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Kansas City [Soundtrack]

Various Artists Audio CD
4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

Price: $32.59 & FREE Shipping. Details
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Product Details

  • Audio CD (May 7, 1996)
  • Original Release Date: May 7, 1996
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Format: Soundtrack
  • Label: Verve
  • ASIN: B00000470T
  • Average Customer Review: 4.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #133,115 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

1. Blues In The Dark - James Carter/Joshua Redman
2. Moten Swing - Jesse Davis/James Carter
3. I Surrender Dear - James Carter/Nicholas Payton/Cyrus Chestnut
4. Queer Notions - David Murray/Russell Malone/Cyrus Chestnut
5. Lullaby Of The Leaves - Jesse Davis/Clark Gayton/Geri Allen
6. I Left My Baby - Mark Whitfield/David 'Fathead' Newman/Craig Handy/Curtis Fowlkes
7. Yeah, Man - Craig Handy/Joshua Redman
8. Froggy Bottom - Geri Allen/David 'Fathead' Newman/Mark Whitfield
9. Solitude - Joshua Redman
10. Pagin' The Devil - Don Byron/Olu Dara/Clark Gayton
11. Lafayette - Nicholas Payton/James Zollar/Olu Dara
12. Solitude (Reprise) - Don Byron/Christian McBride/Ron Carter

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com

Robert Altman's Kansas City is basically a 1930s gangster film, but much of the action takes place in the Hey Hey Club, a black-owned nightclub and gambling den where an all-day, all-night jam session is in progress, featuring such figures as Lester Young (played by Joshua Redman), Hawkins (Craig Handy), Ben Webster (James Carter), Basie (Cyrus Chestnut), Mary Lou Williams (Geri Allen), Hershel Evans (David Murray), Freddie Green (Mark Whitfield), Walter Page (Ron Carter), and Jimmy Rushing (Kevin Mahogany). Kansas City in the mid-1930s was a thriving jazz center and home to legendary bands led by Basie, Bennie Moten, Andy Kirk, and Jay McShann. The music here comes from that period and is done in that style. Producer Hal Willner and music director Butch Morris encouraged a loose atmosphere, with lots of give and take, even shouts of approval, and the musicians respond by playing for the immediate moment, rather than for some dimly imagined history. --Geoffrey Himes

Product Description

Robert Altman soundtrack band includes David 'Fathead' Newman and Joshua Redman. Light scuff on disc will not affect play.

Customer Reviews

4.9 out of 5 stars
(16)
4.9 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars extraordinary recreation of Kansas City's heyday January 21, 2002
Format:Audio CD
This soundtrack of Robert Altman's movie is one of my favorite jazz records in the past years.Altman's genial idea for the soundtrack was to put together some of the great musicians of the nineties and let them recreate the music played in K.C. during the thirties, without trying to copy the original versions of the tunes.In fact,any of these musicians was born at that time,except David "Fathead" Newman (born 1934,Texas),who was for years a member of Ray Charles' band.
"Blues in the dark",a 1938 Basie/Rushing tune,is a tenor duel between James Carter and Joshua Redman,remembering the famous Lester Young/Coleman Hawkins tenor battles."Moten swing",written in 1932 by Benny Moten,is played with great swing and features Jesse Davis' alto sax and James Carter.The rhythm section,made of Geri Allen,Mark Whitfield,Chris McBride and Victor Lewis reminds of the imperial Greene/Jones/Page/Basie team."I surrender dear" is a tribute to Coleman Hawkins' magnificent version of May 25,1940;the young Nicholas Payton has the opportunity for a great solo,in which he sounds just like the immense Roy Eldridge."Queer notions" was written by Hawkins when he was a member of Fletcher Henderson's orchestra;the tenor solo is played by David Murray."Lullaby of the leaves" features the great piano of the beautiful Geri Allen,and efforts by Jesse Davis and trombonist Clark Gayton. "I left my baby" may be the highlight of the record;this Basie/Rushing blues is played with ferocity.After Kevin Mahogany's vocal,the band goes into a wild,down hearted playing,with shining and rough solos by Newman,Craig Handy,and the outstanding Curtis Fowlkes on trombone."Yeah,man",a Noble Sissle original,was played by Henderson's band,and features here the tenors of Handy and Redman for another tenor battle."Froggy bottom",arranged by MaryLou Williams for Andy Kirk's band,is a perfect vehicle for Geri Allen's talented touch and David Newman's blues-rooted sax."Pagin' the devil",a 1938 Walter Page/Eddie Durham blues,featured Lester Young on clarinet;Don Byron plays the blackstick here,followed by Olu Dara on cornet and Clark Gayton."Lafayette" ,a Basie/Durham tune,is the occasion for a trumpet battle,and features Payton,Dara and James Zollar . Finally,there are two versions of Duke Ellington's "Solitude";the first one features Joshua Redman,the second has solos by Don Byron,Chris McBride and Ron Carter.
I hope many of you will be fascinated by this extraordinary tribute to the elders of jazz;it could have looked like a museum,with nostalgia and some dust;but it appears like a pure moment of madness and swing and youth too.Just sit down at the Hey Hey Club and enjoy beeing back to the mythic K.C. !
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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Format:Audio CD
This is an exciting and interesting Jazz CD, because it contains a proposal on how to deal with a problem that has never been entirely solved in jazz: how to re-create past music. In classical music you simply play the score, which contains more or less everything. But the essence of jazz is not in the score, but in all those non-objectifiable elements that are not in the score, namely, those collectively called "swing" (that's why the score is not the document in jazz, but only the recorded piece, which glorifies one particular instant).

Hence, how do you solve the problem? Do you play ancient jazz with exactly the same sound and accents (horrible) or do you use modern tricks (maybe kitsch)? Do you repeat note-by-note the original solos or do you play new improvised ones on top of the old arrangements? There have been various attempts: for instance, Lennie Niehaus' system in Clint Eastwood "Bird" to electronically remove ancient rhythm sections and superimpose Parker's solos on new rhythm sections (interesting but terrible). Tavernier with Dexter Gordon in "Round Midnight" skipped the problem and recorded new music.

In "Kansas City", instead, we have a fresh approach: that of letting modern jazzmen interpret those pieces. It is clear they pay their dues to the pioneers - the swing and freshness is there to testify this - but at the same time they are not shy about showing off their modern techniques and mastery of the overtones - especially tenor saxophonists, like Joshua Redman and James Carter, the latter being fond of mingling with the elders. Hence, it is as if they had created a virtual, parallel Kansas City of 1934, which is distinct from the real one, but claims the same letters of credit (this reviewer has embarked in the exercise of compiling a CD with the original pieces recorded in the 30's and it is worth one's while to do the comparison).

Thus, also the re-created battle between Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young (with the interpreters mentioned above) has to be taken with a grain of salt: it's a fantasy, the ancient ones did not play that way, but the relationship between the two, to some degree, holds.

The music is fascinating and stands on its own, but the fact that it represents an attempt of re-creating originals without neither diluting nor betraying their spirit gives to this CD an extra quality that makes it unique.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Old Skool by The New Skool January 5, 2000
Format:Audio CD
At first listen, one will be hooked!

I can't think of a better jazz soundtrack and I can't think of a post-70s jazz all-star recording that burns on EVERY SINGLE track. To hear cool cats like Nicholas Payton, Joshua Redman, Mark Whitfield and others in the new generation handle this watershed music with such fluidity lets the old fan and new recognize that jazz will transcend.

The follow-up KC AFTER DARK: More Music from Robert Altman's Kansas City is equally energetic, expressive and ebuillent, but missed the same flamboyant intensity by just a hair.

Also, for a smile-inducing treat read the liner notes on how this recording was done in the confines and context of the movie being made; it was recorded live for the soundtrack as well as for the various "takes" during the filming -- believe that!
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Love this music.
WE have enjoyed this music for many years and this recording is very good. I recommend it to anyone who enjoys this kind of music.
Published 3 days ago by Mary Jimenez
5.0 out of 5 stars One of my favorite discs
The movie wasn't great, but these tracks were recorded live in the club used as a set for the movie. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Budster
5.0 out of 5 stars kansas jazz cd
The price was excellent and I received the item in better condition than I expected.
Published on July 17, 2009 by Jeff Bernstein
5.0 out of 5 stars Hang Out at the Hey Hey Club
I didn't like Altman's movie at all. But my God, this soundtrack is amazing. Between the swing and bebop eras of jazz was Kansas City -- and you can hear strains of both genres in... Read more
Published on February 7, 2006 by A. Blasko
5.0 out of 5 stars MUSIC FOR THE MUSIC LOVERS
NOTHING SUPER SPECIAL TO SAY EXCEPT THAT ONCE VIEWING THE MOVIE AND LISTENING TO THE SOUND TRACK, I HAD TO FIND OUT IF IT WAS AVAILABLE ON CD'S. IT WAS, I BOUGHT, I LOVED IT! Read more
Published on September 25, 2005 by David G. Tripp
5.0 out of 5 stars I love this type of jazz, full of soul and blues...
Current musicians like Joshua Redman, James Carter and Mark Whitfield do a wonderful recreation of the music of Lester Young, Count Basie, Jimmy Rushing, Coleman Hawkins, etc. Read more
Published on October 17, 2004 by Stephen Cabral
5.0 out of 5 stars I ALMOST FELL DOWN
While channel surfing one day I saw the documentary about this music and nearly fell on the floor. A mixture of eager young jazz musicians (Redman, Mahogany, Dare etc) teamed with... Read more
Published on April 16, 2004 by D. Wolf
5.0 out of 5 stars Swing, swing, swing!
Though the movie is painful to watch, its soundtrack is stunning! Like movies where the script was written around the already-planned special effects (MI2 for instance), Altman... Read more
Published on March 29, 2001 by Robert M. Emanuel
5.0 out of 5 stars great disc
forget the movie the soundtrack is where the money is at.the music sounds alive and swings on this disc.Nicholas Payton grooves here.Joshua Redman and me have been hit&Miss. Read more
Published on March 13, 2000
5.0 out of 5 stars Jazz doesn't get much better than this.
This album has some of the swingingist, raunchiest, smooth and sweet music I've heard from any Jazz era. It's one of the most exciting albums I can think of. Read more
Published on January 1, 1999
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