Various Artists – Verve 6 Great Jazz (2017) [Esoteric Japan Box Set] SACD ISO + FLAC 24bit/96kHz

VA – Verve 6 Great Jazz (2017) [Esoteric Japan Box Set]
SACD Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 252:51 minutes | Box Scans included | 10,1 GB
or FLAC Mono/Stereo(converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | Box Scans included | 4,82 GB

ESOTERIC proudly introduces a series of re-master collection – A great Jazz collection. The reissue of historical music masterpieces by ESOTERIC has attracted a lot of attention, both for its uncompromising commitment to recreating the original master sound, and for using SACD technology to improve sound quality. This Box Set of “Verve 6 Great Jazz” features masterpiece releases of Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington & Johnny Hodges, Lester Young & Teddy Wilson, Illinois Jacquet, Dizzy Gillespie/Sonny Stitt/Sonny Rollins, Ben Webster & Art Tatum. Not only for new followers, but also for well experienced followers of these recorded materials.

Disc 1: Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong – Ella And Louis (1956/2017)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 54:30 minutes | 2,18 GB
or FLAC Mono (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | 0,99 GB
Esoteric Japan # ESSV-90163

Ella and Louis is an inspired collaboration, masterminded by producer Norman Granz. Both artists were riding high at this stage in their careers, and Granz assembled a stellar quartet of Oscar Peterson (piano), Buddy Rich (drums), Herb Ellis (guitar) and Ray Brown (bass). Equally inspired was the choice of material, with the gruffness of Armstrong’s voice blending like magic with Fitzgerald’s stunningly silky delivery. Outstanding are Irving Berlin’s “Cheek to Cheek” and “Isn’t This a Lovely Day,” and everything else works like a dream, with the golden star going to the Gershwin brothers’ “They Can’t Take That Away from Me.” Gentle and sincere, this is deserving of a place in every home.

Tracklist:

01. Can’t We Be Friends
02. Isn’t This A Lovely Day
03. Moonlight In Vermont
04. They Can’t Take That Away From Me
05. Under A Blanket Of Blue
06. Tenderly
07. A Foggy Day
08. Stars Fell On Alabama
09. Cheek To Cheek
10. The Nearness Of You
11. April In Paris

Recorded on August 16, 1956 at Capitol Studios, Los Angeles.

Personnel
Ella Fitzgerald – vocals
Louis Armstrong – vocals, trumpet
Oscar Peterson – piano
Herb Ellis – guitar
Ray Brown – bass
Buddy Rich – drums

Disc 2: Duke Ellington & Johnny Hodges – Back To Back (1959/2017)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 47:13 minutes | 1,89 GB
or FLAC Stereo (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | 1,02 GB
Esoteric Japan # ESSV-90164

These distinctive small-group sessions, featuring Duke Ellington as pianist in a blues context, are part of a group of recordings issued under the confusing titles Back to Back and Side by Side, and further reissued under the not particularly distinctive name of Blues Summit. But there should be no confusion about the high quality of music that came out of these sessions – it is all “cooking with gas” as the expression goes. From the jazz world, it would be difficult to find more profound soloists on traditional blues numbers than the Duke or his longtime collaborator Johnny Hodges, who does some of the most soulful playing of his career here. Also hitting a very high standard for himself is trumpeter Harry Edison and, while musicians are being patted on the back, the Jones boys in the rhythm section should be given a hand. That’s Jo Jones (drums) and Sam Jones (bass), so as not to create additional confusion in the Jones-heavy jazz world. The songs all have titles that end in “Blues,” with the oddball having “Love” in the title not once but twice. (It’s “Loveless Love,” what else?) But these songs are just vehicles for playing the blues, a formula that has produced great music many times, and certainly did every time this particular pianist was leading the group.

Tracklist:

01. Wabash Blues
02. Basin Street Blues
03. Beale Street Blues
04. Weary Blues
05. St. Louis Blues
06. Loveless Love
07. Royal Garden Blues

Recorded on February 20, 1959 at Columbia Studios, New York.

Personnel
Duke Ellington – piano
Johnny Hodges – alto saxophone
Harry “Sweets” Edison – trumpet
Les Spann – guitar
Al Hall – bass on “1 & 4” (February 26, 1959)
Sam Jones – bass on “2, 3, 5, 6, 7”
Jo Jones – drums

Disc 3: Lester Young, Teddy Wilson Quartet – Pres And Teddy (1959/2017)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 36:38 minutes | 1,46 GB
or FLAC Mono (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | 683 MB
Esoteric Japan # ESSV-90165

Although it has been written much too often that Lester Young declined rapidly from the mid-’40s on, the truth is that when he was healthy, Young played at his very best during the ’50s, adding an emotional intensity to his sound that had not been present during the more carefree days of the ’30s. This classic session, a reunion with pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Jo Jones (bassist Gene Ramey completes the quartet), finds the great tenor in particularly expressive form. His rendition of “Prisoner of Love” is quite haunting, the version of “All of Me” is also memorable, and all of the swing standards are well worth hearing.

Tracklist:

01. All Of Me
02. Prisoner Of Love
03. Louise
04. Love Me Or Leave Me
05. Taking A Chance On Love
06. Love Is Here To Stay

Recorded on January 13, 1956 in New York City.

Personnel
Teddy Wilson – piano
Lester Young – tenor saxophone
Gene Ramey – bass
Jo Jones – drums

Disc 4: Illinois Jacquet – Swing’s The Thing (1957/2017)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 34:20 minutes | 1,37 GB
or FLAC Mono (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | 640 MB
Esoteric Japan # ESSV-90166

Illinois Jacquet’s honking, screeching tenor saxophone was a cornerstone of the bebop jazz sound but also influenced and inspired two generations of R&B and rock sax players. Jacquet is credited with playing the very first R&B sax solo back when he was a mere teenager in Lionel Hampton’s band. Swing’s The Thing was Jacquet’s debut album on his own, after his stints with Hampton, Cab Calloway, Charles Mingus and Count Basie. Jacquet surrounded himself in the studio with the best of the best session players in jazz at the time and this instrumental album is considered essential listening for Jacquet fans.

Tracklist:

01. Las Vegas Blues
02. Harlem Nocturne
03. Can’t We Be Friends
04. Achtung
05. Have You Met Miss Jones
06. Lullaby Of The Leaves

Recorded on October 16, 1956 at Radio Recorders, Hollywood, CA.

Personnel
Illinois Jacquet – tenor saxophone
Roy Eldridge – trumpet
Jimmy Jones – piano
Herb Ellis – guitar
Ray Brown – bass
Jo Jones – drums

Disc 5: Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, Sonny Rollins – Sonny Side Up (1959/2017)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 37:55 minutes | 1,52 GB
or FLAC Mono (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | 733 MB
Esoteric Japan # ESSV-90167

Dizzy Gillespie brings together tenor saxophonists Sonny Stitt and Sonny Rollins for four extended cuts, and in the process comes up with one of the most exciting “jam session” records in the jazz catalog. While the rhythm section of pianist Ray Bryant, bassist Tommy Bryant, and drummer Charlie Persip provides solid rhythmic support, Stitt and Rollins get down to business trading fours and reeling off solo fireworks. Apparently, Gillespie had stoked the competitive fires before the session with phone calls and some gossip, the fallout of which becomes palpable as the album progresses. On “The Eternal Triangle,” in particular, Stitt and Rollins impress in their roles as tenor titans, with Stitt going in for sheer muscle as that most stout of bebop cutters and Rollins opting for some pacing as a more thematic player. In the midst of the rivalry (certainly some torch was being passed, since Rollins was soon to become the top tenor saxophonist in jazz), an embarrassment of solo riches comes tumbling out of both these men’s horns. Gillespie adds his own split commentary on the proceedings with a casual solo on “After Hours” and a competitively blistering statement on “I Know That You Know.” With an at ease rendition of “On the Sunny Side of the Street” rounding things out, Sonny Side Up comes off as both a highly enjoyable jazz set and something of an approximation of the music’s once-revered live cutting session.

Tracklist:

01. On The Sunny Side Of The Street
02. The Eternal Triangle
03. After Hours
04. I Know That You Know

Recorded on December 19, 1957 at Nola Recording Studio, New York City.

Personnel
Dizzy Gillespie – trumpet, vocals on “1”
Sonny Stitt – tenor saxophone
Sonny Rollins – tenor saxophone
Ray Bryant – piano
Tommy Bryant – double bass
Charlie Persip – drums

Disc 6: Art Tatum, Ben Webster Quartet – The Tatum Group Masterpieces (1958/2017)
PS3 Rip | SACD ISO | DSD64 2.0 > 1-bit/2.8224 MHz | 42:15 minutes | 1,69 GB
or FLAC Mono (converted with foobar2000 to tracks) 24bit/96 kHz | 812 MB
Esoteric Japan # ESSV-90168

The only album-length collaboration between pianist Art Tatum and tenor saxophonist Ben Webster (accompanied by a rhythm section of Red Callender, bass, and Bill Douglass, drums) was this September 11, 1956, session under the auspices of Norman Granz’s Verve Records label. (It was also Tatum’s last recording session before his death.) Granz probably suggested the repertoire of standards by the likes of Kern and Hammerstein, Rodgers & Hart, and Cole Porter, but the melodies, of course, only provide a framework. On each track, Tatum leads things off, with Callender and Douglass coming in discreetly (and low in the mix). Then, at a certain point, Webster appears in the foreground, playing comparatively few notes and sticking much more to the melody than his partner. This is a good approach, since Tatum never subsides to simple comping; he just keeps soloing away under Webster’s rich tenor tones until Webster stops playing, and then keeps on to the end. So, although this is billed as a group effort, it’s not a group of equals or really one in which the players are cooperating with each other. Tatum might as well be playing solo, since he takes very little account of what’s happening around him. Granz makes it work by varying the volume of the different instruments in the mix, and the result is a fascinating study in contrasts.

Tracklist:

01. Gone With The Wind
02. All The Things You Are
03. Have You Met Miss Jones?
04. My One And Only Love
05. Night And Day
06. My Ideal
07. Where Or When

Recorded on September 11, 1956 in Los Angeles, CA.

Personnel
Art Tatum – piano
Ben Webster – tenor saxophone
Red Callender – bass
Bill Douglass – drums

ESOTERIC equipment used for re-mastering:
The criterion of re-mastering is to faithfully capture the quality of the original master. ESOTERIC’s flag ship D/A converters, model D-01VU, Rubidium master clock generator model G-0Rb and ESOTERIC MEXCEL interconnect cables and power cords, were all used for this re-mastering session. This combination of highly advanced technology greatly contributed to capturing the high quality sound of the original master.

Re-Issue Produced by Motoaki Ohmachi (ESOTERIC COMPANY)
Mastering Engineer: Kazuie Sugimoto (JVC Mastering Center)

ESSV-90163 Ella Fitzgerald & Louis Armstrong – Ella And Louis (1956) [Mono]

ISO

Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90163EllaFitzgeraldLouisArmstrongEllaAndLouis1956Mono.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90163EllaFitzgeraldLouisArmstrongEllaAndLouis1956Mono.part2.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90163EllaFitzgeraldLouisArmstrongEllaAndLouis1956Mono.part3.rar

FLAC

Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90163EllaFitzgeraldLouisArmstrongEllaAndLouis1956Mono.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90163EllaFitzgeraldLouisArmstrongEllaAndLouis1956Mono.part2.rar

ESSV-90164 Duke Ellington & Johnny Hodges – Back To Back (1959) [Stereo]

ISO

Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90164DukeEllingtonJohnnyHodgesBackToBack1959Stereo.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90164DukeEllingtonJohnnyHodgesBackToBack1959Stereo.part2.rar

FLAC

Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90164DukeEllingtonJohnnyHodgesBackToBack1959Stereo.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90164DukeEllingtonJohnnyHodgesBackToBack1959Stereo.part2.rar

ESSV-90165 Lester Young, Teddy Wilson Quartet – Pres And Teddy (1959) [Mono]

ISO

Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90165LesterYoungTeddyWilsonQuartetPresAndTeddy1959Mono.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90165LesterYoungTeddyWilsonQuartetPresAndTeddy1959Mono.part2.rar

FLAC

Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90165LesterYoungTeddyWilsonQuartetPresAndTeddy1959Mono.rar

ESSV-90166 Illinois Jacquet – Swing’s The Thing (1957) [Mono]

ISO

Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90166IllinoisJacquetSwingsTheThing1957Mono.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90166IllinoisJacquetSwingsTheThing1957Mono.part2.rar

FLAC

Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90166IllinoisJacquetSwingsTheThing1957Mono.rar

ESSV-90167 Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, Sonny Rollins – Sonny Side Up (1959) [Mono]

ISO

Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90167DizzyGillespieSonnyStittSonnyRollinsSonnySideUp1959Mono.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90167DizzyGillespieSonnyStittSonnyRollinsSonnySideUp1959Mono.part2.rar

FLAC

Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90167DizzyGillespieSonnyStittSonnyRollinsSonnySideUp1959Mono.rar

ESSV-90168 Art Tatum, Ben Webster Quartet – The Tatum Group Masterpieces (1958) [Mono]

ISO

Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90168ArtTatumBenWebsterQuartetTheTatumGroupMasterpieces1958Mono.part1.rar
Verve6GreatJazz_ISO_ESSV90168ArtTatumBenWebsterQuartetTheTatumGroupMasterpieces1958Mono.part2.rar

FLAC

Verve6GreatJazz_FLAC_ESSV90168ArtTatumBenWebsterQuartetTheTatumGroupMasterpieces1958Mono.rar

Artwork

Verve6GreatJazz_BoxArtwork.rar

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