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- Newsgroups: rec.music.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!usc!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!linac!att!cbnews!ajw
- From: ajw@cbnews.cb.att.com (andrew.j.whitman)
- Subject: Jimmy Blanton (was Re: TOP TEN FAMOUS JAZZ BASSISTS)
- Organization: AT&T
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1992 14:52:59 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Dec21.145259.12792@cbnews.cb.att.com>
- References: <1992Dec18.202655.17289@Csli.Stanford.EDU> <tp20r1s@zola.esd.sgi.com> <malcolm.724797024@wrs.com>
- Lines: 49
-
- In article <malcolm.724797024@wrs.com> malcolm@wrs.com (Malcolm Humes) writes:
- >
- >sik@grosz.esd.sgi.com (Seth Katz) writes:
- >>>
- >>Malcolm, try these:
- >
- >>- Fred Hopkins
- >>- Jimmy Blanton
- >>- Ronnie Boykins
- >>- Alan Silva
- >>- Reggie Workman
- >>- Barry Guy
- >>- Peter Kowald
- >>- Malachi Favors
- >
- >Wow! I'm clueless, and I'm not afraid to admit it. Who the heck are
- >these guys? Seriously, I'd like to know more, and I suppose I'm
- >curious if they play acoustic or electric or both.
-
- Well, I can fill you in on Jimmy Blanton, at any rate.
-
- Jimmy Blanton was the bassist in Duke Ellington's band during the early
- forties. He had an amazingly fluid, melodic style, and was one of
- the first (if not the first) bassists to lift his lines away from
- the beat. Virtually every jazz bassist that has followed owes
- him a tremendous debt. In essence, he took the bass from "oom-pah-pah"
- to virtuoso solo instrument.
-
- Unfortunately, he died very young and left only a small recorded legacy.
- I'd highly recommend that you check out RCA Bluebird's "The Webster/
- Blanton Years," a 3-CD set of recordings made by what was arguably
- Ellington's greatest band (the Webster, in this case, being Ben
- Webster, one of the giants of the tenor sax). Although most of
- the selections feature the big band, and thus somewhat obscure
- Blanton's contributions, there are also a number of piano/bass
- duets that really showcase his talents. If you don't feel like
- going the box set route, Smithsonian has also released a series
- of double-album sets of Ellington's recordings on a year-by-year
- basis. The years (and titles) you are after are "1940," "1941,"
- and "1942." It's classic jazz in any case, and would be at the
- top of my list of recommendations for anyone curious to find out
- what Ellington's music was all about.
-
- > - Malcolm
-
- Andy Whitman
- AT&T Bell Laboratories, Columbus, Ohio
- att!cblpn!ajw or
- ajw@cblpn.att.com
-