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Ike Quebec - Swing Hi-Swing Lo

Swing Hi-Swing Lo
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Album Details: Swing Hi-Swing Lo

Release Date:01/01/1946
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Track List: Swing Hi-Swing Lo

  1. Tiny's Exercise
  2. Blue Harlem
  3. Hard Tack
  4. Mad About You
  5. Facin' the Face
  6. Dolores
  7. Topsy
  8. Masquerade Is Over
  1. Basically Blue
  2. Someone to Watch over Me
  3. Zig Billion
  4. Girl of My Dreams
  5. Scufflin'
  6. I.Q. Blues
  7. Jim Dawgs

Pro Reviews: Swing Hi-Swing Lo

  • All Music Guide

    It's not as exhaustive as Quebec's portion of the Mosaic box The Complete Blue Note Recordings of Ike Quebec and John Hardee, but now that set is out of print, the Spanish-import compilation Swing Hi Swing Lo becomes an indispensable chronicle of Quebec's early years (1944-46). There are no alternate takes here, only the masters that were officially released on 78 rpm records (which actually makes the collection more compulsively playable). In addition to the Blue Note material, there are also four tracks from a 1945 session for Savoy that produced the hit ballad "I.Q. Blues." These performances showcase Quebec in a so-called "swingtet" format, playing big band-inspired swing in small groups (between five and seven members total) that allow for more harmonic flexibility. That means Quebec is free to incorporate modernist bop vocabulary as well, and he stakes out a warmly accessible middle ground between the two styles. Yet even in his more sophisticated moments, Quebec remains an earth...y stylist whose big, round tone and expressive vibrato are obviously grounded in the blues. Even this early on, the smoky, late-night ballad flair that would make Quebec's name during his 1959-62 comeback is already in evidence, producing all-time classics in "If I Had You," the aforementioned "I.Q. Blues," and Quebec's signature tune, the self-penned jukebox smash "Blue Harlem." Quebec can burn through the up-tempo tunes too, though, heard particularly well on "Facin' the Face," "Indiana," and "Zig Billion." Quebec is joined by a variety of musicians, most often guitarist Tiny Grimes, pianist Roger Ramirez, and drummer J.C. Heard; the septets add trumpet and trombone to the front line. Some might bemoan the loss of alternate tracks, but what is here is immensely satisfying small-group swing/bop. In whatever form you track it down, this is classic, vastly underappreciated music. - Steve Huey, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Ike Quebec

Influenced by Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster but definitely his own person, Ike Quebec was one of the finest swing-oriented tenor saxman of the 1940s and '50s. Though he was never an innovator, Quebec had a big, breathy sound that was distinctive and easily recognizable, and he was quite consistent when it came to came to down-home blues, sexy ballads, and up-tempo agg... Read more