Advanced search
Artist
2024 0-9 z y x w v u t s r q p o n m l k j i h g f e d c b a

Randy Weston - Mosaic Select 4 '2003

Mosaic Select 4
ArtistRandy Weston Related artists
Album name Mosaic Select 4
Country
Date 2003
GenreJazz
Play time 03:29:45
Format / Bitrate Stereo 1420 Kbps / 44.1 kHz
MP3 320 Kbps
Media CD
Size 1,2 GB (+3\%rec.)
PriceDownload $9.95
Order this album and it will be available for purchase and further download within 12 hours
Pre-order album

Tracks list

The three CDs that make up the Randy Weston Mosaic Select package comprise the
complete sessions from six different albums, one of which was previously
unreleased. Weston has had a long and varied career, and one that has
established him in the consummate realm of piano soloists with his
idiosyncratic, inclusive style. His deep jazz roots were accompanied, almost
from the beginning, by the influences of Afro-Caribbean folk and the music of
Asia, which he encountered during his tenure with the U.S. armed forces.

As represented by this set, the only consistent thing in Westons output from the
years 1957-1963 is the high quality. Piano à la Mode was released on Jubilee
with a trio that included Connie Kay and Peck Morrison; two big band albums,
Uhuru Afrika and Highlife, were issued in 1960 and 1963, respectively; and there
were three recordings in between: an unreleased date for Roulette, Little Niles,
and Live at the Five Spot, the latter two for United Artists. Their personnel,
producers, and material varied so widely that, if it werent for Westons telltale
style in the middle register, wed never know that the albums had the same
bandleader. Little Niles, and Five Spot reflect the Weston weve come to know
since 1989, creating a new pan-African classical music, structured outside of
the Western cultural paradigm. How they came into being after the Five Spot date
(the first of his recordings arranged by Melba Liston) – which featured a
band with Kenny Dorham, Coleman Hawkins, Roy Haynes, and Wilbur Little –
is a mystery. The late hard bop and bluesy swing from that date is nowhere in
evidence on Uhuru or Highlife. But this set offers clues in the form of
compositional development and the gradient incorporation of new ideas, rhythmic
concepts, and contrapuntal strategies.

As a bandleader, the gradual expansion from a trio to quintet to big band is
also fascinating because Weston sounds more at home with each phase of his band.
But at the time Highlife was issued, according to the music here, Weston sounded
as if he had liked a big band playing trans-African music his entire life. These
three CDs are nothing less than monumental in the revelation of Westons musical
thought and application. His interaction with small rhythm sections and various
groups of soloists reveal his consummate status as one of the most generous
bandleaders in history. This highly recommended package is indispensable not
only because it fills the cracks in Westons legacy, but for the merits of the
music in it, as well.


Tracks:

DISC 1
01. Earth Birth (A) 2:50 (Randy Weston)
02. Little Susan (A) 3:22 (Randy Weston)
03. Nice Ice (A) 2:54 (Randy Weston)
04. Little Niles (A) 5:58 (Randy Weston)
05. Pam’s Waltz (A) 3:13 (Randy Weston)
06. Babe’s Blues (A) 6:55 (Randy Weston)
07. Let’s Climb A Hill (A) 5:50 (Randy Weston)
08. Hi Fly (B) 7:21 (Randy Weston)
09. Beef Blues Stew (B) 5:00 (Randy Weston)
10. Star Crossed Lovers (B) 5:09 (B. Strayhorn-D. Ellington)
11. Spot Five Blues (B) 10:42 (R. Weston-K. Dorham)
12. Lisa Lovely (B) 4:40 (Randy Weston)
13. Where 5:53 (Randy Weston)


DISC 2
01. Earth Birth (C) 5:10 (Randy Weston)
02. Nobody Knows The Trouble I’ve Seen (C) 3:14 (traditional)
03. Saucer Eyes (C) 4:19 (Randy Weston)
04. I Got Rhythm (C) 5:22 (George Gershwin-Ira Gershwin)
05. Gingerbread (C) 2:54 (Randy Weston)
06. Cocktails For Two (C) 3:35 (Sam Coslow-Arthur Johnson)
07. Honeysuckle Rose (C) 6:28 (Fats Waller-Andy Razaf)
08. Fe-Double-U Blues (C) 5:36 (Randy Weston)
09. Portrait Of Patsy J (D) 4:07 (Randy Weston)
10. Uncle Nemo (D) 4:58 (Randy Weston)
11. Cry Me Not (D) 5:17 (Randy Weston)
12. Honk Honk (D) 2:01 (Randy Weston)
13. Saucer Eyes (D) 4:22 (Randy Weston)
14. 204 (D) 6:31 (Randy Weston)
15. C.B. Blues (D) 4:54 (Randy Weston)


DISC 3
01. Introduction: Uhuru Kwanza (Part One) (E) 2:36 (Langston Hughes)
02. First Movement: Uhuru Kwanza (Part Two) (E) 5:45 (Randy Weston)
03. Second Movement: African Lady (E) 8:24 (R. Weston-L. Hughes)
04. Third Movement: Bantu (E) 8:03 (Randy Weston)
05. Fourth Movement: Kucheza Blues (E) 8:01 (Randy Weston)
06. Caban Bamboo Highlife (F) 2:44 (Randy Weston)
07. Niger Mambo (F) 5:01 (Bobby Benson)
08. Zulu (F) 4:40 (Randy Weston)
09. In Memory Of (F) 7:44 (Randy Weston)
10. Congolese Children (F) 2:32 (Randy Weston)
11. Blues To Africa (F) 6:21 (Randy Weston)
12. Mystery Of Love (F) 7:37 (Guy Warren)

Personnel:

Randy Weston: piano
Benny Bailey: trumpet; Ron Carter: bass; Jimmy Cleveland: trombone; Kenny
Dorham: trumpet; Booker Ervin: tenor sax; Gigi Gryce: flute, alto sax; Slide
Hampton: trombone; Budd Johnson: clarinet, soprano sax, tenor sax; Melba Liston:
trombone; Cecil Payne: baritone sax; Jerome Richardson: piccolo, saxophone; Max
Roach: drums; Les Spann: flute, guitar; Julius Watkins: french horn; Aaron Bell:
tuba; Armando Peraza: bongos, conga; Coleman Hawkins: tenor sax; Brock Peters:
vocals; Quentin Jackson: trombone; Connie Kay: drums; Clifford Jarvis: drums;
Ray Copeland: trumpet, flugelhorn; George Duvivier: bass; Yusef Lateef: flute,
oboe, tenor sax; Kenny Burrell: guitar; Candido Camero: conga; Clark Terry:
trumpet, flugelhorn; Frankie Dunlop: percussion, drums; Martha Flowers: vocals;
Roy Haynes: drums; Freddie Hubbard: trumpet; George Joyner: bass; Wilbur Little:
bass; Peck Morrison: bass; Charlie Persip: drums, tympani; Tuntemeke Sanga:
narrator; Sahib Shihab: alto sax, baritone sax; Idrees Sulieman: trumpet; Archie
Lee: percussion, conga; Richard Gene Williams: trumpet.

Related artists

Start radio