| 1. Propapagoon |
| 2. This Is Always |
| 3. Jack Spratt |
| 4. Just You, Just Me |
| 5. Cool Blues |
| 6. Mr. Sun |
| 7. Dancing on the Ceiling |
| 8. Everyone Does |
| 9. Till the End of Time [*] |
Sonny Stitt,Sonny Stitt,Mca,Bop,Jazz,Jazz Music
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Sonny Side Up
Dizzy Gillespie , Sonny Stitt , and Sonny Rollins Manufacturer: Polygram Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000047CZ Release Date: 1997-07-29 |
Tracks:
- On The Sunny Side Of The Street
- The Eternal Triangle
- After Hours
- I Know That You Know
Amazon.com
Dizzy Gillespie's long, fruitful career is peppered with a number of high-profile summit meetings with a variety of jazz royals, and this 1957 date ranks with the best of them. Gillespie facilitated this battle between tenor titans Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins and even, according to legend, stoked their competitive fires with well-timed phone calls prior to the session. The good-natured opener "On the Sunny Side of the Street," complete with a lighthearted Dizzy vocal turn, doesn't even hint at the serious business to follow it. "The Eternal Triangle" is a quintessential bop fracas filled with inspired, white-hot improvisation. Rollins and Stitt exchange mighty blows, in solos and in trades, and Gillespie's trumpet work is no mere afterthought, bristling as it does with creativity and authority. The ensemble catches their collective breath with "After Hours," a tasty slow blues introduced by Ray Bryant's mood-setting piano, before they unleash a ripping reading of the chestnut "I Know That You Know." You get the sense that the more artful (and "jazz's new thing") Rollins was dragged into a real street fight by the fiery Stitt, who was unbeatable on his own blistering bop turf, but each man--Gillespie included--rises to the occasion in spirited fashion. --Marc GreilsamerCustomer Reviews:
beyond fantastic ! ! ! .......2006-11-27
What makes it really fun to listen to is that even though Rollins and Stitt are clearly children of Bird, their sounds are different enough that you can tell who's up at the mike. (Stitt has a sharper more agressive intonation... Rollins is bit warmer - - seems to have a bit of Dexter Gordon in him (or is it just me?) - - Gillespie often stands off to the side enjoying the action, but once he's in on the game its a master in his own territory/god knows what's going to happen next type of intensity that's classic Gillespie. - - As for the album... The rhythm section is soooooooooo tasty you want to eat the notes (*tell me I'm lying !) - - Line up is Ray Bryant, Tommy Bryant and Charile Persip.
In addition to the fact that this is one of those "sit down and transcribe" type blowing sessions, what also makes it phenomenal is the variety... from the frensic bop of triangle, the 12 beat after hours blues of the aptly titles AFTER HOURS, the sprightly swinging SUNNY SIDE (which also features Dizzy on vocals) and alas the more hard boppish I KNOW THAT YOU KNOW.
All in all this is just one of those sessions which is in such a league of its own you almost want to shed a tear that few groups are really playing with this feel (not the solid high hat on the 2 and 4 - - modern day drummers don't like to do that any more but notice how toe tapping the music is... yet the Roach-like punches are still as there. - - Another fine point is that the clearly listening to and digging each other (At one point Rollins clearly flubs a tone in his solo, but it don't matter and clearly Dizzy digs it and you can hear him vocalizing sort of an encouraging Gotcha!/I dig it! that Jazz msicians of that era were prone to do.)
Conclusion: What a session - - must have study and listening ! A journey back to a time when Jazz was cool, fresh, vibrant, boppin', swinging and every word in between !
Sizzles with torrents of energy........2005-03-06
The following concerns The Eternal Triangle. The Eternal Triangle begins with a multi-instrument theme (30 seconds). Then there is a saxophone solo, apparently by Rollins (1 minute), then a short multi-instrument interlude, followed by another Rollins solo (1 min.). There follows then another sax solo, this time by Stitt. The Stitt solos are distinguished by the springiness of the connected notes, and because of Sonny Stitt's trademark "fly-away" fluorishes that he sometimes attaches to the end of a phrase. Rollins has a sharper, almost tearing, sound. Then comes a short multi-instrument interlude. There then follows an extended period (about 5 min.) of alternating sax solos, without any intervening interludes. Then comes a trumpet solo (1 min and 20 sec.), a multi-instrument interlude, another trumpet solo (1 min and 20 sec.), and lo and behold, a piano solo (50 seconds). After the piano solo is what might be construed as a drum solo, where the drum solo consists of eight alternating short exclamations by the trumpet and by the drums, in this order: trumpet drums, trumpet drums, trumpet drums, trumpet drums, trumpet drums, trumpet drums, trumpet drums, trumpet drums. This followed by the multi-instrument theme (30 sec.). The piece is be-bop from beginning to end.
Now this concerns The Bop Session, another album similar to (but less raw, if you don't mind the term "raw") than Sonny Side Up. "The Bop Session," was recorded on May 19-20, 1975. The album is on Sonet records, and is distributed by VOGUE. The musicians are Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, John Lewis, Percy Heath, Hank Jones, and Max Roach. The album is basically a shared Stitt/Gillespie album. All the pieces are in the "be bop" style. There are no Cuban congas, Brazilian harmonies, pleasant Broadway melodies, or sprited blues wailings. These chamber music pieces are unadorned with singing, chanting, electric guitars, or vibraphones. The piano and drums only have relatively short periods for soloing. On the other hand, the album could be called "The Percy Heath Bass Album," since bass notes spew continuously throughout, without pause, where the bass lines are always clearly defined and right out in front.
In all the pieces the saxophone comes from the left speaker, the trumpet from the right, and the bass, drums, and piano from the center. For best appreciation of the album, the volume should be turned up, to enable hearing Max Roach's clicking cymbol rhythms.
1. Blue'n'Boogie. This piece is unusual, in this set, because after the intro there is a piano solo (rather than a sax or trumpet solo). Next comes a sax solo which, at one point, appears to quote from a fragment of When the Saints Go Marching In. At another point, Mr.Stitt plays one note repeatedly, but with two different fingers, providing an interesting effect. Then there's a trumpet solo. Next a bass solo. There is a drum solo, which concludes with an alternating interlude. Overall, the alternating interlude could be construed as a drum solo, and it consists of the instruments taking turns like this: trumpet, sax, drums, trumpet, drums, sax, drums, trumpet, drums, and sax.
2. Confirmation. Confirmation and Groovin' High are tunes for all Americans to learn by heart. First comes a saxophone solo. The sax solo contains many notes, as one might expect. They are strung together in a way that invokes oozing honey, melting butter, or a cube of vibrating jelly. At one point in the solo, Mr.Stitt plays one note repeatedly, but with two different fingerings, providing a special effect (see above). There's a trumpet solo. Then a piano solo. Then come multiple bass solos, each bracketed by an ascending fluttering motif on trumpet/sax. There are six such ascending fluttering motifs.
3. Groovin' High. The sax solo consists of many notes, as one might expect, but one of them is distorted (intended or not). The single distorted note provides a more powerful effect than repeatedly playing distorted notes, here and there throughout the piece. (Thirty years ago, in the mid 70s, I heard Dave Holland and Sam Rivers at Keystone Korner in San Francisco. In the middle of one of the pieces, Sam Rivers stopped playing saxophone for a moment, and screamed into the microphone, then resumed playing. He didn't do that again, during that particular evening. Doing odd things once can have a bigger effect than doing them a plurality of times.) Then comes a trumpet solo. Then a piano solo. Groovin' High is unique among these pieces in that it concludes with a dramatic fanfare.
4. Lover Man. This piece is slow, though the lenghthy muted trumpet solo contains a few spurting arpeggios that are as quick as those found elsewhere in this set. Lover Man begins with a long sax solo. Then there's a muted trumpet solo. Then a short piano solo. Then a sax solo.
5. All the Things You Are. Begins with a sax and muted trumpet duet. Then a muted trumpet solo. Then sax solo. In this piece, the sax has a somewhat sharper tone, rather than the more honey-toned saxophone tone found in the other pieces. Then a piano solo. Then a non-muted trumpet interlude, DRUM SOLO, sax solo, DRUM SOLO, trumpet solo, DRUM SOLO, sax solo, DRUM SOLO, trumpet solo, DRUM SOLO, sax solo, DRUM SOLO, finally a duet with muted trumpet and sax.
6. Lady Bird. Lady Bird begins with a sax solo. The saxophone solo contains Sonny Stitt's trademark ascending fluttering arpeggios. Muted trumpet solo. Piano solo (the longest on this album). Bass solo. Drum solo. The ending comprises Sonny Stitt playin the tune (theme) while Gillespie improvides on this tume.
In my opinion, every American high school student should be issued a copy of "The Bop Session," prior to graduation, as part of their acculturation process.
Quite possibly the best "blowing" album ever.......2004-07-07
jazz at its best.......2004-06-01
Quite short, but a piece of JAZZ Heaven and History.......2003-09-09
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Boss Tenors in Orbit (Dlx) (Dig)
Gene Ammons , and Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Umvd Labels ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00006466T Release Date: 2002-06-04 |
Tracks:
- Long Ago And Far Away
- Walkin'
- Why Was I Born?
- John Brown's Body
- Bye-Bye, Blackbird
Customer Reviews:
Gene & Sonny on Verve: Round 2.......2006-09-14
The Price of Progress.......2004-07-14
In short, it's a wonder that even the inspired musicmaking of this extraordinary pair somehow rises above the technology. Take it from me, the humble mono LP is far closer to the way this ensemble sounded when I heard them play in the early '60's at McKie's Show Lounge on Chicago's south side. There was no space (literally) between the musicians or between the musicians and the listeners (on more than one occasion I simply reached across the bar to supply Sonny with his drink--didn't even have to get off the stool). Only on the vinyl do you begin to feel included in the sound mix, much as in the club itself.
Granted, the CD reissue isn't as indispensable as the original, but it's still exemplary Ammons-Stitt-Patterson, and most musicians I know have ears that can "translate" even bad audio reproduction into sublime musical content (which helps explain the high regard for much early recorded material by Bird, Billie, Satchmo, and even Tatum).
For the record, Sonny plays tenor and not alto on "Walkin'", the blues line made famous by Miles. He's so fluid and comfortable in the upper register of the instrument that it's easy to be fooled. And whether you call it "John Brown's Body" or "Battle Hymn," there are many players and listeners alike who will find these public domain chord changes, like those of the blues, felicitous ones to blow on.
An album of its time.......2002-10-23
Sublimely Soulful.......2002-10-22
The abum has been reissued several times under different titles and formats. The original LP opened with "Bye Bye Blackbird," featuring Donald Patterson's fresh, original chord changes (outclassing players like Jack Macduff and Jimmy Smith). The playing of Sonny and Jug is as lyrical and inspired as it's earthy and funky. And it's so much more than another "cutting contest." These are two musicians for whom the whole point of human existence is playing music, all the better if you can play it together--and neither player ever sounded better.
"John Brown's Body" (a tune that's become a signature number for Monty Alexander) is literally exhumed and reanimated by Jug and Sonny. Like Horace Silver's "The Preacher" (based on "Show Me the Way to Go Home" changes) it's an infectious "public domain" tune that brings out the spirits of both saxophonists at their most communicative, from extended emotive choruses to a feisty exchange of 4's. Patterson's a delight whether or not he's soloing (and he does get some extended solo space), because of his logical bass lines, rich registrations, judicious use of the Leslies, and responsiveness to his two boss men. Billy James synchronizes the time clock of his trap cymbals to Patterson's walking left foot and gooses the principals at every opportunity.
And whether you love Gene Ammons or wonder why you should, simply listen to his building, passionate, inimitable sound on the opening track. All the man needs is a single note and he can simply knock you out--much like the sound of Judy Garland's voice.
In short, this album comes closer than any other to capturing these two tenor titans at the top of their game. It's the way I remember them from their very best nights at the long-gone Chicago southside jazz club, McKee's Show Club (at 63rd and Cottage Grove). The remastering, though state of the art, does in effect produce some "digital drying-out" of those "dirty" Hammond frequencies and overtones (if you have a good LP version, save it). All the same, I'd swap 5 Joey D's and even Jimmy's "The Sermon" for this session.
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New York Jazz
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Verve ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00004SNQW Release Date: 2003-06-10 |
Tracks:
- Norman's Blues
- I Know That You Know
- If I Had You
- Alone Together
- Twelfth Street Rag
- Down Home Blues
- Sonny's Tune
- Stars Fell On Alabama
- Body And Soul
- Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
Customer Reviews:
Sizzling!.......2006-03-10
Am I glad I did! This is a great CD. The solos will burn up your CD player. The supporting cast is great as well. If you like bebop, or just a casual jazz fan, I suggest you add some Stitt to your collection.
Merely perfect.......2004-03-31
One of the big myths among even those players who respect Sonny's playing is that his so-called "popular" recordings--the early Roosts and Verves on which he turns in 5-6 flawless gems on each side of the record--can be overlooked in favor of his earlier pairings with Diz and Rollins or his later virtuosic work on Muse. On the contrary, it's on these miniature performances where Sonny's unique genius is especially apparent. Allowing himself no more than a couple of choruses he still manages to construct logically complete, emotionally satisfying solos with a beginning, middle, and end, time and time again. Just listen to what he does with "Alone Together"--first on tenor, then switching horns and taking the tune out with another textbook solo on alto.
This reissue is especially welcome because it complements Sonny with an ideal rhythm section. Jo Jones was the prototypal straightahead swinging drummer during his Basie tenure; Jimmy Jones was always the self-effacing accompanist for Sarah Vaughan, and Ray Brown could be whatever the occasion demanded. All three merely lay down a harmonic/rhythmic track and stay out of Sonny's way--as it should be.
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The Complete Original Quartet Recordings
Sonny Stitt , and Hank Jones Manufacturer: Lone Hill Jazz ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0008GIXFU Release Date: 2005-05-10 |
Tracks:
- Afterwards
- If I Should Lose You
- Blues for Bobby
- My Melancholy Baby
- Cherokee
- Engos, The Bloos
- Body and Soul
- I Didn't Know What Time It Was
- Best Things in Life Are Free
- People Will Say We're in Love
- Bloosey
- Bird's Eye
- It Might as Well Be Spring
- Fine and Frisky
- No Cal
- Corn Flakes
- Eye Ball
- Saginaw
Album Description
This 20-bit remastered collection contains two of Sonny Stitt's finest sessions in a quartet setting with the illustrious pianist Hank Joneson on one CD. Lonehill. 2005.Album Details
This Exceptional Release Includes Two of Sonny Stitt's Finest Sessions in a Quartet Setting with the Illustrious Pianist Hank Jones. Jones' Delicate Piano Accompaniment and Tastefully Sparse Solos Mark the Perfect Complement to Stitt's Dazzling Virtuosic Display. Both Sessions Boast Exceptional Rhythm Sections with Tommy Potter and Roy Haynes Expertly Holding Down the Bass and Drum Chairs for the Stitt in Orbit Session and Wendell Marshall and Shadow Wilson Swinging Away on all of the Exciting Material from the Album Sonny Stitt and the New Yorkers. The Two Different Dates also Include Eight Original Stitt Compositions and Feature the Leader on Both Tenor and Alto Saxophone.Customer Reviews:
An American Master (but it takes a European to know).......2007-06-08
Stitt was not an "open" improviser. He had his formulae, which he stitched seamlessly together and worked to perfection, which some listeners hold against him. His playing, or "system," is about "closure," rather than the continual creation of tension. I don't think Sonny ever saw a tonic chord he didn't like, and whenever the opportunity presented itself, he would touch "home base" before embarking on his next melodic excursion. As a listener, there are times when a Hank Mobley or Harold Land is like a fresh breath of air, but inevitably, even after Coltrane and Dexter, I return to the mastery of Stitt, who was instrumentally to the American Songbook what Sinatra was vocally. He was a ubiquitous lone wolf, a traveling musical gunslinger for hire who loved tenor and alto "battles" (I've always felt he was a bit more creative on alto, though his audiences, and probably Sonny as well, seemed to favor the tenor, especially for the "duels").
These two Roost sessions are merely representative, not quintessential, Stitt-- but even representative Stitt is timeless, quintessential jazz. Still, you might look for "New York Jazz" (Jimmy Jones rather than Hank Jones), which is like an Art Tatum recording--a bit overwhelming but indispensable; also "Sonny Stitt with the Oscar Peterson Trio" is worth the price of the Japanese import; and "In Style" finds him in rare form on both horns, sometimes on the same tune.
Sonny played through pain, hard knocks, heavy hang-overs, but he kept playing--and 90% of it is "can't miss." But avoid anything with "Ronnie Scott's" or "Left-Bank" in the title (both are rip-offs) as well as any sessions on which he distorts his gorgeous sound with the Selmer Varitone attachment that he favored for several years in the late '60s. Also, he appeared with Blakey's Jazz Messengers on two dates in the '60s--the 2nd one, on Impulse ("Jazz Message," I believe), is particularly lame (at least for a Stitt performance).
Perhaps the most currently prized out-of-print set is "Endgame Brilliance," a single CD compilation of the two studio sessions--"Tune Up" and "Constellation"--that caused musicians and critics to "rediscover" him in the early to mid-1970s. (It may be coming out as a Spanish import.) Finally, the most fascinating match-up in the music: the six months Sonny played with Miles in 1960 following the departure of Coltrane. It's a colossal struggle--Miles' new modernist, modal bag vs. Sonny's Bird-inherited harmonic universe and bop language. Miles tries everything to shove Sonny's face in the new music, but he'll have none of it. (I caught Sonny many times in person. He could be outgoing and personable--or as cold and "ornery," stubborn and independent as they come, barely more approachable than Miles). Neither player gives an inch on the Miles-Sonny confrontations (available only on overseas recordings made in France and Sweden).
Bird Lite?.......2006-09-30
My prior exposure to Sonny Stitt was through his late career recordings on Verve. The playing here seems vastly more assured. And as noted below, the remastering job is awesome: you really get to hear the delicate nature of the tone of the sax; his alto always seemed a little screechy to my ears on the Verve records. And the bonus is the piano work of Hank Jones. Wow! Complex, melodic, and perfectly simpatico with the horn.
This CD is really something special; it's one of those rare jazz records where all the elements come together perfectly. Nearly 80 minutes worth, and I'm always a little sad when it's over. If I had any complaint at all, it's that I would have liked to have heard more of his tenor sax playing, which is confined to the last few tracks.
Mastery.......2006-03-08
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Last Stitt Sessions, Vols. 1 & 2
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Savoy Jazz ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00009UVXZ Release Date: 2003-07-01 |
Tracks:
- Steamroller
- I'll Be Seeing You
- Out of Nowhere
- Sweet Georgia Brown
- Keepin' It
- This Is Always
- Makin' It
- Angel Eyes
- At Last
- Bouncing with Bud
- As Time Goes By
- Swifty
- Sugar
- Jumpin' the Blues
Customer Reviews:
A Jazz Master Goes Out In Style.......2007-05-07
very solid final effort.......2006-10-05
The last from a legend.......2005-04-09
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Sax o' Bebop
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Proper UK Boxed Sets ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B0000DZH5B Release Date: 2003-10-27 |
Tracks:
- One Bass Hit, Pt. 1 - Dizzy Gillespie Sextet
- Oop Bop Sh'bam - Dizzy Gillespie Sextet
- That's Earl, Brother - Dizzy Gillespie Sextet
- Bebop in Pastel
- Fool's Fancy
- Bombay
- Ray's Idea
- Serenade to a Square
- Good Kick
- Seven Up
- Blues in Bebop
- Epistrophy - Kenny Clarke
- 52nd Street Theme - Kenny Clarke & His 52nd Street Boys
- Oop-Bop-Sh'bam - Kenny Clarke
- Royal Roost - Kenny Clarke & His 52nd Street Boys
- Boppin' a Riff
- Fat Boy
- Everything's Cool
- Webb City
- Stardust - Lord Nelson and His Boppers
- Third Song - Lord Nelson and His Boppers
- Body and Soul - Lord Nelson and His Boppers
- Ratio and Proportion - Lord Nelson and His Boppers
Tracks:
- Red Shoes
- Be Bop Blues
- Royal Wedding
- Fine and Dandy
- Scamparoo - Russell Jacquet
- Suede Jacquet - Russell Jacquet
- Lion's Roar - Russell Jacquet
- Relaxin' - Russell Jacquet
- Afternoon in Paris - Jay Jay Johnson, Sonny Stitt
- Elora - Jay Jay Johnson, Sonny Stitt
- Teapot - Jay Jay Johnson, Sonny Stitt
- Blue Mode - Jay Jay Johnson, Sonny Stitt
- Blue Mode [Alternate Take] - Jay Jay Johnson, Sonny Stitt
- All God's Chillun Got Rhythm - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- Sonnyside
- Bud's Blues - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- Sunset - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- Move
- Hot House
- Strike Up the Band - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- I Want to Be Happy - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- Taking a Chance on Love - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- Fine and Dandy - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
- Fine and Dandy [Alternate Take] - Bud Powell, Sonny Stitt
Tracks:
- Avalon
- Later
- Ain't Misbehavin'
- Mean to Me
- Stairway to the Stars
- Touch of the Blues - Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt
- Bye Bye - Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt
- Blues Up and Down - Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt
- You Can Depend on Me [Take 1] - Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt
- You Can Depend on Me [Take 2] - Gene Ammons, Sonny Stitt
- Chabootie
- Count Every Star
- Nice Work If You Can Get It
- There Will Never Be Another You
- Blazin'
- Seven Eleven
- To Think You've Chosen Me
- After You've Gone
- Our Very Own
- 'S Wonderful
- Stringin' the Jug
Tracks:
- Nevertheless
- Jeepers Creepers
- Imagination
- Cherokee
- Liza (All the Clouds'll Roll Away)
- Can't We Be Friends?
- New Blues Up and Down, Pts. 1-3
- Thrill of Your Kiss
- If the Moon Turns Green
- P.S. I Love You
- This Can't Be Love
- I Cover the Waterfront
- Don't Worry 'Bout Me
- Down with It
- For the Fat Man
- Splinter
- I'm Confessin'
- Cool Mambo
- Sonny Sounds
- Blue Mambo
- Stitt's It
- Sancho Panza - Johnny Richards Orchestra, Sonny Stitt
- Hooke's Tours - Johnny Richards Orchestra, Sonny Stitt
- Opus 202 - Johnny Richards Orchestra, Sonny Stitt
- Loose Walk - Johnny Richards Orchestra, Sonny Stitt
- Pink Satin - Johnny Richards Orchestra, Sonny Stitt
Album Description
UK exclusive box-set for one of the greatest sax players to emerge in the post bebop era, originally known as a disciple of Charlie Parker. Includes 40 page booklet with discography. Standard jewel cases housed in a slipcase. Proper. 2003.Album Details
One of the Greatest Sax Players to Emerge in the Post-bebop Era, this Four CD Set is a Comprehensive Guide to his Early Years. The Set Includes a Booklet with Full Discography, Rare Photographs and Full Liner Notes.Customer Reviews:
Complete Early Recordings!!.......2005-05-22
Stitt was one of the foremeost bebop saxophonists, a true virtuoso who raised technical standards for saxophonists everywhere. He was widely admired by musicians as diverse as Oscar Peterson, Zoot Sims, Booker Ervin and John Coltrane. A formidable player, he loved to "battle" with other horn players, forcing them to play at their best.
Stitt started on alto sax, later adding tenor and baritone. His technique on all three horns is amazing. Adding the other horns
made him a more complete and soulful player. Like Parker, he excels at the blues and soulful ballads. Few players, then or now, could stay with him on up-tempo numbers.
This is an exhaustive survey of his early stuff. Some of the material is very good, the Gillespie material and the Prestige quartet sides from 1950 and 1951 are great. The most critically acclaimed sides are a quartet date with Bud Powell from 1949
and a quintet date with John Lewis and JJ Johnson from around the same time. Stitt's tenor playing here is among his best.
The band Stitt co-led with Gene Ammons is here as well, but I find the 1960s Boss Tenors sessions much preferable to this stuff, which is a bit raw. You may also find the period vocals
by obscure singers offputting. Stitt plays well on the Johnny Richards stuff, but the busy, contrived arrangements don't suit his style.
I like the quartet sides from 1950 & 1951. Stitt is the focus of attention and plays beautifully on these, whether on alto tenor or baritone, on which he shows more ability than many full time baritone players. Stitt is so obviously superior to most of his contemporaries that the presence of other soloists, as on the "Bebop Boys" Savoy sessions is merely distracting. True, Fats Navarro and Bud Powell are on these, but so are some other players who tend to ramble on.
The sound quality is pretty variable. Two sessions recorded for an obscure Detroit label seem to have been recorded in an echo chamber. There is some distortion on some of the Prestige stuff. The Savoy and Roost material sounds pretty good, remembering that these were 78rpm recordings.
Of great historical interest, as much early Bud Powell is here, but not essential unless you are a Stitt fan. Nice to have and not expensive to buy. Very informative booklet as well.
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Endgame Brilliance: Constellation & Tune-Up
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: 32. Jazz Records ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000005BE8 Release Date: 1997-04-01 |
Tracks:
- Constellation
- (I Don't Stand) A Ghost Of A Chance With You
- Webb City
- By Accident
- Ray's Idea
- Casbah
- It's Magic
- Topsy
- Tune Up
- I Can't Get Started
- Idaho
- Just Friends
- Blues For Prez And Bird
- Groovin' High
- I Got Rhythm
Amazon.com
Of all the saxophonists that would be touched deeply by the genius of Charlie Parker, Sonny Stitt came away from the experience indelibly marked. Endgame Brilliance finds Stitt decades removed from Parker, recording in 1972, fronting a ready-to-rumble quartet rounded out by pianist Barry Harris, bassist Sam Jones, and either Alan Dawson or Roy Brooks on drums. They play with palpable sizzle on both the sessions here (originally released on Muse Records as Constellation and Tune Up!), tackling an array of bop cornerstones and more. Stitt blazes through the title track to "Tune Up," alerting the ears that he's not one to pull punches. But he also plays with late-night romance in his heart on "(I Don't Stand) A Ghost of a Chance with You" and strutting soul in his hips on "By Accident." In all, the 15 tracks of Endgame Brilliance amount to a primer on bop, blues, and balladry at once. It's some of Stitt's finest playing on record, and all of it comes off as an extended simple, inspired, game-winning jump shot. --Andrew BartlettCustomer Reviews:
A Must Have.......2007-01-14
Hard to Beat.......2005-07-01
Barry Harris on piano,
Sam Jones on bass,
Roy Brooks on drums.
This album is actually a compilation of 2 of Stitts previously released records. From the cover:
Tune-Up! and Constellation are among the best records Sonny Stitt ever made, and, without question, are the two finest examples of his late period work. Aside from their inherent musical brilliance, they go a long way to show just why Stitt was so respected by his peers and revered as one of the giants of modern jazz. Both records were originally released on the now defunct Muse label. Even though Constellation was nominated for a Grammy and Tune-Up! was as critically acclaimed, both records have been relatively hard to find. Now they're both on one disk.
Tune Up! and Constellation were originally released 1972
Potent Package.......2005-02-19
If you can locate "Endgame Brilliance" (and at a time when you're not too strapped financially), by all means grab it up. These may be Stitt's best recordings during the last ten years of his career; they're certainly among his most uncompromising. On "Tune-Up" Sonny turns in a tour-de-force on "I Got Rhythm" changes, using two tempos and both of his horns. On "Constellation" he uses the same changes, ups the tempo a notch, and sticks to alto, once again confirming my slight preference for his work on the smaller and lighter instrument.
[Addendum: The two sessions are not yet available domestically but can be ordered in a single-CD format from Spain (do a search for Fresh Sound Records). Listening to the disc now, I'm going to say that it's quintessential, not necessarily the "best," Stitt. In effect, these two 1972 dates represented Sonny stripping his horns of his Selmer Varitone device, announcing an aversion to the Hammond B3 organ, and moving beyond the '60s "funk/soul artist" tag. It was an inspirational moment to keepers of the flame at a time when country, fusion, and disco ruled the day.]
Stitt was never better than on these Cobbelstone dates........2001-11-14
Sonny Blows Up A Storm.......2000-02-21
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Stitt's Bits: Bebop Recordings 1949-1952
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Prestige ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000FZET3O Release Date: 2006-07-25 |
Tracks:
- Afternoon In Paris (Take 1)
- Afternoon In Paris (Take 2)
- Elora (Take 1)
- Elora (Take 2)
- Teapot (Take 1)
- Teapot (Take 2)
- Blue Mode (Take 1)
- Blue Mode (Take 2)
- All God's Chillun Got Rhythm
- Sonny Side
- Bud's Blues
- Sunset
- Strike Up The Band
- Strike Up The Band (Alternate)
- I Want To Be Happy
- Taking A Chance On Love
- Fine And Dandy (Take 1)
- Fine And Dandy (Take 2)
- Avalon
- Later
- Ain't Misbehavin'
- Mean To Me
- Stairway To The Stars
- Bye Bye
- Let It Be
Tracks:
- Blues Up And Down (Take 1)
- Blues Up And Down (Take 2)
- Blues Up And Down (Take 3)
- You Can Depend On Me (Take 1)
- You Can Depend On Me (Take 2)
- Touch Of The Blues
- Dumb Woman Blues
- Chabootie
- Who Threw The Sleeping Pills In Rip Van Winkle's Coffee?
- Gravy (AKA Walkin')
- Easy Glide
- Count Every Star
- Nice Work If You Can Get It
- There Will Never Be Another You
- Blazin'
- Back In Your Own Back Yard
- Sweet Jennie Lou
- La Vie En Rose
- Seven Eleven
- To Think You've Chosen Me
- After You've Gone
- Our Very Own
- 'S Wonderful
- Stringin' The Jug
- Nevertheless (I'm In Love With You)
Tracks:
- Jeepers Creepers
- Imagination
- Cherokee
- 'Round About One A.M.
- Jug
- Wow
- Blue And Sentimental
- Liza (All The Clouds'll Roll Away)
- Can't We Be Friends
- New Blues Up And Down
- The Thrill Of Your Kiss
- If The Moon Turns Green
- P.S. I Love You
- This Can't Be Love
- Down With It
- For The Fat Man
- Splinter
- Confessin'
- Undecided
- (It Will Have To Do) Until The Real Thing Comes Along
- Because Of Rain
- Charmaine
- Cool Mambo
- Sonny Sounds
- Blue Mambo
- Stitt's It
Amazon.com
Sonny Stitt may be one of the most neglected figures of the bop era, a brilliant alto saxophonist unjustly overlooked for his stylistic resemblance to Charlie Parker. But as this exemplary three-CD set demonstrates, Stitt was his own man, and his style could still serve as a definition of bop, his lithe, high-speed lines and effortless swing propelling him through complex chord changes and sometimes fractured rhythms. Stitt is heard in numerous settings here, from octet to quartet and from appearances with giants like trombonist J.J. Johnson and pianist Bud Powell to journeyman groups that still pulse with the vitality of jazz's first revolution. Stitt's fluid brilliance is as apparent on ballads and standards as it is on the kinetic bop tunes, and it readily translates to tenor saxophone. There are numerous tracks by the two-tenor band he co-led with Gene Ammons, highlighting the contrast between Stitt's swift, complex phrases and Ammons's gruff passion. --Stuart BroomerCustomer Reviews:
I ALWAYS give Sonny Props.......2006-09-16
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Legends of Acid Jazz
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Prestige ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B000000ZF4 Release Date: 1996-07-16 |
Tracks:
- Turn It On
- Bar-B-Que Man
- Miss Riverside
- Cry Me A River
- There Are Such Things
- Goin' To D.C.
- Aires
- Black Vibrations
- Calling Card
- Where Is Love?
- Them Funky Changes
Customer Reviews:
Stitt is it.......2007-01-24
Underrated.......2003-01-02
This is a tight, enthusiastic group of musicians, drum, bass, Hammond B3, guitar, trumpet and Stitt playing tenor sax with some alto. All the players except the drummer and bassist have ample opportunities to strut their stuff in extensive solos. Even then the rhythm section is so absolutely outstanding in the way they simultaneously hold the beat like clockwork and highlight what's going on musically you don't need a solo to be blown away by them.
The organist and guitarist are both excellent in their own right, with the organist having a lot of outstanding solo moments as well as being an essential supporting rhythmic element.
The trumpet player on this CD is also a real treat. He consistently puts out a clear mellow full tone that does not falter when he's playing fast, and he always seems to infuse a little syncopation into his playing that enhances the overall effect. I would have to say that his playing is journeyman rather than master level, even though knowing that he's on a record would probably make me feel like I'm in goood hands.
The only thing that really detracts from Stitt's awesome playing is his use of the Gibson Maestro, on the first 5 of the 11 tracks which lends some harshness and nasality to his tone. Even then his playsing and phrasing is so good you can almost ignore it. Indeed in some places you almost can't tell he's got the d___ed thing on. Throughout, Stitt displays virtuosic skills as he brings his bop sensibilities to the world of organ funk with blazing fast keywork, keeping the sense of grooviness essential to such an enterprise. His opening riff in "Miss Riverside" is classic. "Cry Me a River" and "Where is the Love" are ballads Stitt brings great feeling to without going mushy. "Going to DC" has real urgency to it, and "Aires" has a lush, almost big band feel to it.
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Personal Appearance
Sonny Stitt Manufacturer: Verve ProductGroup: Music Binding: Audio CD Similar Items:
ASIN: B00026B26S Release Date: 2004-06-22 |
Tracks:
- Easy To Love
- Easy Living
- Autumn In New York
- You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To
- For Some Friends
- I Never Knew
- Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
- East Of The sun (And West Of The Moon)
- Original?
- Avalon
- Blues Greasy
Customer Reviews:
Destructible recording; indestructible music........2007-06-08
The previous reviewer, Mr. Richmond, is right on the money with each of his sentences. It's hard to go wrong with Sonny (not necessarily the most innovative but certainly the "most perfect" saxophone player), who is estimated to have recorded approximately 150 sessions under his own name in his 30-year-career! He was a ubiquitous lone wolf, loved tenor and alto "battles," was the instrumental Sinatra of the American Songbook (as his Roost recordings--5-6 perfect performances per side--abundantly illustrate).
This session isn't nearly as good as many that are out of print. "New York Jazz" is like listening to an Art Tatum recording--slightly overwhelming but indispensable; "Sonny Stitt with the Oscar Peterson Trio" is worth the price of the Japanese import; "In Style" finds him in rare form on both horns, sometimes on the same tune.
Sonny played through pain, hard knocks, heavy hang-overs, but he kept playing--and 95% of it is can't miss. But avoid anything with "Ronnie Scott's" or "Left-Bank" in the title (both are rip-offs) as well as any sessions on which he distorts his gorgeous sound with the Selmer Varitone attachment that he favored for several years in the late '60s. Also, he appeared with Blakey's Jazz Messengers on two dates in the '60s--the 2nd one, on Impulse ("Jazz Message," I believe) is a real bummer (at least for a Stitt performance).
Perhaps the most currently prized out-of-print set is "Endgame Brilliance," a single CD compilation of the two studio sessions--"Tune Up" and "Constellation"--that caused musicians and critics to "rediscover" him in the early to mid-1970s. (It may be coming out as a Spanish import.) Finally, the most fascinating match-up in the music: the six months Sonny played with Miles in 1960 following the departure of Coltrane. It's a colossal struggle--Miles' new modernist, modal bag vs. Sonny's Bird-inherited harmonic universe and bop language. Miles tries everything to shove Sonny's face in the new music, but he'll have none of it (in person, Sonny could be outgoing and personable--and as tough, stubborn and independent as they come, barely more approachable than Miles). Neither player gives an inch (available only on overseas recordings made in France and Sweden).
If life were fair, at least 80% of Sonny's recordings would still be in print, and the trilogy of great American performers of the 20th century would be Crosby, Sinatra and Stitt (with all apologies to the keepers of the gate at Graceland).
Delightful "Appearance".......2005-04-02
Jazz Music: