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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
such great FEELING!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Group Masterpieces 1 (Audio CD)
since the track list above is wrong, i will give it to you:1 blues in C 2 undecided 3 under a blanket of blue 4 blues in Bb 5 a foggy day 6 street of dreams 7 s'wonderful 8 makin whoopee 9 old fashioned love 10 blues in my heart 11 my blue heaven 12 hands across the table 13 you're mine you 14 idaho the first track, "blues in C" is at a slow tempo, with tatum starting off all by himself. the atmosphere is sort of a sad blues. benny carter and louis bellson join in, and benny carter's solo (as with everywhere on this album) is completely amazing and beautiful.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
gutbucket blues,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Group Masterpieces 1 (Audio CD)
This recording is (surprisingly) very bluesy and lowdown. Since there is no bassist, the players seem to have decided to fall back on the basics. It is interesting to hear Tatum in this context, where many of his 'ornamental' tendencies have been discarded in favor a more straightforward approach, relatively speaking. For Art Pepper fans, the Carter influence is very obvious (Pepper played in Carter's band during his formulative period). This is a fabulous recording, easily recommended for any serious jazz collection.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Swing Extravaganza Vol 1,
This review is from: Group Masterpieces 1 (Audio CD)
Art Tatum manages to be both adventurous in the field of harmonies and an unstopable rhythm machine; a rhythm section and a soloist at the same tame, capable of grinding lesser musicians.
Carter however, obviously does not belong to the ranks of lesser musician in any respect I can imagine; his alto sax is melodic and lyrical as opposed to Tatum's wild harmonies, but these two giants somehow don't clash; instead they complement each other. Why is it so? Probably because of Carter's subtle sense of rhythm; a good match to Tatum's rhytmical abilities. With explosive Louis Bellson on the drums, this could be nothing less than a classic.
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