Henry B. Meets Alvin G. Once in a Wild

Henry B. Meets Alvin G. Once in a Wild Artist: Spike Robinson w , and the Al Cohn Quintet
Label: Capri Records
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 054987400629
EAN: 0054987400629
ASIN: B00004WFFL


Release Date: 2000-09-12

Related Categories:

Cool Jazz Cool Jazz
Related | Jazz | Styles | Music
General General
Related | Jazz | Styles | Music
General General
Related | Pop | Styles | Music
General General
Related | Jazz | Indie Music | Stores | Music

Listmania:

  1. Obscure Treasures: 26 Endangered Jazz Recordings

Tracks:

  1. Sippin' At Bell's
  2. Ballad Medley: Easy Living / These Foolish Things
  3. Sweet's Blues
  4. Rustic Hop
  5. Once In A While
  6. Low Life
  7. Bye Bye Blues
  8. Just An Old Manuscript
  9. This Can't Be Love

Similar Items:

  1. Jusa Bit O' Blues, Vol. 1
  2. Real Corker
  3. Just a Bit O' Blues, Vol. 2
  4. Reminiscin
  5. Good Night, And Good Luck

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars Last Chance.......2004-06-23

I'm surprised to see this one still in the catalog. Al Cohn's tenor prowess throughout his career is widely documented in numerous musical contexts, though some of his best long-playing recordings (especially "Cohn on the Saxophone" and "The Blues Is Everybody's Business") are unlikely ever to be released on CD. Home-town hero Spike Robinson (he graduated from high school in Kenosha, Wisconsin) is another matter. Waiting until the mid-1980's and his mid-50's to devote full time to playing his horn (he worked as an engineer), he had little time to make his mark before suffering a rather precipitous decline in health during the last half of the 1990's. It's doubtful that more than 5 or 6 of his recordings are still available. This is certainly one of his best (an album he made of the music of Harry Warren is also worth chasing down). Whereas Cohn began to play more aggressively and extrovertishly with the passing years, Spike held to a lyrical and thoughtful Getz line. It serves him well. Listen carefully to the opening number, "Sippin' at Bell's," and feel free to judge between the seasoned veteran (Cohn had recorded with Coltrane and numerous jazz all-stars) and the late bloomer. Spike's sense of melodic line places him in the driver's seat, distinguishing him as a player with uncanny vision, capable of executing non-stop, elaborate, purposeful melodic ideas that come to a momentary pause only when there's a need to breathe. Spike's best work on record is on these rare occasions when he's in the challenging company of an Al Cohn, a Ray Brown, or a Victor Feldman. And since he lived in Europe during most of his music career, those moments were all too infrequent. All the more reason to pick up this recording, which is every bit as satisfying as some of the memorable Al Cohn-Zoot Sims meetings, though I wouldn't expect it to be available for much longer.

Music CD:

  1. A Lovesome Thing ~ Frank Morgan
  2. Feelin' So Blue ~ Woody Herman
  3. Bucket's Got a Hole in It ~ Barney Bigard
  4. City Gates ~ George Adams
  5. Powerhouse Sounds of the 70's ~ Peter Herbolzheimer
  6. Electric ~ Moreno
  7. 300 ~ Briggan Krauss
  8. Colours ~ James Robinson
  9. Yesterdays & Todays ~ Jim Widner Big Band
  10. Falling in Love with Paul Desmond ~ Paul Desmond

Music CD

Music CD

Music CD

Boy ~ Trick Daddy

Ride a Rock Horse ~ Roger Daltrey

East Side Sound: 1959-1968 ~ Various Artists

Los 15 Grandes Exitos ~ Vicente Fernandez

Blood Wedding ~ Stevie Craig Fütur Kult

Achin for Summer ~ Markus Holler

Reality ~ No Children

Real Hustlers ~ Gotta Boyz

All Eyez on Me ~ 2 Pac

No Room 2 Breathe ~ Dynamic Twins