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Stanley Turrentine - Blue Note Quintet/Sextet Studio Sessions

Blue Note Quintet/Sextet Studio Sessions
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Album Details: Blue Note Quintet/Sextet Studio Sessions

Release Date:01/01/2002
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Track List: Blue Note Quintet/Sextet Studio Sessions

Disk 1

  1. My Girl Is Just Enough Woman for Me
  2. Fine Li'l Lass
  3. Thomasville
  4. Someone to Watch over Me
  1. Stolen Sweets
  2. Just in Time
  3. Fine Li'l Lass

Disk 2

  1. Jubilee Shout
  2. You Said It
  3. Brother Tom
  1. Cotton Walk
  2. Little Girl Blue
  3. Brother Tom

Disk 3

  1. One O'Clock Jump
  2. Cherry Point
  3. One O'Clock Jump
  1. Midnight Blue
  2. Spring Can Really Hang You up th...
  3. Cherry Point

Disk 4

  1. Fried Pies
  2. In Memory Of
  3. Niger Mambo
  1. Jodie's Cha-Cha
  2. Wahoo
  3. Shirley

Disk 5

  1. Tacos
  2. Can't Buy Me Love
  3. Get It
  1. Way You Look Tonight
  2. Quittin' Time
  3. Six and Four

Pro Reviews: Blue Note Quintet/Sextet Studio Sessions

  • All Music Guide

    During its history, Mosaic has compiled many box sets dealing with the classic Blue Note years. Its five-CD Stanley Turrentine box is a bit unusual in that it groups together six albums (five from 1961-1964 and one from 1969) that are only a small percentage of Mr. T's 1960s output for the label. While he recorded in quartets, on many dates with organist Shirley Scott (his wife during the era), and with larger groups, these albums (Comin' Your Way, Jubilee Shout, A Chip Off the Old Block, In Memory Of, Mr. Natural, and Another Story) all team him with one or two other horn players. Turrentine, a soulful tenor who had a distinctive sound of his own no matter what the setting, is primarily heard playing straight-ahead jazz. His sidemen include brother Tommy Turrentine, Blue Mitchell, Lee Morgan, and Thad Jones on trumpets, Tom McIntosh and Curtis Fuller on trombones, pianists Horace Parlan, Sonny Clark, Herbie Hancock, McCoy Tyner, and Cedar Walton, guitarist Kenny Burrell, a variety of ...bassists and drummers, and (on one date) Shirley Scott. Although these albums were unrelated to each other, there is a strong unity to this box, reinforced by Turrentine's consistency and the high quality of this hard bop-oriented music. While the performances (which include one set dedicated to Count Basie) may not be the tenor's most essential recordings, these are certainly above average and quite enjoyable. - Scott Yanow, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Stanley Turrentine

A legend of the tenor saxophone, Stanley Turrentine was renowned for his distinctively thick, rippling tone, an earthy grounding in the blues, and his ability to work a groove with soul and imagination. Turrentine recorded in a wide variety of settings, but was best-known for his Blue Note soul-jazz jams of the '60s, and also underwent a popular fusion makeover in the e... Read more