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Getting To Know The Weather Solo Baritone Saxophone (1986)—Eve Beglarian [65] A Day in the City for solo saxophone (1986)—Howard J. Buss; Midnight Omen for solo saxophone (1986)—Howard J. Buss; Phoenix (1988)—Ryo Noda; Hard for tenor saxophone solo (1988)—Christian Lauba
This same trip to Los Angeles also included recording sessions that resulted in hits for Domino, including "Blue Monday", on which Hardesty played the baritone saxophone solo because the other musician was unable to get the right sound; it was the first and only time that Hardesty played baritone sax. One music writer said this solo "is as ...
Flanagan revisited "Giant Steps" on several recordings, including an album named after the song, which he dedicated to Coltrane. [8] In some of the alternate takes, Cedar Walton is at the piano, declining to take a solo and playing at a slower tempo than the takes with Flanagan. Coltrane had shown Walton "Giant Steps" a few weeks beforehand ...
It was pure love, expressed over a sophisticated, artful groove, layered with imaginative overdubs of background vocal arrangements, gritty sax solos, vintage analog keyboards, percussion and strings.
The genre of solo saxophone has a rich, but largely unmapped history in contemporary music, particularly jazz. [1] Many, but not all, musicians who play and record solo saxophone use extended techniques, a vocabulary of the saxophone beyond its normal range.
Mother Goose, solo@afkikker in Bone: a tribute to Steve Lacy: Gent: 2003 [CD attached in book] Live 2001-12 The Beat Suite: Universal Music Jazz France: 2003: 2002-05 Work with Anthony CoxăDaniel Humair Sawano: 2003: 2002-07 One More Time with Joëlle Léandre Leo: 2005: Live 2002-07, 2002-08 Leaves Blossoms: Naked Music: 2005: Live 2002-12 ...
Saxophone Solos is a solo soprano saxophone album by Evan Parker. Three of the tracks were recorded live on June 17, 1975, at the Unity Theatre in London, and the remaining music was recorded on September 9, 1975 at the FMP Studio in Berlin. [ 1 ]
Saxophone Colossus is the sixth studio album by American jazz saxophonist Sonny Rollins. Perhaps Rollins's best-known album, it is often considered his breakthrough record. [ 4 ] It was recorded monophonically on June 22, 1956, with producer Bob Weinstock and engineer Rudy Van Gelder at the latter's studio in Hackensack, New Jersey .