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Little Feat: Extended Versions: The Encore Collection
by C. Michael Bailey
Little Feat not exactly batting a thousand. Ain't Had Enough Fun (1995) and Live From Neon Park (1996) were two releases by the reunited Little Feat, sans Lowell George, released on Zoo Records. Zoo Records is a subsidiary of RCA, now a part of Bertelsmann, explaining the BMG Special Products Label gracing the Little Feat Extended ...
Quintet For New Tango
Label: BMG
Released: 2000
Track listing: Conexion Portena; Desde Otros Tiempos; Milongueta; Once Again...Milonga; Imagenes 676; Alrededor del Choclo; El Vals del Duende; Ritmico y Nostalgico; Astor's Place; Muchacha de Boedo; Sandunga; Primavera Portena.
String Fever
By Chuck Wayne
Label: BMG
Released: 2000
Track listing:
Lullaby In Rhythm; Embraceable You; Love For Sale; Along With Me; Carmel; Body And Soul; Snuggled On Your Shoulder; How About You; Lover Man; What A Difference A Day Made; Rock-A-Bye Bay.
Available: through Cadence (315-287-2852), Trueblue Music on the Mosaic website, and Amazon, among many other sources.
Pablo Ziegler: Quintet For New Tango
by AAJ Staff
Life is full of surprises, and things aren't always what they appear to be on the surface. Many hidden mysteries are waiting to reveal themselves to the ones who seek them out. There will be times when you expect everything, and you get nothing. But there will also be times when you expect nothing, and you ...
Chuck Wayne: String Fever
by Mike Neely
The re-mastering and release of Chuck Wayne's String Fever should begin to focus attention on a musician who was not only a brilliant guitarist but also a subtle and significant composer/arranger. On this recording Wayne became the first jazz guitarist to front a big band. He is the main soloist. He also conducted and arranged all ...
Pablo Ziegler: Quintet for New Tango
by Jack Bowers
I’m no expert on the tango, but I do know that to most partisans of that Argentinean music and dance, the words “tango” and “Astor Piazzolla” are practically inseparable. The inescapable question, following Piazzolla’s passing in July 1992, was, where does the tango go from here? The answer, says pianist Pablo Ziegler, a member of Piazzolla’s ...





