I loved this disc. My wife was using the computer this morning, so I took the disc out into the garden and listened on my walkman. After she had vacated the record room, I wanted to compare "Please send me someone to love" with my version on LP and, when I put the disc in the CD player, found that nearly every track title and artist was coming up on the display.
So I know that some of my guesses were way off. Nonetheless, I'm just going to type out what I wrote out while I was listening to the disc anyway.
1 Basie style big band featuring 2 tenor players. Very Ammons/Stitt oriented. Guitarist sounds West Coast. I think this is the same band as #13 [so, although this track title didn't come up, I'm pretty sure who it is].
2 Another big band. Piano lead off. Trumpet solo - YAY! Tenor sax. Feel I know the drummer - there's a characteristic use of the cymbals coming in quite often. Trombone solo, piano solo. Very hip tune. Like this a lot.
3 Don Wilkerson tune but not Don Wilkerson playing it. Wild trumpet player! Very good imitation of Don Wilkerson. Really like the trumpet player.
4 Know this tune. "Prince Albert". Tenor & alto solos good but not special.
5 Know the riff played by bass. Alto player is a bit familiar. Is this Anthony Ortega? I think so. Quote from Clifford Brown tune that Charles Kynard recorded [song of Delilah]. Is this the tune? Sounds like Jack Wilson on piano. Overall sound reminds me of Curtis Amy's "Native land". What about Vic Gaskin on bass and Doug Sides on drum?
6 Live recording of "Moanin'". Only alto sax and piano. Very funky indeed. Touches of Les McCann in intro, not him though. VG left hand. Wonder if this is Jack Wilson again.
7 This one fooled me to start off with, even though I actually have it. But when the and came in, it was clearly B B King. Recorded at Newport in New York in '72 with JOS on organ.
8 Alto sax, piano rhythm. Ballad. Don't know the tune. Don't know the players. Short.
9 Watch that gravy fly man! Tenor sax, tpt, tbn solos. Love the trombonist. Alto sax reminds me of Clifford Scott. Another trumpet solo. Reminds me of Johnny Otis' CD "Spirit of the black territory bands". Not that band but similar approach.
10 Trumpet & rhythm. Wah wah. Nice blues. Piano solo reminds me of Jr Mance a bit, but not that good.Tpt solo off wahwah. Guitar solo made me think of Phil Upchurch. Tpt back to wahwah at end. Dunno who this is.
11 Piano & rhythm, big band. Swing time again. Trombone solo.All a bit amateurish and disorganised, like a rehearsal band. Tenor solo. Don't know the tune. Back to trombone and probably different player; this solo's a bit more interesting. Track too long at 7:48.
12 Piano & rhythm. "Since I fell for you". Who's the singer. Trumpet & tenor sax backing. Very much a late '40s feeling to this. Lula Reed?
13 Very familiar tune from Ammons/Stitt book. Same band as #1. Wonderful revival!
MG