×
Uh-oh, it looks like your Internet Explorer is out of date.
For a better shopping experience, please upgrade now.
4988031380406
$27.34
$27.99
Save 2%
Current price is $27.34, Original price is $27.99. You Save 2%.

CD(Special Edition)
Members save with free shipping everyday!
See details
See details
27.34
In Stock
Overview
Ben Webster's final American recording was one of his greatest. At 55, the tenor saxophonist was still very much in his prime but considered out of style in the U.S. He would soon permanently move to Europe where he was better appreciated. This CD has the nine selections originally included on the LP of the same name, a quartet set with either Hank Jones or Roger Kellaway on piano, bassist Richard Davis, and drummer Osie Johnson. Webster's tone has rarely sounded more beautiful than on "Someone to Watch Over Me" and "Our Love Is Here to Stay." In addition, one song from the same session (but originally released on a sampler) and two tunes featuring Webster on an Oliver Nelson date (More Blues and the Abstract Truth) wrap up this definitive CD.
Product Details
Release Date: | 05/29/2020 |
---|---|
Label: | Universal Japan |
UPC: | 4988031380406 |
catalogNumber: | 1380406 |
Rank: | 78806 |
Related Subjects
Customer Reviews
Related Searches
Explore More Items
Acrobat's fifth volume of America's Greatest Hits, spotlights 1954 with 25 songs by the original ...
Acrobat's fifth volume of America's Greatest Hits, spotlights 1954 with 25 songs by the original
artists. Along with favorites by Tony Bennett, Perry Como, Frank Sinatra, Patti Page and the Crew Cuts, are lesser heard oldies by Tony Martin, Don ...
In the 1950s, tenor-saxophonist Ben Webster was at the peak of his powers. His musical ...
In the 1950s, tenor-saxophonist Ben Webster was at the peak of his powers. His musical
personality really featured two separate emotions: harsh and tough on the faster pieces and surprisingly warm and tender on the ballads. Webster uses the latter ...
It's not hard to collect a variety of superbly sung and orchestrated ballads by arguably ...
It's not hard to collect a variety of superbly sung and orchestrated ballads by arguably
the 20th century's most popular and accomplished singer, as this collection of Frank Sinatra classics amply illustrates. Sinatra's early recordings of Swing Era standards such ...
Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster and trumpeter Harry Sweets Edison, both veterans of the swing era ...
Tenor saxophonist Ben Webster and trumpeter Harry Sweets Edison, both veterans of the swing era
(although associated with different orchestras), had long wanted to record a full album together. The results, a swinging quintet set with pianist Hank Jones, bassist ...
The music on this spirited but amateurish Dixieland record marks the first release of material
by an 11-year-old pianist named Harry Connick, Jr. His solos are quite basic (not on the level of Sergio Salvatore) while his vocal on Doctor ...
Back by popular demand, Rod Stewart adds a fifth album to the chart-topping Great American ...
Back by popular demand, Rod Stewart adds a fifth album to the chart-topping Great American
Songbook series with Fly Me to the Moon: The Great American Songbook, Volume V. Reuniting Rod with his longtime collaborators Richard Perry and Clive Davis, ...
Diana Krall's extraordinary new album, 'Glad Rag Doll' is an exhilirating and adventurous exploration of ...
Diana Krall's extraordinary new album, 'Glad Rag Doll' is an exhilirating and adventurous exploration of
new sounds, new instrumentation and new musicians. It stars a singer and piano player, filled with mischief, humour and a renewed sense of tenderness and ...
Ten years after his first holiday-themed album, When My Heart Finds Christmas, pianist/vocalist Harry Connick, ...
Ten years after his first holiday-themed album, When My Heart Finds Christmas, pianist/vocalist Harry Connick,
Jr. found the spirit again with Harry for the Holidays. Still centered on Connick's vocals, this foray into tinsel tunes is more jazz oriented than ...