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Kessel Plays Standards
Barney Kessel
Kessel Plays Standards
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

Japanese 20-BIT K2 Super Coding remastered reissue of 1958 album, packaged in a miniature LP sleeve.

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Barney Kessel
Title: Kessel Plays Standards
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Label: Jvc Japan
Release Date: 9/4/2001
Album Type: Import, Limited Edition
Genres: Jazz, Pop, Broadway & Vocalists
Styles: Cool Jazz, Bebop, Traditional Vocal Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1

Synopsis

Album Description
Japanese 20-BIT K2 Super Coding remastered reissue of 1958 album, packaged in a miniature LP sleeve.

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CD Reviews

Happy, wonderful reworking of a famous score...
William E. Adams | Midland, Texas USA | 12/21/2003
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Guitarist Kessel had a long career, and there are more than 40 CD's by him currently available. This one seems to me to be an unfairly overlooked gem. On this project, recorded in late December, 1958, Barney gives us 44 minutes of guitar-led swing, inspired by Bizet's opera. The operatic origins peek out now and then, the Spanish setting is not abandoned, but even those who dislike opera or who are simply unfamiliar with that form can love the CD for the warm and uptempo jazz experience it provides. Joining Barney are Buddy Collette on flute and clarinet, Bill Smith, also on clarinet, Andre Previn on piano, Shelly Manne on drums, Jules Jacob on oboe, Pete Terry on bassoon, Justin Gordon on flutes, Joe Mondragon on bass, Chuck Gentry on baritone sax, Herb Geller on alto sax, Harry Betts on trombone and Ray Linn on trumpet. Not all at once...the disc sounds more like quartet or quintet playing than the nine or ten artists who sometimes contribute to a song. Miles Davis did a famous record called "Sketches of Spain" with a big band backing his trumpet, but in a subtle way. That work has its good moments, but is so consistently melancholy that I don't really enjoy listening to it often. Kessel and his group have some passages of quiet beauty here, but overall, the project makes the listener cheerful instead of weepy, and therefore I think "Modern Jazz Performances from Bizet's 'Carmen'" is a better buy for jazz fans. The composer Bizet witnessed the failure of the first staging of "Carmen" in 1875, and died a few months later. As Vernon Duke's liner notes reveal, within three years his condemned work was a worldwide hit, and has stayed that way for more than a century. So, if you like "Carmen" or 1950's jazz, or jazz guitar from all eras, or just good music, consider buying this one. It has slipped under the radar of even Kessel fans, and while not the tragedy that Bizet's death at age 37 was, it's a shame. This CD was re-issued back in 1986, and I can't believe I am the first to review it for Amazon."