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Ray Brown - The Best of the Concord Years

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Download links and information about Ray Brown - The Best of the Concord Years by Ray Brown. This album was released in 2002 and it belongs to Jazz, Bop genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 02:17:52 minutes.

Artist: Ray Brown
Release date: 2002
Genre: Jazz, Bop
Tracks: 24
Duration: 02:17:52
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Buhaina Buhaina (Live) (featuring Ray Brown Trio) 5:51
2. After You've Gone (Live) 8:10
3. The Days of Wine and Roses 6:53
4. That's All (Live) 6:05
5. Blues for Sam Nassi 6:37
6. I'm Afraid the Masquerade Is Over (featuring Monty Alexander, Herb Ellis) 4:06
7. The Real Blues (Live) (featuring Ray Brown Trio) 7:41
8. Carioca HIlls (Live) 4:05
9. Exactly Like You (featuring Ray Brown Trio) 5:43
10. Georgia On My Mind 5:20
11. Keep On Pumpin' 6:39
12. Onion Roll 4:21
13. Gumbo Hump 4:06
14. High Heel Sneakers (Live) 7:56
15. Put Your Little Foot Right Out (featuring Monty Alexander, Herb Ellis) 5:58
16. Ralph's Boogie 4:27
17. Rockin' In Rhythm 5:49
18. Lady Be Good (Instrumental) 6:22
19. Blue Bossa (Live) 4:58
20. Like Someone In Love 3:01
21. The Flinstones Theme 6:01
22. Take the 'A' Train (featuring Ray Brown Trio) 6:17
23. Just Friends 7:21
24. Captain Bill (featuring Monty Alexander, Herb Ellis) 4:05

Details

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Ray Brown was in at the beginning of the Concord Jazz record label in the early '70s, and starting with Brown's Bag in 1975, he recorded a dozen albums as a leader for Concord before departing for Telarc Records in the early '90s. This two-disc compilation, with a running time of almost two hours and 20 minutes, presents 24 selections drawn from 19 Concord Jazz albums recorded between 1973 and 1993, including live performances at the Concord Jazz Festivals, recordings by Brown's trio and the L.A. 4, and a Brown duet with Jimmy Rowles, among other configurations. As a bass player, Brown only rarely solos, so one usually notices the horn players (Harry "Sweets" Edison, Red Holloway, Plas Johnson, Richie Kamuca, Blue Mitchell, Ralph Moore, and Bud Shank), the pianists (Monty Alexander, George Duke, Gene Harris, Art Hillery, and Rowles), or other frontline musicians (guitarists Laurindo Almeida, Herb Ellis, and Joe Pass, violinist John Frigo) before the rhythm section. But even when Brown isn't stepping out, he is maintaining the group's swing, along with drummers John Guerin, Jeff Hamilton, Jake Hanna, Gerryck King, Shelly Manne, Mickey Roker, and Jimmie Smith, and he also wrote a number of the tunes. Brown had done relatively few sessions as a leader in the 30 years of his career prior to his association with Concord, so, while the label owes him a lot, he also was enabled to flourish with the company in a way he had not before, and that is reflected in this well-chosen compilation.