Julian "Cannonball" Adderley Quartet 1959 - I Remember You video free download


45,666
Duration: 06:56
Uploaded: 2010/02/10

Recorded: New York City, NY May 12, 1959

Personnel:

Cannonball Adderley - Alto Sax

Wynton Kelly - Piano

Percy Heath - Bass

Albert "Tootie" Heath - Drums

Comments

9 years ago

菊山ロック

❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤ ❤

9 years ago

blues four

うっはー!気持ち良い!

9 years ago

Matthew Higgins

Happening

10 years ago

irakey

the best.I think this was done in the same year when he recorded waltz for Debby w Bill Evans.Percy is on bass here.yeah 

10 years ago

gidolf

Is it just me, or does Tootie really pick up speed in the trading fours? Expecially in his third and second slot he really steps on it, doesn't he?

10 years ago

和田基

ハローラッぴぃ☆モーニング(^^♪ツイてる!ラッぴぃ☆ボーイの”ホップ”大王です♫Julian "Cannonball" Adderley Quartet 1959 - I Remember You#JAZZ 

10 years ago

vova47

I agree about this album, but I think the only predictable thing about Stitt is that he's going to play the hell out of whatever tune he has chosen on alto, tenor or baritone. And let me remind you that Cannon was a big Sonny Stitt fan, that's according to Nat.

10 years ago

caponsacchi

There aren't many alto players in Cannon's league after Bird. Stitt, of course, but for all his mastery of the horn (practically a continuum between alto and tenor), Sonny is cleaner but more predictable than Cannon. And tone is important. Over the years, I've grown averse to Jackie's raw (always slightly sharp) sound. This is my favorite Cannon record--very underrated. Just Cannon and rhythm--no other horns to distract.

10 years ago

Adam McCulloch

Jackie McLean version lovely too.

10 years ago

Adam McCulloch

my favourite ever alto player

11 years ago

exjazzbass baz

lets put it this way nobody played alto better than cannonball i.m.o.and nobody was better than bird the difference was bird f.....himself up early on.when you think of how he played in such a permanent state of mental chaos.jesus. b.t.w never heard or met a jazz player that didnt repeat a phrase.l.o.l.many thanks.

12 years ago

MrSaxman50

Every Jazz Artist plays their own stuff..what they have inside their soul...at any given moment in time.."He plays his licks...and I play mine" Lester Young.To say who is the best..is like saying which leaf is the best on a giant tree....in the Summertime....or which Snowflake is the most beautiful.Sometimes the beauty can be accomplished with just afew well played notes....sometimes it can be done with many,many well places notes....or pauses.Just enjoy them all.

12 years ago

caponsacchi

Oh, comparisons? Jeep (Hodges) and Benny Carter before Bird. Then after Bird, Desmond, Stitt, Phil Woods along with Cannon. These are the first 7 in my book. If you go to 8, make it Art Pepper. Stitt is the textbook player, 150 albums under his name, as many songs as Sinatra, a more accessible Bird. And a monster on tenor, whether soul or bebop. For his tone, articulations, tunes, everyone should start with him. Art Tatum of the alto.

12 years ago

caponsacchi

This may be Cannonball's most underrated record--just Cannon plus a great rhythm section with the peerless Wynton Kelly on piano. Each tune is a winner. I Remember You (Johnny Mercer) but also Barefoot Sunday Blues, If This Isn't Love, the old standard Poor Butter Fly, gorgeous Serenata. I've got him with Coltrane, Miles, Bill Evans, of course Nat but this wears best. Jackie I grew to dislike; Cannon always got better over the years.

12 years ago

lenardsimpson

@1979saxman i would disagree with the creative part. if you think about bird was amzing when he was 19 making a ton of recordings and getting alot better but he was so addicted to drugs so he couldnt practice alot going to the hospital and stuff, he died very early. so think how sick he would of been if he wasnt on drugs and lived to be older. cannonball lived much longer than parker he had room to progress over the years parker didnt

13 years ago

1979saxman

@ollithehorn well, i don't know about him never repeating a phrase, I'm pretty sure that's impossible. That's kind of akin to someone never speaking the same sentence in their lifetime. Although he is the MOST CREATIVE improviser bar none. Yes, even more than bird. Bird invented the language, but cannonball innovated it!

13 years ago

GIovanni Bulgari

really don't like kelly's style, not even when he was with Miles, but definitely agree about Cannonball

13 years ago

1979saxman

I said it once, and I'll say it over and over and over again. Cannonball is the MOST LYRICALLY CREATIVE jazz alto saxophonist who ever lived!

14 years ago

vova47

Great track from one of my favourite Cannon albums.Too bad he didn´t make more straight ahead quartet albums like this. I , for one, would have loved to hear him with, say, Barry Harris,Sam Jones and Billy Higgins. I am not overly crazy about Nat Adderley or hit funk tunes they indulged in with that quintet,but I am in a " Minority" here .......

Related Videos