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Jazz Articles about Harold Land

7
Multiple Reviews

Jazz in the Key of Japan: The J Jazz Masterclass Series on BBE

Read "Jazz in the Key of Japan: The J Jazz Masterclass Series on BBE" reviewed by Jakob Baekgaard


It's widely known that Japan is a country with a jazz-loving population. The audience appreciates the music and shows it proper respect. It has been that way for a long time. In fact, the history of jazz in Japan goes back to the 1920s when jazz was still popular dance music. Since then, the music has evolved with the times and made the transition from popular music to modern art music. The American influence has been there from the beginning, ...

6
Album Review

Harold Land: A New Shade Of Blue

Read "A New Shade Of Blue" reviewed by Chris May


If Harold Land had left nothing else behind him other than the 1960 Contemporary Records album The Fox, a place in jazz history would be secure. The disc not only featured some of the finest mid-period hard-bop tenor saxophone to come out of the West Coast, but in Land's frontline partner, Dupree Bolton, it showcased a trumpet soloist of outsize talent, one, tragically, who was cut down by heroin addiction and psychiatric problems almost as soon as the recording session ...

7
Album Review

Harold Land: A New Shade Of Blue

Read "A New Shade Of Blue" reviewed by Mark Corroto


What came first, craft beers or the revival of vinyl records? I ask because both revolutions have moved your collective attentions away from corporate culture to smaller more specialized boutiques. That means better beer and certainly a more diverse choice in music. Case in point, saxophonist Harold Land's A New Shade Of Blue originally issued on Los Angeles' Mainstream Records in 1971. When the big record companies were touting their answer to rock-and-roll with electric Miles and Herbie, producers like ...

387
Album Review

Harold Land: Take Aim

Read "Take Aim" reviewed by George Harris


Originally recorded in 1960 for Blue Note but not released until 1980, Take Aim, like Harold Land himself, has undeservedly fallen through the cracks. Most famous for his association with the Clifford Brown/Max Roach quintet of the '50s, Land is another unheralded West Coast giant who made a name for himself out here in California, but was under the radar of the jazz elitists. Take Aim, featuring an obscure group of musicians, is a pleasant surprise, and should be a ...

1
Album Review

Elmo Hope: Trio and Quintet

Read "Trio and Quintet" reviewed by AAJ Italy Staff


Questo è uno dei pochi dischi di Elmo Hope in circolazione oggi in Italia. Un plauso alla Blue Note che l'aveva già pubblicato in CD (con identica copertina e stessi brani) 15 anni fa ed oggi lo riedita per il beneficio di chi se l'era perso.Dopo anni di totale oblio, lo sfortunato pianista e compositore bop ha avuto nel decennio scorso una certa rivalutazione critica ma dal pubblico jazz è ancora ampiamente ignorato.Un vero peccato, perché ...

175
Album Review

Harold Land: Promised Land

Read "Promised Land" reviewed by AAJ Staff


Time allows, eventually, the opportunity for self-actualization--one hopes. After a long, under-appreciated career and sparse discography, tenor saxophonist, Harold Land, affirms his stature on this album as an individual stylist. Land’s sound has matured into something distinctly his own--a combination of the swing style of his early career and a full command of Coltrane-inspired “sheets of sound”.

This session provides a rich, satisfying experience. The songs on the diverse play list--Land originals, standards, and a Monk tune--have well-articulated themes; solid ...


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