a Bell 10:51
43. Nuages (featuring Stéphane Grappelli / Stephane Grappelli) 8:06
44. Some of These Days 3:48
45. Lady Di's Waltz 4:59
46. Stuffy (featuring Harry Edison, Eddie) 9:10

Details

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Just in case anybody has forgotten or needs to catch up with their very first dose, Oscar Peterson is one of the greatest pianists in all of straight-ahead jazz. For heart, soul, and dexterity, for imagination, facility, and finesse, you're not going to do much better than this. The very act of listening is really a groove study in electromagnetic conduction. Something inside of the beholder is likely to change. You might feel it in your legs, the nape of your neck, or up and down the glockenspiel of the rib cage as your spine causes the rest of the body to gyrate almost involuntarily. Almost any band involving Oscar Peterson creates a musical current that resonates in the marrows of performers and listeners alike. And there's always been so much of it! In light of the fact that Norman Granz put out more Oscar Peterson records than most people have been able to digest, the present anthology will enable both seasoned fans and those who aren't sufficiently hip to him to stretch out with a massive but approachable stack of Peterson's coolest and hottest sides. The first of four discs outlines the initial triumph of the Trio. Disc two is dedicated to the Art of the Duet. Disc three charts a tour of the world while tracing an anatomy of the pianist's progress through a series of jams over the span of 13 years. Disc four is a bit like having nine desserts after 37 entrees. And why not? Sometimes pigging out makes perfect sense. This mammoth career retrospective is a heartwarming affirmation of Oscar Peterson's gifts and messages. It could easily lead to a heightened awareness of how jazz, that substantial music of great power and depth, never ceases to recharge the sensibilities of any listener willing to surrender for a while to those spirits of inspiration that Federico Garcia Lorca called the angel, the duende, and the muse. All three forces are at work here. A healthy response would be to feel humbled by the generosity of all these artists who came together to make so much great music for the people to return to time after time.