Art Blakey Rar

Art blakey raritan

Artist: Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers Title: Buhaina's Delight Released: 2003 Style: Jazz, Hard-Bop RAR Size: 468 Mb Tracklist: 01. Backstage Sally 02. Contemplation 03. Bu's Delight 04. Reincarnation Blues 05. Backstage Sally (Alternate Version) 08. Bu's Delight (Alternate Version) 09. Reincarnation Blues. Jazz albums in mp3 and flac. Piratebay and mediafire. Art Blakey - Orgy in Rhythm (1957) Volumes One & Two. A Night In Tunisia is the 1958 album by Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. This is completely different from the album Blakey released three years later on Blue Note with the same title, but credited to Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers. This pressing from 2002 by Blue Note/RCA Victor Group features three alternate takes of song on the original album. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - Midnight Session (1957) FLAC; Art Blakey - A Night at Birdland Vol. 2 (1954/2014) Hi-Res Art Blakey - 1958 Paris Olympia (1958) Art Blakey - Des Femmes Disparaissent-Les Tricheurs (1958) Thelonious Monk, Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, Art Blakey - Bop Fathers Completed (1971).

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Moanin’ (1958/2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/192 kHz | Time – 40:06 minutes | 1,73 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: HDTracks | Digital Booklet | @ Blue Note Records

Art Blakey Albums

Paris

The album is accompanied by its original sleeve notes plus additional photos and newly-written package essays.

“In preparing these hi def remasters, we were very conscientious about maintaining the feel of the original releases while adding a previously unattainable transparency and depth. It now sounds like you’ve set up your chaise lounge right in the middle of Rudy Van Gelder’s studio!” -Blue Note President, Don Was.

Recorded October 30, 1958 in Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ

Originally issued as Blue Note BLP 4003

Moanin’ is the seminal hard-bop masterpiece by Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers. It features arguably the band’s finest lineup, which includes Lee Morgan, Benny Golson, Bobby Timmons and Jymie Merritt. The musicians display uncanny chemistry and deliver breathtaking solos. The work includes the timeless jazz classics: “Moanin’,” “Along Came Betty” and “Blues March.”Moanin’ is a pivotal addition to jazz history and a must-have for any jazz collection.

Tracklist:
01 – Moanin’
02 – Are You Real
03 – Along Came Betty
04 – The Drum Thunder Suite
05 – Blues March
06 – Come Rain or Come Shine

Musicians:
Lee Morgan – trumpet
Benny Golson – tenor sax
Bobby Timmons – piano
Jymie Merritt – bass
Art Blakey – drums

Download:

mqs.linkArtBlakeyTheJazzMessengersManin19582013HDTracks24192.part1.rar
mqs.linkArtBlakeyTheJazzMessengersManin19582013HDTracks24192.part2.rar

Art Blakey Rar

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Just Coolin’ (2020)
FLAC (tracks) 24-bit/192 kHz | Time – 38:53 minutes | 1,45 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download | Front Cover | © Blue Note Records

Blue Note will issue a never-before-released studio album by Art Blakey & the Jazz Messengers, Just Coolin’, on 17 July. It was recorded on 8 March 1959 in the Hackensack, New Jersey studio of feted recording engineer Rudy Van Gelder.

Art blakey are you real

Blakey was joined on the session by a short-lived line-up of the Jazz Messengers that also featured Lee Morgan on trumpet, tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley, pianist Bobby Timmons and bassist Jymie Merritt. The opening track from the LP, ‘Hipsippy Blues,’ is now available to stream or download. Just Coolin’ can be pre-ordered now in a variety of formats: CD, digital download, and an all-analog 180 gram vinyl pressing mastered by Kevin Gray.

This time capsule, recorded in 1959 in Rudy Van Gelder’s Hackensack, NJ, living room and left undisturbed in the Blue Note vaults until now, contains the essential DNA of the first flowering of hard bop in the late ’50s. All the genre hallmarks are present: There are intricate chase-scene originals and clever arrangements (the standard “Close Your Eyes”) and brash blues-inflected outbursts that light up the solos. And yet, transcending those individual traits, defining not just the notes but the very spirit of the endeavor, is a quality that doesn’t get discussed enough in jazz—precision, as in persnickety dotted i’s and crossed t’s.

At times it’s downright startling hearing these five musicians nail the details to the wall. They’re hardly “just coolin’” here; they’re attentive to the small nuances of tunes that might have been written the morning of the session. You can detect the commitment in the pitch-bending doiiiits and the staccato single-note jabs, in the explosion of a long-cresting press roll and the deliberate, nothing-extra stride of a Blakey-trademarked medium-tempo swing. You can hear it in the way trumpeter Lee Morgan and tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley phrase together, adding grace notes that are almost inaudible but key nonetheless. And you can’t miss it in the thrillingly open lanes where the solos happen. Blakey was revered for the communication he cultivated between musicians; using a repertoire of hits and jabs, he pulled his collaborators into rich, sometimes boisterous discussions, a mode of interplay that in many ways defines hard bop.

There are plenty of examples on this record, but perhaps the most crystalline comes during Morgan’s first few choruses on “Jimerick,” a blazing uptempo blues. He begins with a short inversion of the theme, first restating it in a lazy way. Then he articulates more aggressively, as though trying to establish consensus on the tempo. Blakey picks that up, and jabs out an even sharper response from the metal rim of the snare drum. That unleashes some mean Morgan double-time bebop; what began as a single-note bugle call becomes an intricate conversation. Each element of that conversation is notable for its clarity, and each new soloist contributes to it in a different way—check the unhurried, wonderfully lucid way Mobley carves up the opening “Hipsippy Blues.” The tune is one of three originals Mobley wrote for the date, and if it’s familiar that’s because it was included on a monumental live recording captured a few months later—At the Jazz Corner of the World, a fiery and complex document that’s become part of the “essential listening” jazz canon. Just Coolin’, which is apparently the only other recording of this short lived incarnation of the group, might be a step below that in terms of intensity. But only a step. – Tom Moon

Tracklist

1. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Hipsippy Blues
2. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Close Your Eyes
3. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Jimerick
4. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Quick Trick
5. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – M&M
6. Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers – Just Coolin’

Art Blakey Rar

Art Blakey Paris Jam Session

Download:

Art Blakey Art Blakey Quartet

mqs.link_ArtBlakeyTheJazzMessengersJustC00lin202024192.part1.rar
mqs.link_ArtBlakeyTheJazzMessengersJustC00lin202024192.part2.rar