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Bird In Time 1940-1947

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Download links and information about Bird In Time 1940-1947 by Charlie Parker. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Jazz, Bop genres. It contains 105 tracks with total duration of 04:38:29 minutes.

Artist: Charlie Parker
Release date: 2008
Genre: Jazz, Bop
Tracks: 105
Duration: 04:38:29
Buy on iTunes $39.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Charlie Parker Interview - Remembers Family, High School Band, Early Gigs 8:39
2. Honeysuckle Rose / Body and Soul 3:04
3. I Got Rhythm 3:37
4. I Found a New Baby (featuring Jay McShann) 3:00
5. Body and Soul (featuring Jay McShann) 2:52
6. Moten Swing (featuring Jay McShann) 2:48
7. Coquette (featuring Jay McShann) 3:10
8. Oh, Lady Be Good! (featuring Jay McShann) 2:57
9. Wichita Blues (featuring Jay McShann) 3:10
10. Honeysuckle Rose (featuring Jay McShann) 2:58
11. Max Roach Interview - Meeting Bird - Cherokee 1943 (featuring Max Roach) 2:08
12. Cherokee 2:50
13. St. Louis Mood (featuring Jay McShann) 4:42
14. I Got It Bad (with Al Hibbler) (featuring Jay McShann) 3:59
15. I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles (featuring Jay McShann) 4:02
16. Hootie Blues (with Walter Brown) (featuring Jay McShann) 4:35
17. Swingmatism (featuring Jay McShann) 4:01
18. Theme: Love Don't Get You Nothin' (featuring Jay McShann) 0:29
19. Cherokee (2) [with Efferge Ware] 3:10
20. My Heart Tells Me (with Efferge Ware) 3:18
21. I Found a New Baby (2) [with Efferge Ware] 3:31
22. Body and Soul #2 (with Efferge Ware) 1:39
23. Sweet Georgia Brown (with Charlie Parker) (featuring Dizzy Gillespie) 2:38
24. I Got Rhythm (2) [with Charlie Parker] (featuring Dizzy Gillespie) 4:13
25. Max Roach Interview - Musicians Coming to New York (featuring Max Roach) 2:32
26. Boogie Woogie (with Charlie Parker) (featuring Billy Eckstine) 3:36
27. Shoe Shine Swing (featuring Billy Eckstine, Goon Garner) 4:13
28. Body and Soul #3 (featuring Hurley Ramey) 1:52
29. Embraceable You (featuring Hazel Scott) 2:41
30. Charlie Parker Interview - Rubberlegs Williams 0:48
31. That's the Blues (featuring Rubberlegs Williams) 3:12
32. Charlie Parker Interview - Clyde Hart All-Stars 1945 0:40
33. Dream of You (featuring Clyde Hart All-Stars 1945) 2:55
34. 7th Avenue (featuring Clyde Hart All-Stars 1945) 2:55
35. Charlie Parker Speaks - The Earl Hines/Billy Eckstine Bands 0:47
36. Charlie Parker Speaks - The Song - Mop Mop 0:13
37. Mop Mop (Excerpt) (featuring Coleman Hawkins) 0:31
38. Theme: 'Round Midnight (featuring Cootie Williams) 0:19
39. 711 (Roll 'Em) (featuring Cootie Williams) 3:09
40. Cootie Williams Speaks - Introduction (featuring Cootie Williams) 0:11
41. Do Nothin' TIll You Hear from Me (featuring Cootie Williams) 4:06
42. Don't Blame Me (featuring Cootie Williams) 3:58
43. Perdido (featuring Cootie Williams) 4:06
44. Night Cap (featuring Cootie Williams) 4:57
45. Saturday Night (featuring Cootie Williams) 3:19
46. MC Announcement (featuring Cootie Williams) 0:04
47. Floogie Boo (featuring Cootie Williams) 3:51
48. MC Announcement (2) (featuring Cootie Williams) 0:19
49. St. Louis Blues (featuring Cootie Williams) 1:53
50. Max Roach Speaks - Dizzy Gillespie Introduces Charlie Parker to New York (featuring Max Roach) 1:00
51. Sweet Georgia Brown #2 (featuring Dizzy Gillespie) 3:19
52. Lover, Come Back to Me (featuring Dizzy Gillespie) 3:28
53. Teddy Edwards Speaks - West Coast Music Scene - Mid 40's (featuring Teddy Edwards) 3:45
54. Intro (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 1:19
55. Shaw 'Nuff (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 4:10
56. MC Announcement (3) (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 0:22
57. Groovin' High (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 5:38
58. MC Announcement (4) (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 0:24
59. Dizzy Atmosphere (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 4:25
60. Milt Jackson Speaks - West Coast Music Scene - Mid 40's (featuring Milt Jackson) 0:34
61. Salt Peanuts (featuring Dizzy Gillespie's Rebop Six) 2:04
62. Diggin' Diz (featuring Dizzy Gillespie) 2:52
63. Roy Porter Speaks - The West Coast Club Scene #1 (featuring Roy Porter) 2:02
64. Teddy Edwards Speaks - Charlie Parker Playing With Maggie (featuring Teddy Edwards) 1:13
65. Howard McGhee Discusses His History (featuring Howard McGhee) 5:07
66. Jam Session - Announcement 1:20
67. Tea for Two (featuring The Benny Carter) 2:45
68. Body and Soul (2) (featuring Willie Smith) 2:39
69. Cherokee (3) 3:04
70. Teddy Edwards Speaks - Maggie - Charlie Parker's First Dial Date (featuring Teddy Edwards) 2:02
71. Roy Porter Speaks - First Dial Session (featuring Roy Porter) 2:44
72. Roy Porter Speaks - Second Dial Session (featuring Roy Porter) 0:41
73. Lover Man 3:20
74. Max Is Makin' Wax (aka Chance It) 2:31
75. The Gypsy 3:03
76. Bebop 2:54
77. Roy Porter Speaks - Second Dial Session - Continued (featuring Roy Porter) 1:47
78. Teddy Edwards Speaks - After Charlie Parker's Collapse (featuring Teddy Edwards) 2:48
79. Howard McGhee Remembers Charlie Parker (featuring Howard McGhee) 0:52
80. Lullaby In Rhythm, Pt. 1 1:30
81. Lullaby In Rhythm, Pt. 2 1:32
82. Homecooking 1 - Lullaby In Rhythm 2:22
83. Homecooking 2 - Cherokee 2:06
84. Homecooking 3 - I Got Rhythm 1:44
85. Earl Coleman Speaks - This Is Always / Dark Shadows, Pt. 1 (featuring Earl Coleman) 1:30
86. This Is Always 3:10
87. Dark Shadows 4:03
88. Earl Coleman Speaks - This Is Always / Dark Shadows, Pt. 2 (featuring Earl Coleman Speaks) 1:49
89. Roy Porter Speaks - The Hi-De-Ho Club 1947 (featuring Roy Porter) 0:27
90. Dee Dee's Dance 3:49
91. Roy Porter Speaks - Maggie Playing At Fast Tempos (featuring Roy Porter) 1:58
92. Earl Coleman Speaks - Maggie (featuring Earl Coleman) 4:28
93. Milt Jackson Speaks - Meeting Maggie (featuring Milt Jackson) 0:57
94. Introduction - Ko Ko (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 1:12
95. Hot House (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 5:13
96. Fine and Dandy (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 3:24
97. Introduction to Koko (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 1:08
98. On the Sunny Side of the Street (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 3:24
99. How Deep Is the Ocean? (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 3:00
100. Tiger Rag (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 3:47
101. Theme: 52nd Street Theme (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 0:48
102. Intro: 52nd Street Theme (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 2:16
103. Donna Lee (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 2:25
104. Theme: Koko (featuring Barry Ulanov's All-Stars) 6:20
105. Roy Porter Speaks (featuring Roy Porter) 1:18

Details

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The history of Charlie Parker is well documented, so much so that most devotees of Bird's pioneering legacy undoubtedly have more than enough recordings to tell the tale. What they might not previously own is readily available in one package on this splendid four-CD set, containing a 100-track chronological musical and verbal account of Parker from 1940 to 1947. It encompasses items such as two whopping, finely detailed 32-page booklets, an early rare demo and interview with the saxophonist about his family and life as a teenager, and recordings with Jay McShann, Hazel Scott, Cootie Williams, Dizzy Gillespie, Earl Coleman, and Barry Ulanov's Metronome All Stars. The sound quality is good overall, though some of the early interview segments are paper thin, and a few of the songs have dropouts. Generally the studio or radio transcriptions are very good, and have held up through digital transfer. Interviews with Max Roach and Teddy Edwards are particularly illuminating and clearly recorded. The interviews with Roy Porter are just as interesting, but sound scratchy and not as clean.

Over this eight-year period, Parker became the singularly unique star of bop, and fell hard as a heroin addicted junkie, committed to the Camarillo rehabilitation center in California for six months in 1946. Prior to that, he was well on his way to stardom, and the 1940 sessions with McShann's band prove the point. These are the most valuable dates in that they showcase the alto and tenor saxophonist as a premier soloist and lead melody constructor. A well done cover of "Moten Swing," the jumpin' "Oh, Lady Be Good" with Bird on tenor, and the self-proclaimed "louder and funnier" "Wichita Blues" give sway to the emergence of Parker, the latter piece featuring trombonist and violinist Bob Gould. More McShann from radio broadcasts lay out further evidence, at times with Al Hibbler or Walter Brown singing, but "Swingmatism" expresses the emerging modern, tricky, multi-faceted approach. Tracks with guitarist Efferge Ware, trumpeter Billy Eckstine, pianist Hazel Scott, and vocalist Rubberlegs Williams suffer a bit from sound, but are all rare and precious sessions. Recordings with the Cootie Williams Orchestra from 1945 represent a high-water mark, ranging from the raucous, hard swinging Mary Lou Williams evergreen "711/Roll 'Em," a plus take of "Perdido," Williams originals like the swing jam "Night Cap," and sly, bluesy "Saturday Night." Several tracks with Gillespie and the Rebop Six include classics like the furious "Shaw 'Nuff," the inimitable "Groovin' High," and "Dizzy Atmosphere," including vibist Milt Jackson. These recordings, and following tracks were taken from the legendary Jubilee revue programs, hosted by the irascible Ernie "Bubbles" Whitman. There's an admirable session with poll winners Benny Carter, Willie Smith, and Parker all taking a featured tune.

But by the time Parker was signed to Dial records in 1946, you could clearly hear the deterioration in his playing. His second series of recordings for Dial with trumpeter Howard McGhee is, in the words of the booklet annotator, "falling apart," even though you hear a rare take of the fine Oscar Pettiford bop tune "Max Is Makin' Wax" (aka "Chance It"), and the obscure Parker blues "The Gypsy." Unfinished material and solos (Parker was also doing benzedrine), and the great material of classy crooner Coleman, especially "This Is Always," follow the post-Camarillo tracks where Bird sounds disinterested, and Dean Benedetti's well known "Hi-De-Ho" recordings with an inspired McGhee gave Parker somewhat of a boost. Parker had gained considerable weight in the hospital, McGhee was taking care of him, and it seemed that Bird's run might be done. Fortunately the Ulanov sessions marked a triumphant return, as Bird was paired again with Gillespie and Roach, clarinetist John LaPorta, pianist Lennie Tristano, bassist Ray Brown, and guitarist Billy Bauer. These Mutual Broadcasting System Bands for Bonds radio broadcasts from September 13 and 20 of 1947, proved Parker a capable team player, as well as a still impressive soloist. Included is the fiery "Hot House," a wild intro before calming to "On the Sunny Side of the Street," and a Dixieland jam plus bop styled take of "Tiger Rag" gone livid and crazy. After having won a poll of listeners, the band made a return appearance on November 8, with trumpeter Fats Navarro, bassist Tommy Potter, and tenor saxophonist Allen Eager replacing Diz, Brown, and Bauer. Parker is clearly feeling more confident, leading out on the fleet "Donna Lee" as the others lag behind. Bird in Time is an essential item for collectors of Parker's music, and though many of the recordings are available elsewhere, the salient interviews are not. As a complete package it further illustrates, musically and otherwise, what the saxophonist individually expressed and endured at a time when he was the main progenitor and flag waver of the bop revolution. ~ Michael G. Nastos, Rovi