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Groovin' High (Savoy) by Dizzy Gillespie (CD, Oct-2005, Savoy Jazz USA) 
Groovin' High (Savoy) by Dizzy Gillespie (CD, Oct-2005, Savoy Jazz USA)

 
Groovin' High (Savoy) by Dizzy Gillespie (CD, Oct-2005, Savoy Jazz USA)

Release Date: Oct 2005
Format: CD
Record Label: Savoy Jazz (USA)
Genre: Jazz Instrument, Trumpet
UPC: 081757015226
Product ID: EPID3055394
Description: Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet); Charlie Parker, Sonny Stitt (alto saxophone); Dexter Gordon (tenor saxophone); Howard Johnson, Lucky Warren, Ray Abrams, John Brown, Saul Moore, Scoops Carey, Billy Frazier (saxophone); Dave Burns, R...
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Track Listing
1. Blue 'N' Boogie
2. Groovin' High
3. Dizzy Atmosphere
4. All the Things You Are
5. Salt Peanuts
6. Hot House
7. Oop Bop Sh'bam
8. That's Earl Brother
9. Our Delight
10. One Bass Hit (Part 2)
11. Things to Come
12. Ray's Idea
13. Emanon

Details
Playing Time:36 min.
Contributing Artists:Charlie Parker, Cozy Cole, Dexter Gordon, John Lewis, Kenny Clarke, Milt Jackson, Ray Brown, Shelly Manne
Distributor:WEA (Distributor)
Recording Type:Studio
Recording Mode:Mono
SPAR Code:AAD

Album Notes
Personnel: Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet); Charlie Parker, Sonny Stitt (alto saxophone); Dexter Gordon (tenor saxophone); Howard Johnson, Lucky Warren, Ray Abrams, John Brown, Saul Moore, Scoops Carey, Billy Frazier (saxophone); Dave Burns, Raymond Orr, Talib Daawood, John Lynch, Matthew McKay, Elman Wright (trumpet); Alton Moore, Leon Cormenge, Gordon Thomas, Taswell Baird (trombone); Milt Jackson (vibraphone); Frank Paparelli, Clyde Hart, Al Haig, John Lewis (piano); Chuck Wayne, Remo Palmieri (guitar); Murray Shipinsky, Slam Stewart, Curley Russell, Ray Brown (bass); Shelly Manne, Cozy Cole, Sid Catlett, Kenny Clarke, Joe Harris (drums).
Recorded between February 9, 1945 and November 12, 1946. Includes liner notes by Ozzie Cadena.
Had John Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie chosen to disappear after making these combo and big band sessions, his reputation would still be secure for a thousand years. Following hard on the heels of Louis Armstrong and Roy Eldridge, Gillespie is the next great trumpet innovator in American music. Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk changed the manner in which musicians and vocalists phrased every bit as much as Armstrong did; and it is through Dizzy's direct decendants (Fats Navarro and Miles Davis) that the vast vocabulary of the modern trumpeter proceeds.
Sure, some trumpeters had a more alluring tone, but no one since Satchmo had approached the instrument with such bravura chops and harmonic sophistication. The proof is here to behold on GROOVIN' HIGH. The classic vamp and release of "Blue 'N' Boogie" seems to emerge full blown from the great jam sessions of the '30s, but with more modern chords and a looser rhythmic feel; and when Dizzy explodes out of young Dexter Gordon's tenor break, it's clear something new is afoot.
And there it is on the title tune, as Dizzy and the other half of his heartbeat, Charlie Parker, essay elongated, heavily syncopated melodic variations--culminating in the trumpeter's closing aria. On "Dizzy Atmosphere," following their dynamic solo breaks, they harmonize a complex second theme with such seamless phrasing it must have scared other horn players to death. In a contrasting mood, they redefine the famous changes to Jerome Kern's "All The Things You Are," displaying supple melodic grace.
As revolutionary as these sides are, Gillespie's 1946 sides with arranger Gil Fuller served to elevate the big band into orchestral dimensions just beyond the pale of dancers. "Things To Come" finds each section phrasing like a soloist, with broad brassy flourishes, rolling counterpoint and bold accents. Dizzy's solo is a banshee cry in which he answers long clarion shouts with tenacious, triple-timed variations. Not that this well-oiled machine couldn't get down and stomp some blues in a classic swing mode, as they do on "Eamon." Here, Gillespie follows Milt Jackson's vibes break with even more dramatic contrasts, building harmonic sand castles, only to blow them down in a swelter of rhythmic accents.

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