Portrait of Sonny Criss
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Artist:
Sonny Criss
Label: Ojc
Category: Music
Average customer rating:
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1
UPC: 025218665520
EAN: 0025218665520
ASIN: B000000YVC
Release Date: 1991-07-01 |
Related Categories:
Bebop General
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Bebop
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Jazz
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Styles
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Music
Hard Bop
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Bebop
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Jazz
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Styles
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Music
General
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Jazz
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Styles
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Music
General
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Pop
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Music
Listmania:
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Best Albums of 1967
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Sonny Criss' Best CDs: My Picks, in Order
Tracks:
- A Million Or More Times
- Wee
- God Bless The Child
- On A Clear Day
- Blues In The Closet
- Smile
Similar Items:
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This Is Criss!
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I'll Catch the Sun
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Up, Up and Away
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Out of Nowhere
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Sonny's Dream (Birth of the New Cool)
Customer Reviews:
Criss at his best.......2006-12-05
Sonny Criss was a bop alto player of prodigious technique. Although influenced by Parker (who wasn't?), he developed his own style and sound. His career was, however, hampered by the usual 'personal problems' plus being based in the wrong location i.e. playing East Coast hard bop on the West Coast. He did, however, make a series of fine records for Prestige in the sixties. This is the pick of them. While This Is Criss is good and I'll Catch The Sun has the inestimable benefit of Hamp Hawes on piano, there is an inspiration about Portrait that lifts every track above the ordinary into a very special listening experience.
Good but somewhat underachieved.......2001-06-02
Sonny Criss is a saxophonist who deserves a lot more attention than he ever got during his life. He's often been characterized as a Parker disciple but this is somewhat misleading: he's not a soundalike like Charlie McPherson or Frank Morgan, but a creative & distinctive player like Art Pepper or Phil Woods, creating something much more personal than reheated Parker licks. The liner notes here stress "soulfulness", & that's indeed the quality one finds in Criss's music; it can inject substance into an otherwise unpromising vehicle, like the pianist Walter Davis's "A Million of More Times"; or it can make the trajectory of a piece like "On a Clear Day" feel genuinely uplifting as it moves from its mournful opening to its joyous middle section.
This is a good album that could be a touch better. There's a performance of the bop staple "Wee" which is pure bebop virtuosity: it's an astonishing performance, though marred badly by a squeaking reed, & also slightly blemished by Criss's losing his spot at one point & moving into the bridge too soon. But the real reason to listen to the album is the two ballad performances, "God Bless the Child", one of the best renditions of the tune on record; & "Smile". His ballads are never desolate or merely pretty, but instead radiate warmth, & often a gentle melancholy.
An album worth a listen; a small pity that it's so brief (a little over 30 minutes), & not entirely consistent. I would actually direct the curious to the immediately preceding disc instead, _This Is Criss_: it's perhaps slightly more consistent, & also has another of Criss's best ballad performances in "Skylark". -- Sad that Criss never made it during his life; in the 1970s, as he was finally getting back on track, he was diagnosed with stomach cancer & rather than waiting for it to take its course killed himself. With Frank Rosolino, it's one of the saddest ends for one of the greatest of West-Coast musicians of his generation: fans of Art Pepper, Chet Baker et al should certainly know his music.
Not The Best Portrait of Sonny.......2000-08-02
"Portrait of Sonny Criss" is a mixed album by an underrated alto sax wizard. While the slower numbers "On A Clear Day," God Bless the Child" and "Smile" are magical numbers, the remainder of the album does not quite hold up. The first tune "A Million Or More Times" is not very creative, and basically sounds like a 60s TV show theme song (can we say "hoping to cut a hit single"). The jazz standard "Wee" and "Blues in the Closet" are swinging but this is 1967, not 1957, and with a band of Walter Davis, Paul Chambers and (especially) Alan Dawson, I expected it to be more experimental. Instead, the quartet seems more at home on the slower tempo ballads. In all, "Portrait of Sonny Criss" deserves 3 1/2 stars, but since I can't I rounded it up. If you want to get a better portrait of Sonny, check out the newly released "Complete Imperial Sessions" on Blue Note.
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