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All Things Are New

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Download links and information about All Things Are New by Beaux J Poo Boo. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Jazz genres. It contains 12 tracks with total duration of 01:09:59 minutes.

Artist: Beaux J Poo Boo
Release date: 2005
Genre: Jazz
Tracks: 12
Duration: 01:09:59
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Ferris Wheel (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 7:39
2. Dancing With the Monk (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 5:26
3. Only Trust Your Heart (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 5:42
4. Beaux J Poo Boo (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 6:58
5. Hosanna (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 6:34
6. Overleaf (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 4:49
7. Go With Godfrey (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 5:49
8. Scintilla...(To Sparkle) (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 5:32
9. M & M (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 4:12
10. Tooth (For Frank Mantooth) (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 4:47
11. On Again, Off Again (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 4:41
12. All Things Are New (featuring Shelly Berg, Steve Houghton, Fred Hamilton, Lou Fischer) 7:50

Details

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Beaux J Poo Boo is a quartet featuring four veteran musicians (pianist Shelly Berg, guitarist Fred Hamilton, bassist Lou Fischer, and drummer Steve Haughton) who are also well known for their contributions to jazz education. The diverse background that each player brings to the date is reflected in his performance, especially in the funky, gospel-inflected cut (penned by Les McCann) that inspired the group's unusual name. The opening blues, "Ferris Wheel" (written by Rick Margitza, a saxophonist deserving of wider recognition), is a real cooker featuring effective solos by Berg, Fischer, and Hamilton. "Tooth," Berg's touching waltz-time salute to the late Frank Mantooth, is a gorgeous waltz that has an undercurrent of anguish. Hamilton's "Dancing with Monk" is a hard bop cooker that ignites the band. They also deliver with a slowly savored interpretation of Benny Carter's "Only Trust Your Heart" (featuring Fischer's warm arco bass).