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SET 1:
    00 - MrJazzbo-April262016
    01 - Wynton Marsalis - Think of One
Think of One is the fourth studio album by Wynton Marsalis, released
    in 1983 through Columbia Records. The album peaked at number 102 on
    the Billboard 200 and number one on Billboard's Top Jazz Albums
    chart.[2] The album takes its name from the Thelonious Monk
    composition "Think of One", which is performed on the album. The
    album earned Marsalis a Grammy Award for Best Jazz Instrumental
    Performance by a Soloist. Phil Bowler – Bass, Ray Drummond – Bass,
    Kenny Kirkland – Piano, Branford Marsalis – Sax (Alto), Sax
    (Soprano), Sax (Tenor), Wynton Marsalis – Arranger, Producer,
    Trumpet, Jeff "Tain" Watts – Drums. Composer - Thelonius Monk.
  
04 - Waters of March - Cassandra Wilson
    The Waters of March (Portuguese: "Águas de Março" [ˈaɡwɐʒ dʒi
    ˈmaʁsu]) is a Brazilian song composed by Antônio Carlos Jobim
    (1972). Jobim wrote both the English and Portuguese lyrics. The
    lyrics, originally written in Portuguese, do not tell a story, but
    rather present a series of images that form a collage; nearly every
    line starts with "É..." ("[It] is..."). In 2001, "Águas de Março"
    was named as the all-time best Brazilian song in a poll of more than
    200 Brazilian journalists, musicians and other artists conducted by
    Brazil's leading daily newspaper, Folha de S.Paulo.[1] It was also
    voted by the Brazilian edition of Rolling Stone as the 2nd greatest
    Brazilian song. The inspiration for "Águas de Março" came from Rio
    de Janeiro's rainiest month. March is typically marked by sudden
    storms with heavy rains and strong winds that cause flooding in many
    places around the city. The lyrics and the music have a constant
    downward progression much like the water torrent from those rains
    flowing in the gutters, which typically would carry sticks, stones,
    bits of glass, and almost everything and anything. The orchestration
    creates the illusion of the constant descending of notes much like
    Shepard tones.
    
    SET 3:
      05 - Dave Brubeck - Time In 
    Time In is a 1966 studio album by Dave Brubeck, the last of
    Brubeck's 'Time' series. All the compositions on it were written by
    Dave Brubeck (two co-written with his wife Lola Brubeck), and
    performed by the Dave Brubeck Quartet. Stylistically, they cover a
    considerable range, from slow ballads in a West Coast jazz sound, to
    some of the religiously themed work he began to essay in the later
    1960s (Forty Days, which would later appear in his The Light in the
    Wilderness: An Oratorio for Today), to more driving bebop-influenced
    numbers. AllMusic's reviewer Thom Jurek wrote that it was "one of
    his most musically adventurous. ... of all the 'Time' recordings,
    this is the least commercial ... Though it is seldom celebrated as
    such, this is one of Brubeck's finest moments on Columbia." Dave
    Brubeck - piano, Paul Desmond - alto saxophone, Gene Wright - double
    bass, Joe Morello - drums.
    06 - Doc Cheatham - Wolverine Blues
    September 17, 1992 & September 18, 1992. There has never been a
    trumpeter in recorded history over the age of 80 on Doc Cheatham's
    level. Age 87 at the time of this CD, he plays with power,
    creativity and confidence on this quartet set of swing standards. He
    dominates the music with his trumpet solos and quiet but charming
    vocals and, even with the participation of a strong rhythm section
    led by pianist Chuck Folds, Cheatham is the obvious star. This
    historic set is a real gem on several levels and is highly
    recommended. - AllMusic Review by Scott Yanow
    07 - George Adams/Don Pullen Quartet - 1529 Gunn Street
    Recorded in 1987 for the Blue Note label. Don Pullen – piano, George
    Adams – tenor saxophone, flute, Cameron Brown – bass , Dannie
    Richmond – drums.
    
     SET 4:
      08 - The Miles Davis All Stars - Blue 'n' Boogie
    From the album Walkin ' - 1954. Miles Davis on trumpet, J. J.
    Johnson on trombone, Lucky Thompson on sax, Horace Silver on piano,
    Percy Heath on bass and Kenny Clarke on drums. The song is a cover
    of the Dizzy Gillespie and Frank Paparelli tune.
    09 - Gil Evans Orchestra - Bird Feathers
    Recorded in New York City on May 26, 1958. Art Blakey (ds), Paul
    Chambers (b), Chuck Wayne (g), Joe Bennet (tb), Frank Rehak (tb),
    Tom Mitchell (tb), Julius Watkins (fh), Bill Barber (tuba), Phil
    Bodner (reeds), Johnny Coles (tp), Louis N\Mucci (tp), Clyde
    Reasinger (tp), Cannonball Adderley (as) Gil Evans (p, arr, cond).
     10 - Miles Davis & Gil Evans - Corcovado 
    Quiet Nights is a studio album by jazz musician Miles Davis, and his
    fourth album collaboration with Gil Evans, released in 1964 on
    Columbia Records, catalogue CL 2106 and CS 8906 in stereo. Recorded
    mostly at Columbia's 30th Street Studios in Manhattan, it is the
    final album by Davis and Evans. "Corcovado" (known in English as
    "Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars") is a bossa nova song written by
    Antônio Carlos Jobim in 1960. An English lyric was later written by
    Gene Lees. The Portuguese title refers to the Corcovado mountain in
    Rio de Janeiro. Andy Williams recorded the song with English lyrics,
    reaching #92 in the Billboard Hot 100 and #18 in the Hot Adult
    Contemporary Tracks chart in 1965.
    
    SET 5:
    11 - James Carter - Sandu
    Jurassic Classics, Recorded on 16, 17 April 1994 at Power Station,
    NYC. Bass – Jaribu Shahid, Drums – Tani Tabbal, Piano – Craig
    Taborn, Soprano Saxophone, Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – James
    Carter.
      12 - Little Jimmy Scott - All The Way
    Jimmy Scott is beyond category, an interpreter of ballads at tempos
    so languorous they seem practically motionless, hovering
    atmospherically in the air like the smoke in a barroom. All but
    forgotten when he recorded this album in 1992 at the age of 66, it
    stands as his finest achievement, the capstone of a career marked by
    extraordinary promise and devastating disappointment--including a
    legendary Ray Charles-produced album in 1962 that had to be
    withdrawn because of a contractual dispute. Scott's voice is
    uniquely androgynous and capable of marvelous subtlety; the closer
    you listen, the more it seems to blur (and transcend)
    characteristics of sex and age. That quality has made him a favorite
    of folks like director David Lynch, but his musicianship makes all
    other concerns superfluous. Here he's accompanied by first-class
    jazz musicians: Kenny Barron (piano), Ron Carter (bass), Grady Tate
    (drums), John Pisano (guitar), and David "Fathead" Newman (sax). The
    song, "All The Way" stands the test of time as a world-class
    classic. Never was there a voice more suited for song.
    13 - Clifford Brown & Max Roach - Cherokee
    Clifford Brown (tp), Harold Land (ts), Richie Powell (p), George
    Morrow (d), Max Roach (ds). Cherokee. 1955. Study in Brown.
    
    SET 6:
    14 - Nina Simone - I Put Spell On You
    I Put a Spell on You is a 1965 album by Jazz
    singer/pianist/songwriter Nina Simone for Philips Records. It
    features some of Simone's best known songs. "I Put a Spell on You",
    a song originally by Screamin' Jay Hawkins. The original version
    gave the song an ironic theme, but Simone transformed it into a
    thrilling love song, complete with horns and strings. It had become
    one of her most well known songs. She used the title for her
    autobiography I Put A Spell On You (1992). The Beatles drew
    inspiration from the song for their song "Michelle". Recorded    New
    York City January 1965. Phillips. 
      15 - Ornette Coleman - Ramblin'
    Album: Change of the Century (1960), Written by Ornette Coleman;
    Ornette Coleman — alto saxophone, Don Cherry — pocket trumpet,
    Charlie Haden — bass, Billy Higgins — drums
    16 - Sonny Rollins - Airegin
    "Airegin" was first recorded in 1954 by the Miles Davis Quintet and
    released in the US on the 10" LP Miles Davis with Sonny Rollins. The
    personnel on that recording was Davis (trumpet), Sonny Rollins
    (tenor saxophone), Horace Silver (piano), Percy Heath (bass), and
    Kenny Clarke (drums). A version with lyrics composed by Jon
    Hendricks appeared on the 1958 Lambert, Hendricks & Ross album
    The Swingers! It is considered a challenging song due to its fast
    tempo and complex changes.
    
    FINAL SET:
    17 - Sun Ra - Enlightenment
    Jazz in Silhouette is a jazz album by Sun Ra and His Arkestra. It
    was recorded on March 6, 1959 and released in May of the same year.
    Recorded at El Saturn Studio, Chicago, the album is one of three
    records that the Arkestra released in the 1950s - the other two
    being Jazz by Sun Ra and Super-Sonic Jazz.
      | 
SET 2:
02 - Ahmad Jamal - Poinciana (Song of the Trees) Argo 
Ahmad Jamal (born Fritz Russell Jones, July 2, 1930) is an American jazz pianist, composer, and educator. According to American music critic Stanley Crouch, Jamal is second in importance in the development of jazz after 1945 only to Charlie Parker. For five decades, he has been one of the most successful small-group leaders in jazz. At the Pershing: But Not for Me is a 1958 jazz album by pianist Ahmad Jamal. The recordings took place on January 16, 1958, at the Pershing Lounge of Chicago's Pershing Hotel and each set played that night was recorded, a total of 43 tracks, of which 8 were selected by Jamal for the album. The LP was released as Argo Records LP-628. Jamal's previous releases on Argo had been from previously made masters; this was his first release recorded for Argo, and his first album recorded live. Ahmad's accompanied by Ahmad Jamal on (piano), Israel Crosby (bass) & Vernel Fournier (drums). 
03 - Cab Calloway - Sweet Georgia Brown
Maceo Pinkard, Ben Bernie and Kenneth Casey's "Sweet Georgia brown" was recorded on the July 9th, 1931 session, the results of which were released on the Romeo and Banner Budget Labels. The solo sequence on Foots Thomas' arrangement of "Sweet Georgia Brown" is Foots Thomas, Edwin Swayzee, Harry White, Andrew White and Arville Harris. | 
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Louis Armstrong's New Orleans, with Wynton Marsalis: 
 A Joe Bev Musical Sound Portrait 
by Joe Bevilacqua Narrated by Joe Bevilacqua, Winton Marsalis, Donald Newlove, Leonard Lopate, Louis Armstrong 
Veteran
 radio producer Joe Bevilacqua hosts this entertaining, informative 
hour, recorded in the French Quarter of New Orleans and featuring jazz 
great Wynton Marsalis, jazz author and historian Donald Newlove, WNYC 
Radio talk show host Leonard Lopate, members of the Preservation Hall 
Jazz Band, and others, on the origins of jazz, and the life and music of
 legendary trumpeter Louis Armstrong. Also featured is the music of 
Armstrong throughout his long career, and rare recordings, including 
audio from a 1957 CBS TV documentary with Edward R. Murrow. | 
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