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  1. King Pleasure first gained attention by singing the Eddie Jefferson vocalese classic "Moody's Mood For Love", based on a 1949 James Moody saxophone solo to "I'm In The Mood For Love". Pleasure's 1952 recording, his first after signing a contract with the Prestige label, is considered a jazz classic; the female vocalist featured is ...

  2. 1997 — US. CD. View credits, reviews, tracks and shop for the CD release of "King Pleasure Sings / Annie Ross Sings" on Discogs.

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  3. King Pleasure Sings / Annie Ross Sings (1958) Golden Days (1960) Moody’s Mood for Love (Blue Note, CD 1992) Literatur. Martin Kunzler: Jazz-Lexikon. Band 1: A–L (= rororo-Sachbuch. Bd. 16512). 2. Auflage. Rowohlt, Reinbek bei Hamburg 2004, ISBN 3-499-16512-0. Weblinks

  4. BUY OR LISTEN. These are the seminal sessions in vocalese which spawned a whole host of singers–including Manhattan Transfer–working in this style today. Taking Eddie Jeffersons lead, King Pleasure developed his own style and material in the idiom.

  5. 1973 — US. Vinyl —. LP, Album, Stereo. Explore the tracklist, credits, statistics, and more for King Pleasure Sings / Annie Ross Sings by King Pleasure / Annie Ross. Compare versions and buy on Discogs.

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  6. 6. Nov. 2021 · King Pleasure was not a prolific recording artist. However his work survives on three available CDs : King Pleasure Sings/Annie Ross Sings (Original Jazz Classics) 1991 - the classic Prestige singles from the early fifties. A bonus is four vocalese tunes from Annie Ross including the wordless "Lament".

  7. King Pleasure. King Pleasure, along with Eddie Jefferson was one of the first masters vocalese. This is a style where lyrics are written and sung in harmony to the solos by jazz instrumentalists. Pleasure said Jefferson was his greatest influence, but Pleasures sax-like style and scat singing were equally influential.