Stan Kenton - Contemporary Concepts album flac
Performer: Stan KentonTitle: Contemporary Concepts
Released: 1955
MP3 album: 1848 mb
FLAC album: 1261 mb
Rating: 4.3
Other formats: TTA VQF ADX VQF DTS MP3 FLAC
Genre: Jazz
New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm is an album by Stan Kenton. Fresh from the commercial failure of his Innovations in Modern Music Orchestra, Kenton returned to the studio and the road with a new jazz band, featuring some of the top-flight west coast players he had come to know since his last jazz band broke up in 1950. He commissioned music from several arrangers, including Bill Holman, Johnny Richards, Gerry Mulligan, Shorty Rogers, and Bill Russo, and this album was the result
Contemporary Concepts. Extra Tracks, Remastered. Contemporary Concepts. The reason this album is so close to me is that I saw this particular Stan Kenton band in person when I was in college. Nearing my 75th birthday I tend to nostalgia more often. But I will never forget how I felt listening to Bill Perkins play Yesterdays!
Arranged By, Written-By – Stan Kenton. 9. Opus In Chartreuse. Arranged By, Written-By – Gene Roland. Contemporary Concepts (LP, Album, Mono).
This is one of the less important Stan Kenton LP reissues on Creative World.
City of Glass, an album originally issued as a 10" LP by Stan Kenton, consists entirely of the music of Bob Graettinger. There is a great deal written in music history books about the period of artistic experimentalism after World War II in Europe and the United States
Stan Kenton: Contemporary Concepts by Russell Moon, published on November 3, 2003. Contemporary Concepts was recorded in July of 1955, and it offers six standards arranged by Bill Holman and one by Gerry Mulligan. The Mulligan chart, "Limelight," is easily recognizable and prefigures his work for his Concert Jazz Band five years later. There is no room for a canary on any of Holman's six works.
Stan Kenton with bassist Eddie Safranski, 1947 or 1948. Kenton's first appearance in New York was in February 1942 at the Roseland Ballroom, with the marquee featuring an endorsement by Fred Astaire. Kenton's Contemporary Concepts (1955) and Kenton in Hi-Fi (1956) albums during this time are very impressive as a be-bop recording and then a standard dance recording (respectively). Kenton in Hi-Fis wide popularity and sales benefited from the fact it was his greatest hits of ten years earlier re-recorded in stereo with a contemporary, much higher level band. Stan Kenton's Cuban Fire! album featured the music of composer Johnny Richards.









