420 results on '"Jack, Gordon"'
Search Results
2. Obituaries.
3. Jimmy Witherspoon: Live In London 1966: Historic moment for British blues as Peter King, Dick Morrissey and Ray Warleigh accompany an American original at the BBC and The Bull's Head.
4. Fran Jeffries: Fran Can Really Hang You Up The Most/Annita Ray: Slow Glow: Fresh Sound's Best Voices Jazz Forgot series revives two more, including that of Fran Jeffries, notable for her appearance in Pink Panther.
5. Dave Frishberg, past master/2: Work was good in NY in the 1960s with Webster et al, but as it dried up at the end of the decade, Frishberg took a West Coast TV job which led to more jazz opportunities.
6. Dave Frishberg, past master/1: The songwriter and pianist has combined an appetite for nostalgia with lightly ironic lyrics and a sound bebop piano facility.
7. Sam Donahue: Collection 1940-48: Donahue brought an attractive Georgie Auld by way of Lester Young tenor sound to his Lunceford style band.
8. Meredith d'Ambrosio, the innocent radical: An argument for the Boston-born singer of whom Fred Hersch said 'most singers aren't musicians . . . Meredith is a musician who just happens to sing'.
9. Gerry Mulligan Sextet: Night Lights + Butterfly With Hiccups: The early 60s were a fallow period for Mulligan but the 1964 date here marks a landmark of sorts, the last studio session by his pianoless quartet.
10. Gerry Mulligan & Thelonious Monk: Mulligan Meets Monk: Contractual reasons prevented Coltrane from appearing with Monk on Riverside but the substitution of Mulligan was perfectly fruitful.
11. Vinnie Burke: All-Stars And His String Jazz Quartet: The fine and flexible bassist appears with Eddie Costa, Al Cohn, Urbie Green and the outstanding violinist Dick Wetmore.
12. Serge Chaloff: the bebop lowdown/2: Tracing the career of the Boston-born saxophonist who became known as the 'white Charlie Parker' for his mastery of the bebop idiom - on the baritone instrument. Part two.
13. Serge Chaloff: the bebop lowdown/1: Tracing the career of the Boston-born saxophonist who became known as the 'white Charlie Parker' for his mastery of the bebop idiom - on the baritone instrument. Part one.
14. Ira B. Liss Big Band Jazz Machine: Mazel Tov Kocktail! The latest album from the Liss aggregation, producing big band music in southern California for four decades, offers blues, swing, bop and a klezmer romp.
15. The 14 Jazz Orchestra: Cartoon Bebop: A heady brew of bebop, fusion and Latin coordinated and recorded in multiple locations using the participants' home studios during the pandemic.
16. Clifford Brown, trumpet titan/3: Brown seemed to excel at everything - chess, pool, table tennis, maths ... and jazz trumpet, becoming in the last case one of the most highly regarded players of the hard bop period. Part three of a three-part survey...
17. Clifford Brown, trumpet titan/2: Brown seemed to excel at everything - chess, pool, table tennis, maths ... and jazz trumpet, becoming in the last case one of the most highly regarded players of the hard bop period. Part two of a three-part survey of...
18. Clifford Brown, trumpet titan/1: Brown seemed to excel at everything - chess, pool, table tennis, maths ... and jazz trumpet, becoming in the last case one of the most highly regarded players of the hard bop period. Part one of a three-part survey of...
19. Albare: Plays Jobim Vol. 2.: Moroccan guitarist seduced by the haunting beauty of the bossa nova achieves an attractive sound reminiscent of the Hungarian guitarist Gabor Szabo.
20. The Jeff Benedict Big Big Band: The Weather Is Here, Wish You Were Beautiful: Benedict's latest release has tight ensemble playing, carefully shaded dynamics and some quite outstanding solo contributions.
21. Marty Elkins, Mike Richmond: 'Tis Autumn: Ms Elkins is back in a duo setting, this time with the virtuoso bass player Mike Richmond and a repertoire from the golden age of popular music.
22. Dave Pell, man of many parts: A typical West Coast all rounder, Pell was a Lester Young inspired saxophonist, the leader of a sleek octet (shunned by the critical establishment), a studio pro, an original photographer and creative director for Motown...
23. Cedric Caillaud: With Respect To A.C. Jobim.
24. The 8-Bit Big Band: Backwards Compatible.
25. Ike Quebec: saying it with sound: The swing-steeped tenor player who went on, as A&R man, to persuade Blue Note to take on bebop insurgents Thelonious Monk, Bud Powell and Tadd Dameron.
26. Gene Estes: Westful / Dick Grove: Big, Bad & Beautiful.
27. Willie Dennis: crossing the grain /2.
28. Willie Dennis: crossing the grain /1.
29. South Florida Jazz Orchestra: Cheap Thrills - The Music Of Rick Margitza.
30. Rachel Beausoleil: Brazz.
31. Charlie Barnet: Collection 1946-1950.
32. Alan Broadbent.
33. Bennie Green Tone to the bone.
34. Jim Waller Big Band: Bucket List.
35. J.J. Johnson and Kai Winding: the early years/2: Jay and Kai was one of the most commercially successful of jazz duos, but the two produced a wealth of good music before that. This second and concluding part focuses on Winding's beginnings and the...
36. J.J. Johnson and Kai Winding: the early years/1: Jay and Kai was one of the most commercially successful of jazz duos, but the two produced a wealth of good music before that.
37. Chet Baker: Salt Peanuts.
38. Art Blakey And The Jazz Messengers: Moanin'.
39. Stan Getz, Charlie Byrd: Jazz Samba.
40. Nat King Cole: The Complete After Midnight Sessions.
41. Bruce Johnstone, baritone with Maynard Ferguson /2.
42. Bruce Johnstone, baritone with Maynard Ferguson /1.
43. Carole Simpson: Singin' And Swingin' / Connie Haines: A Tribute To Helen Morgan.
44. Schapiro 17 - New Shoes: Kind Of Blue At 60.
45. John Pal Inderberg Trio: Radio Inderberg.
46. John Fedchock NY Sextet: Into The Shadows.
47. Don Joseph, jazz poet/3.
48. Don Joseph, jazz poet/2.
49. Don Joseph, jazz poet/1.
50. Obituary: Lennie Niehaus.
Catalog
Books, media, physical & digital resources
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.