Search - Lee Morgan :: Gigolo

Gigolo
Lee Morgan
Gigolo
Genre: Jazz
 
A sparkling 1965 session with Wayne Shorter, Harold Mabern, Bob Cranshaw and Billy Higgins, who ignites the whole proceedings. Morgan and Shorter solo with a vengeance on some of Lee's finest compositions, including "Trapp...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Lee Morgan
Title: Gigolo
Members Wishing: 0
Total Copies: 0
Release Date: 3/24/2006
Album Type: Import
Genre: Jazz
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPCs: 094633776227, 094633776258, 094635520620, 094635520620

Synopsis

Album Description
A sparkling 1965 session with Wayne Shorter, Harold Mabern, Bob Cranshaw and Billy Higgins, who ignites the whole proceedings. Morgan and Shorter solo with a vengeance on some of Lee's finest compositions, including "Trapped," "Speedball" and the title, which is also heard in a previously unissued alternate take.

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CD Reviews

Going Past the Cheese, Gettin' to the Core
Todd M. Stellhorn | baltimore, MD | 07/30/2007
(5 out of 5 stars)

"As much as I love "the procrastinator", "cornbread", and "the sidewinder", this is the definative Lee Morgan album for me. As with all post-sidewinder albums the knock on this one by the jazz-police (the great defenders of cliche and self-important snobbery) is the sidewinderesque first track: "Yes I can, No you can't". For people who can look past labels (and the head of the tune) what you'll find with this track is something very similar to Hank Mobley's "Dippin'", namely a very soulful, very engaging, slice of jazz-funk, done as only Lee Morgan could do it. However the person who makes this album a classic isn't so much the usual suspect of excellence: Wayne Shorter and his brilliant compositional skills and jagged tenor, but rather the pure-hot-fire drumming of Billy Higgins. I think a pretty good case could be made that no one in the history of jazz was a player in more quality recorded sessions than Higgins, one of the two or three greatest ever drummers in jazz. This is a man who could truely do it all, from the high speed Tony Williams like drumming on this album, to, fast forward forty years, his verging on languid, anticipating-improv with Charles Lloyd. Billy Higgins kept the fire burning for a long time, and under many different jazz-pots, but with this album we get Higgins at his most vital, his most alive and immediate. We also get Lee Morgan at his most engaged, no hint here of some of the going-through-the-motions-tiredness of some sideman sessions, or the hesitant tone of late sixties post-swimming accident Lee. This is Lee reaching into his bag of tricks and shooting them all out of his shining horn. He even throws in a ballad just to show that he can. In short this is an album for people who can see past the cheese of the title, the tired criticisms of the self-superior, and who can deal with an album on its own terms. If you can do that what you'll find is a master on the trumpet doing what he does best. And that is a thing to behold.

"
Terrible Remaster....
Well Red | UK | 10/05/2007
(1 out of 5 stars)

"This is fantastic jazz - Lee Morgan's finest, but it's been ruined by an appalling remastering job. So much treble has been added that his trumpet is rendered as a shrill blast likely to loosen your fillings. If you're getting older, you may find that a diminishing of your high-end hearing ability makes it acceptable. For those with normal hearing, I suggest seeking out an earlier version.



Such great music really deserves better.



"
Great work, Lee.
Michael Schmidt | San Diego, CA | 07/24/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"A trumpeter friend of mine recommended this album with Cornbread when I asked him for two Lee Morgan recommendations. After listening to Lee Morgan's work at 19 on Coltrane's Blue Train album, I have been a big fan. Every track on The Gigolo is solid. I highly recommend it."