Baritones and French Horns

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Philip Cross (talk | contribs) at 13:55, 28 June 2018 ({{Hampton Hawes}}). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Modern Jazz Survey – Baritones And French Horns
Studio album by
Pepper Adams/Cecil Payne/Julius Watkins/Dave Amram
Released1957
RecordedApril 20 and May 18, 1957
StudioVan Gelder Studio, Hackensack
GenreHard bop, cool jazz
Length76:22
LabelPrestige
PRLP 16-6
ProducerTeddy Charles

Baritones and French Horns is a 16+23 rpm album released in 1957 on Prestige Records. The album is one of a series of releases attributed to the Prestige All Stars.[1] Each side of the album was a distinct date with distinct personnel. From a jazz.com review,[2] Kenny Berger wrote, "Among the many innovative technological failures of the mid- and late- 1950s, the 16-rpm phonograph record stands as the industry's answer to the Edsel. One of Prestige's contributions to this auditory dustbin was an LP on steroids titled Baritones and French Horns under the supervision of vibist, composer, arranger, A&R man Teddy Charles. The baritone side of this album was reissued twice on LP and twice more on CD under John Coltrane's name [as Dakar], though Pepper Adams was the actual leader on these sessions." The "french horns" side of the album was reissued as Prestige ST 8305, Curtis Fuller and Hampton Hawes with French Horns.[3]

Track listing

Baritones

  1. "Dakar" (Teddy Charles) — 7:09
  2. "Mary's Blues" (Pepper Adams) — 6:47
  3. "Route 4" (Charles) — 6:55
  4. "Velvet Scene" (Waldron) — 4:53
  5. "Witches Pit" (Adams) — 6:42
  6. "Catwalk" (Charles) — 7:11

French Horns

  1. "Ronnie's Tune" (Ball, Zito) — 7:27
  2. "Roc And Troll" (Charles) — 7:11
  3. "A-Drift" (Zito) — 6:13
  4. "Lyriste" (Charles) — 6:00
  5. "Five Spot" (Amram) — 3:28
  6. "No Crooks" (Charles) — 6:26

Personnel

Baritones (recorded April 20, 1957), also released as Dakar under John Coltrane's name

French Horns (recorded May 18, 1957), also released as Curtis Fuller and Hampton Hawes with French Horns

References