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Lalo Schifrin & Friends
Lalo Schifrin
Lalo Schifrin & Friends
Genres: International Music, Jazz, Pop, Latin Music
 
  •  Track Listings (9) - Disc #1

It is as appropiate as it is welcome that this latest Aleph issue focuses on Schifrin the pianist as much as Schifrin the composer. He is joined by James Morrison, James Moody, Dennis Budimir, Brian Bromberg, and Alex Acu&...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: Lalo Schifrin
Title: Lalo Schifrin & Friends
Members Wishing: 1
Total Copies: 0
Label: Aleph Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2007
Re-Release Date: 9/11/2007
Genres: International Music, Jazz, Pop, Latin Music
Styles: South & Central America, Argentina, Latin Jazz, Latin Pop
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 651702636020

Synopsis

Album Description
It is as appropiate as it is welcome that this latest Aleph issue focuses on Schifrin the pianist as much as Schifrin the composer. He is joined by James Morrison, James Moody, Dennis Budimir, Brian Bromberg, and Alex Acuña. Of the nine selections, six are Schifrin tunes: a testimony to the rich variety of this writer?s palette and range of mood.

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CD Reviews

Tremendous All-Star Session!
Steven Jay | Denver CO | 09/03/2008
(5 out of 5 stars)

"Lalo Schifrin turned 75 on June 21, 2007. In anticipation of that milestone, he convened the recording session for this album a little less than three months earlier, on March 30, 2007, intending to return to his first love of acoustic jazz. The sextet making up the pianist/composer's friends here includes saxophonist James Moody, James Morrison on trumpet and trombone, guitarist Dennis Budimir, bass player Brian Bromberg, and Alex Acuña on drums and percussion. It's an accomplished lineup, and Schifrin wrote and arranged material to showcase the players, beginning with the standard "Besame Mucho," on which Morrison's trumpet takes the lion's share of space. Moody's tenor is given greatest attention on "Fast Forward," the first of six Schifrin originals, and Budimir is the star of "Old Friends." The lengthy "Free Parking" begins with Morrison's trombone leading, followed by an extensive bass solo from Bromberg, before Morrison returns on trumpet. "Night Walk" is given over to Moody and Acuña. Of course, the leader himself does not go unheard up to this point, but he begins to assert himself more late in the set, duetting with Bromberg on the head section of "A Tribute to Bud" (that's Bud Powell, of course), and really taking over on the melancholy ballad "Winter Landscapes," which finds the horns laying out. An extended take of "Tin Tin Daeo," which evokes Schifrin's mentor, Dizzy Gillespie, is also performed sans horns, but Moody makes a comeback on Oscar Peterson's "Hymn to Freedom." It's easy to imagine this 63-minute collection forming the basis for a hot set at a small jazz club, and that may be the intention. Schifrin has ranged far and wide since his days of playing piano with Gillespie, but, as he says in Richard Palmer's liner notes, "Once a jazz musician, always a jazz musician."

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