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Frank Rosolino/Carl Fontana - Trombone Heaven, Vancouver, 1978 (CD)

Trombone Heaven, Vancouver, 1978
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Album Details: Trombone Heaven, Vancouver, 1978

Release Date:01/22/2008
Label:Uptown Jazz
UPC:026198275228

Track List: Trombone Heaven, Vancouver, 1978

  1. Medley: Here's That Rainy Day/St...
  2. Well, You Needn't
  3. All Blues
  1. Just Friends
  2. Medley: Laura/Embraveable You
  3. Ow

Pro Reviews: Trombone Heaven, Vancouver, 1978

  • All Music Guide

    Save J.J. Johnson, Frank Rosolino, and Carl Fontana were the two most technically gifted jazz trombonists without peer. Period. Putting them together is indeed like being in trombone heaven, yet this club date in Vancouver, British Columbia at the Bayside Room proved their styles were compatible even if their sounds were distinct. The ultraliterate Rosolino, displaying a cat quick tonguing technique, runs rings around anybody the instrument has ever known, while Fontana restrained his ultimate gifts in favor of a more precise, soulful, refined, full, less showy sound, yet could play effortless bebop at the flip of a switch. These two, in their own inimitable ways, truly had it goin' on Unfortunately, both sported limited discographies, so this release is both a treat and an event. The tunes, all standards, are outandout extended jam sessions, but often with a twist. Two ballad medleys have each 'bonist playing individually, with Rosolino tearing up "Here's That Rainy Day," while Fontan...a chills on "Stardust," then in quite similar melodic parallel lines, Fontana gently strokes "Laura" while Rosolino snuggles up to "Embraceable You." They discourse quite vocally through their brass and slide axes ad infinitum on a 16plusminute "Well, You Needn't," predominantly in beautiful unison on the lead melody, run through a stylized but inspired 15 1/2minute take of the loping "All Blues," and draw on counterpointed Dixieland type chattery, clipped, conversational phrases during a 13minute drill on "Just Friends." The telepathy between the two is remarkable, but the finale, Dizzy Gillespie's "Ow" shows their complete command of harmonics, their ability to play off each other, and their willingness to experiment with the extended sonic timbres of their horns. The sound quality is very good for recordings that have been sitting around since 1978, and the local rhythm section is par for the course, as they allow these two to have center stage and blow. Rosolino and Fontana, who both passed away underrecognized in the general scheme, deliver all one could hope for on this fully realized document of two real geniuses, at work and at play. - Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Frank Rosolino

The horrible way that Frank Rosolino's life ended (killing himself after shooting his two sons) has largely overshadowed his earlier musical accomplishments. One of the top trombonists of the 1950s, Rosolino's fluid and often-humorous style put him near the top of his field for awhile.He was a guitarist when he was ten, but switched to trombone as a teenager. After serv... Read more