(JazzPlanet) Freddie Hubbard - Open Sesame (Eac Flac Cue) (RVG Edition)seeders: 6
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(JazzPlanet) Freddie Hubbard - Open Sesame (Eac Flac Cue) (RVG Edition) (Size: 383.06 MB)
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Freddie Hubbard - Open Sesame
Freddie Hubbard – Open Sesame Label: Audio Wave – AWMXR-0012 Format: CD, Album, Reissue, Remastered, XRCD Country: US Released: 1960 - RVG 2010 Genre: Jazz Style: Post Bop Extractor: EAC 0.99 prebeta 4 Used drive: HL-DT-STDVDRAM GSA-E10L Read offset correction: 667 Read mode : Secure Utilize accurate stream : Yes Defeat audio cache : Yes Make use of C2 pointers : No Codec: Flac 1.2.1; Level 8 Single File.flac, Eac.log, File.cue Multiple wav file with Gaps (Noncompliant) Accurately ripped (confidence 15) Size Torrent: 383 Mb Cover Included Track List 1 Open Sesame 7:10 2 But Beautiful 6:24 3 Gypsy Blue 6:21 4 All Or Nothing At All 5:33 5 One Mint Julep 6:01 6 Hub's Nub 6:52 Bonus Tracks 7 Open Sesame (Alternate Take) 7:15 8 Gypsy Blue (Alternate Take) 7:30 Personnel Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard Piano – McCoy Tyner Tenor Saxophone – Tina Brooks Bass – Sam Jones Drums – Clifford Jarvis Listen to Sample http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iVJYrBoPi94 review A fitful way to start would be Hubbard's first album as a leader, Open Sesame. Recorded in 1960, it is not only a very good record, it dramatizes history in the making. The trumpeter was not unknown then, but he was still in his early years; so was pianist McCoy Tyner, for whom a momentous association with John Coltrane was just around the corner. Indeed, the best-known musician at the time of this recording was bassist Sam Jones, and while he went on to bigger things with Cannonball Adderley and then Oscar Peterson, it was Hubbard and Tyner who would emerge as unambiguously major figures. That by rights should also have characterized tenorist Tina Brooks, but this superb player (his work on "But Beautiful" here is exquisite) never got the recognition he deserved, dying almost forgotten in 1974 at the age of 42. Further highlights include the leader's "Hub's Nub" and the two takes apiece of the title track and "Gypsy Blue," both excellent compositions by Brooks. Mention should also be made of drummer Clifford Jarvis, a young lion steeped in Blakey, and Rudy Van Gelder's predictably flawless engineering. The music both invigorates and enchants. It's 1960. Freddy Hubbard still looks like a teen-ager. It's his first feature recording. His sidemen? An unknown pianist named McCoy Tyner (who would become Coltrane's accompanist, one of the great keyboard stylists). For tenor, try the new kid from North Carolina, Tina Brooks, who sounds like a reborn Lester Young. Delighted with their invitation to record for Blue Note, they blow fresh and clear with no pretension, and probably have no idea they're making a classic. This set is deftly re-mastered by the great Rudy Van Gelder. Buy it NOW if you care about modern jazz or even about history. The blowing is tight, passionate yet cool. It shimmers with an innocence all too fragile, since Tina Brooks would self-destruct after only a handful of recordings and Hubbard would never find such clarity and lightness again. Brooks' compositions ('Open Sesame' and 'Gypsy Blue') are eloquent bop structures based in the blues with a Horace Silver tinge. They're destined to enter the canon of great bop recordings. Of no less merit is the funky Rudolph Toombs composition, 'One Mint Julip'. Hubbard's own 'Hub & Nub' gets a sharp treatment, as good as any later version. And the two ballads ('But Beautiful', 'All Or Nothing At All') are treated with maturity and lyricism. This CD has alternate takes of Brooks' compositions, as finely crafted as the other two versions. We have an important addition to the canon of classic bebop here, no less beautiful for its youth and innocence. Right up there with Lee Morgan's 'Sidewinder' and Hancock's 'Takin' Off.' Rarely does such rediscovery come to us! And if you're a tenor sax player like me, here's a precious footnote to the short tragic history of Tina Brooks, who would have been a titan had he stayed this fresh and avoided the addictions that ruined so many of his troubled generation Sharing Widget |