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Sweet Rain

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Download links and information about Sweet Rain by Stan Getz. This album was released in 1967 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 5 tracks with total duration of 37:26 minutes.

Artist: Stan Getz
Release date: 1967
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 5
Duration: 37:26
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Litha (featuring Chick Corea, Bill Evans) 8:30
2. O Grande Amour 4:43
3. Sweet Rain 7:11
4. Con Alma (featuring Chick Corea, Bill Evans) 8:06
5. Windows (featuring Chick Corea, Bill Evans) 8:56

Details

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One of Stan Getz's all-time greatest albums, Sweet Rain was his first major artistic coup after he closed the book on his bossa nova period, featuring an adventurous young group that pushed him to new heights in his solo statements. Pianist Chick Corea, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Grady Tate were all schooled in '60s concepts of rhythm-section freedom, and their continually stimulating interplay helps open things up for Getz to embark on some long, soulful explorations (four of the five tracks are over seven minutes). The neat trick of Sweet Rain is that the advanced rhythm section work remains balanced with Getz's customary loveliness and lyricism. Indeed, Getz plays with a searching, aching passion throughout the date, which undoubtedly helped Mike Gibbs' title track become a standard after Getz's tender treatment here. Technical perfectionists will hear a few squeaks on the LP's second half (Getz's drug problems were reputedly affecting his articulation somewhat), but Getz was such a master of mood, tone, and pacing that his ideas and emotions are communicated far too clearly to nit-pick. Corea's spare, understated work leaves plenty of room for Getz's lines and the busily shifting rhythms of the bass and drums, heard to best effect in Corea's challenging opener "Litha." Aside from that and the title track, the repertoire features another Corea original ("Windows"), the typically lovely Jobim tune "O Grande Amor," and Dizzy Gillespie's Latin-flavored "Con Alma." The quartet's level of musicianship remains high on every selection, and the marvelously consistent atmosphere the album evokes places it among Getz's very best. A surefire classic.