Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. Vor 5 Tagen · 1. Tea for two – Ella Fitzgerald 3:18. 2. Metropolis Blues – Vincent Herring 3:43. 3. The Shadow of your Smile – Aaron Neville 3:38. 4. Tico! – Paquito d‘Rivera 5:31. 5. Mercy mercy me – Everette...

  2. Vor 4 Tagen · December 28, 2017. Various artists – The Passion of Charlie Parker. by Matt Micucci. 00. Various artists – The Passion of Charlie Parker (Impulse) Unlike many tribute albums, The Passion of Charlie Parker does not try to emulate the sound of the honored artist.

  3. 16. Mai 2024 · From 1941, when Charlie Parker’s first commercially recorded solos (“Hootie Blues” and “Jumpin’ the Blues,” with the Jay McShann Orchestra) dropped on Decca Records, his aesthetic decisions and virtuoso flair moved the collective sensibility of jazz in a new direction. And, to paraphrase the mantra that cropped up after Parker died in March 1955, Bird

    • Tribute to Charlie Parker with Strings Charlie Watts1
    • Tribute to Charlie Parker with Strings Charlie Watts2
    • Tribute to Charlie Parker with Strings Charlie Watts3
    • Tribute to Charlie Parker with Strings Charlie Watts4
    • Tribute to Charlie Parker with Strings Charlie Watts5
  4. Vor 5 Tagen · Folgende Titel sind zu hören: 1. Tea for two – Ella Fitzgerald 3:18 2. Metropolis Blues – Vincent Herring 3:43 3. The Shadow of your Smile – Aaron Neville 3:38 4. Tico! – Paquito d‘Rivera 5:31 5. Mercy mercy me – Everette Harp 3:01 6. Summertime – Charlie Parker with Strings 2:49 7. I’ve been waiting – Incognito 4:29 8.

  5. 10 Essential Charlie Parker Recordings. Apart from a trove of bootlegged live performances, Parker made virtually all of his recordings for only a few labels. But you won’t find any of his contemporaneous albums on this list — because there weren’t any. Before the debut of the LP in 1948, the 78-RPM single ruled the roost.

  6. Vor 4 Tagen · Cover from Muddy Waters - Muddy Waters at Newport 1969 CDCHESS 1011 Matrix / Runout: CD CHESS 1014 412 0953

  7. I know that in the wiki it said that it was written by Charlie Shavers but I think the song sounds much more like a Parker tune than a Shavers one. Charlie Parker also played a live show in Stockholm Sweden in late November 1950. And to my suspicion I think it would be more likely that Charlie Parker would be the original writer of the song.