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Five Chord Stud

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Download links and information about Five Chord Stud by Julius Hemphill Sextet. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 01:03:57 minutes.

Artist: Julius Hemphill Sextet
Release date: 1993
Genre: Jazz, Avant Garde Jazz
Tracks: 9
Duration: 01:03:57
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Band Theme (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 5:38
2. Mr. Critical (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 3:44
3. Shorty (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 6:49
4. Mirrors (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 5:49
5. Five Chord Stud (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 13:46
6. Moat and the Bridge (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 7:20
7. Georgia Blue (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 5:48
8. Flush (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 7:51
9. Spiritual Chairs (featuring James Carter, Julius Hemphill, Tim Berne, Andrew White, Marty Ehrlich, Sam Furnace) 7:12

Details

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Although altoist Julius Hemphill gets top billing on this CD, his heart surgery in 1993 forced him to stop playing. However, this saxophone sextet was his regular group; he contributed six of the eight compositions (the other two are free improvisations) and the chancetaking heard throughout this adventurous music definitely makes most of the performances sound like they came from a Julius Hemphill recording even if his alto is missed. The sextet has a very strong lineup (altoists Tim Berne, Marty Ehrlich and Sam Furnace, tenors James Carter and Andrew White and baritonist Fred Ho) and the resulting CD contains more than its share of variety. The music ranges from the soulful "Spiritual Chairs" and a boppish "Band Theme" to introspective ballads and wild passionate interplay. Other than Fred Ho (who is not heard from enough), each of the players has their chance to star. The generally fascinating music rewards repeated listenings but one has to have an open mind before putting it on.