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Louis Jordan - I Believe In Music (CD 1997) 
Louis Jordan - I Believe In Music (CD 1997)

 
Louis Jordan - I Believe In Music (CD 1997)

Product ID: EPID4055849
Description: Personnel: Louis Jordan (vocals, alto saxophone); Louis Myers (guitar); Irv Cox (tenor saxophone); Duke Burrell (piano); Dave Meyers, John Duke (bass); Archie Taylor, Fred Below (drums).Reissue producer: Jerry Gordon. Recorded at Barclay...
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Track Listing
1. It's A Low Down Dirty Shame
2. Three-Handed Woman
3. Hard Head
4. I Believe In Music
5. Every Knock Is A Boost
6. Caldonia
7. Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby
8. Saturday Night Fish Fry
9. I'm Gonna Move To The Outskirts Of Town
10. Red Top
11. Take The 'A' Train
12. Groovin' In Paris (part 1)
13. Groovin' In Paris (part 2)
14. Something For Fred
15. Something For Louis

Details
Number of CDs:1
Producer:Disques Black And Blue
Recording Type:Studio
Distributor:Nova
Recording Mode:Stereo
SPAR Code:AAD

Album Notes
Personnel: Louis Jordan (vocals, alto saxophone); Louis Myers (guitar); Irv Cox (tenor saxophone); Duke Burrell (piano); Dave Meyers, John Duke (bass); Archie Taylor, Fred Below (drums).Reissue producer: Jerry Gordon. Recorded at Barclay Studio, Paris, France on November 6, 1973. Includes liner notes by Fred Bouchard.Recorded in a single Paris session on November 6, 1973, for the French label Barclay Disques, I BELIEVE IN MUSIC finds jazz vocalist Louis Jordan just barely a year prior to his death at the age of 67. In poor but not frail health, Jordan sounds somewhat subdued but hardly sickly. What's interesting about this date is that Jordan sings comparatively little, preferring to focus his energy on his under-appreciated alto saxophone skills. A blues honker in the Jimmy Forrest/King Curtis tradition, Jordan blows the hell out of his axe, trading lines with tenor Irv Cox while a hot piano-guitar-bass-drums rhythm section pounds behind them. Jordan revisits a few of his own classics, like "Saturday Night Fish Fry" and "Is You Is Or Is You Ain't My Baby," but mostly he prefers to explore other standards like Duke Ellington's "Take the A Train." The closing "Something For Louis" is a tender farewell to the recently deceased Mr. Armstrong, an old friend and cohort of Jordan's.

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