Alyn Shipton has a new idea for JRR: nominate the hottest jazz ever recorded. In the interests of getting it started, here are some suggestions:
1. St Louis Blues - the 1940s Albert Ammons small group with his son Gene; the contrast between the two-beat intro and the 4/4 sections is amazing. I never thought that Ammons Sr needed a rhythm section, but this one really belts things along
2. I would do anything for you - Billy Banks' Rythmmakers; Banks himself is a bit of a letdown but Red Allen and Pee Wee Russell (on tenor, yet)
3. Hot mallets - Lionel Hampton; if there's anything, anywhere, that swings more than Hamp's solo, I've yet to hear it - though No 4 runs it close.
4. Blowin' up a storm by Woody Herman's First herd.
I suppose it doesn't really apply to bop and after, but if it does, I'd nominate Bud Powell's trio version of Bud's Bubble: the way he tears into the them right from the start is phenomenal and it just goes on from there.
1. St Louis Blues - the 1940s Albert Ammons small group with his son Gene; the contrast between the two-beat intro and the 4/4 sections is amazing. I never thought that Ammons Sr needed a rhythm section, but this one really belts things along
2. I would do anything for you - Billy Banks' Rythmmakers; Banks himself is a bit of a letdown but Red Allen and Pee Wee Russell (on tenor, yet)
3. Hot mallets - Lionel Hampton; if there's anything, anywhere, that swings more than Hamp's solo, I've yet to hear it - though No 4 runs it close.
4. Blowin' up a storm by Woody Herman's First herd.
I suppose it doesn't really apply to bop and after, but if it does, I'd nominate Bud Powell's trio version of Bud's Bubble: the way he tears into the them right from the start is phenomenal and it just goes on from there.
Comment