• Hi Guest - Come check out all of the new CP Merch Shop! Now you can support CigarPass buy purchasing hats, apparel, and more...
    Click here to visit! here...

You Know You're a Cigar Smoker When ...

sir-smokes-a-lot

A Freudian Slip in progress
Joined
May 1, 2003
Messages
2,025
Reaction score
0
Location
The LCdH between Point A and Point B
Hey guys, (little background here) have performed on the trumpet ever since middle school. Play jazz, classical, marching band, etc...


anyway, was talking w/ the parents the other day
(the good son I am, I call them at least once a week from the dorms)
and was telling them about this great new CD I got from Arturo Fuente ...

was telling how smooth it was and the great texture,

then remembered the guys name is Arturo SANDOVAL

:sign: :sign:



It is a 'cover' CD w/ Sandoval playing his version of many classic trumpet pieces, definately buy it!

Oh yeah, interview w/ him in last issue of cA, check it out!
 
f87133mxliw.jpg


Title: Trumpet Evolution
Artist: Arturo Sandoval

As reviewed by the fine folks at AMG:
Trumpeter Arturo Sandoval is one of those cats who can never be predictable. He's either amazing — actually, technically he always is — or his records are putrid exercises in hollow proficiency with no soul. Trumpet Evolution, which is literally a journey through the great trumpeters from jazz's and orchestral music's past, is easily the finest moment of Sandoval's long career and one of the greatest records jazz has produced in the preceding two decades. Sandoval has compiled a collection of tunes by composers and fellow horn players, from King Oliver to Wynton Marsalis, performed by a big band and, when needed, an orchestra, too. It isn't just playing tunes by these men — whose tracks are sequenced in order of birthdate of the source of inspiration — it's the mastery of their techniques; and given that there are 19 subjects here, that's a hell of a lot of mastery. And that word is not overused. Indeed what appears in the ear of the listener seems to be the creation of the impossible. Whether striding out blues by Louis Armstrong, Bix Beiderbecke, and Oliver, playing in the hot bebop styles of Dizzy Gillespie, Fats Navarro, and Clifford Brown, the muted, elegant silkiness of the warm, thin-toned masters such as Chet Baker, Harry James, and Miles Davis, or classical maestros such as Maurice Andre, Rafael Méndez, or Timofei Dokshizer and the full-throated sweetness of Bunny Berigan, Cootie Williams, Clark Terry, and Roy Eldridge, or the hard edgy sounds of Maynard Ferguson, or the technically perfect pitch of Marsalis, the effect is the same, perfection, and not just technical. The emotional sonances of these tunes ring as true as if Sandoval wrote them himself. In the booklet, either the musician paid tribute to or a relative or associate offering quotes, of course, praise Sandoval's work. And while the album is self-produced as well, Quincy Jones acted as an executive producer and no doubt wrote some charts. His contribution is noteworthy as well for its depth and warmth overall. This is a record so fine, so full of passion, grace, and elegance it simply needs to be heard to be believed. — Thom Jurek

Song Listing:
1. Dipper Mouth Blues (Oliver) - 2:15
2. When It's Sleepy Time Down South (Muse/Rene/Rene) - 3:02
3. At the Jazz Band Ball (Edwards/Larocca/Sbarbaro/Shields) - 2:56
4. La Virgen de la Macarena (Calero/Monteverde) - 3:06
5. I Can't Get Started (Duke/Gershwin) - 4:35
6. Concerto for Cootie (Ellington) - 3:51
7. Little Jazz (Eldridge/Harding) - 2:40
8. The Man With a Horn (De Lange/Jenney/Lake) - 3:30
9. Manteca (Fuller/Gillespie/Pozo) - 3:23
10. Tee Pee Time (Terry) - 4:07
11. Coloratura Concerto for Soprano: First... (Gliere) - 3:41
12. Nostalgia (Navarro) - 3:31
13. 'Round Midnight (Hanighen/Monk/Williams) - 5:42
14. Maynard Ferguson (Rogers) - 4:16
15. My Funny Valentine (Hart/Rodgers) - 4:25
16. Joy Spring (Brown) - 4:17
17. Concerto in D Major: First Movement (Tartini) - 3:57
18. Up Jumped Spring (Hubbard) - 4:11
19. Later (Marsalis) - 4:01
 
Top