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    Booker Little: "Booker Little" (Japanese remaster import)

    Posted By: VanPelten
    Booker Little: "Booker Little" (Japanese remaster import)

    Booker Little: "Booker Little" (Japanese Remaster)
    Jazz | 1960/2001 (Time/M&I Japan) | Ape | EAC Logs + Cues | HQ Full Covers & Booklet | 294mb


    Now, here is a man who will knock you off of whatever you are sitting with his playing. Listen to this album without preparation and, I am warning you, you will be astounded beyond belief. Listen to Booker's incredibly wide range, impeccable attack on notes, melancholy sound, and remarkable endurance (with relentless 3 or 4 minute solos). Check out the rhythm section - did these guys ever play beforehand or ever again? Tommy Flanagan or Wynton Kelly, Scott LaFaro, and Roy Haynes pool their experience into a rhythm section of firepower and graceful groove.

    Booker Little's eponymous album introduced a powerful new voice in the jazz trumpet: a musician who actually preferred composition and arranging to playing, yet was equipped with arguably the best technique and ability of any jazz trumpeter. It is also extremely valuable when considering Little's ridiculously under-recorded career, as it is one of his only four albums. The music is powerfully swift ("Opening Statement"), introspectively spiritual ("Minor Sweet"), unapologetically groovy ("Bee's Minor Plea"), heart-rending ("Life's A Little Blue"), anguished and bittersweet ("Grand Valse"), and sorrowful ("Who Can I Turn To").

    Little's trumpet playing elevates him (and the listener) as if he were among the elms of a hill's summit. His tone has a gorgeously executed vibrato, his harmonic knowledge allows him to hit striking notes (tritone subs, flatted fifths), his improvisations are stunningly melodic and linear, and, most importantly, he dedicates every single note to the significance of his music and the life that it portrays. LaFaro sounds as one who is dreaming alone, playing spiraling, rhythmically complex bass-lines without compromising tonal centers. Haynes relegates to the background and sounds almost non-existent at times.

    Beware, however, that this album is heartbreakingly full of pain. Most of the music is in the minor key, and even the music that is in the major key is played with such heartfelt interpretation that the listener can't help but feel magnification of his or her life's sorrows, not to mention bemoaning of this trumpet legend's early 20's death. You will enjoy Little's music despite your mood, but it reaches much further down emotionally than many other tapestries of notes can bother to reach.

    This was Little's only album fronting a quartet, which means that plenty of time is given to the young man to stretch out and penetrate the listener with his musical ideas. He solos at large length on each tune, including an absolutely mind-blowing cadenza to begin "Minor Sweet." His improvisations contain fleeting lines up scales, searching figures throughout his compositions' mysterious chords (think lots of Lydian dominant chords), and unforgettable virtuosity propelling him through his many statements.

    The cadenza to open up "Minor Sweet" cannot be praised enough. It is diatonic, consisting of notes from the C minor scale, and is only accompanied by Haynes's free, tribal drumming. Little effortlessly slides between his notes, reaching a climax on a high F (concert Eb) before gunning into a rhythmically amazing melody that switches between breakneck swing and a break-cha-cha chorus (with the aforementioned Lyd-dominant chord) that is spellbinding. "Minor Sweet" is a landmark in the history of recorded jazz and absolutely shattered bebop into unrecoverable shards.

    Now, this music is not a landscape lined with many flowers, but rather a grove presided by dark, overhanging yews. The melodies are heart-rending and Little's playing is unbelievably breathtaking. He continued to climb the road and see the stars more and more with each step, and the jazz world will never know his final destination, as uremia claimed him at age 23. "Booker Little" is a tragically beautiful album that finds Little at the summit of the jazz trumpet world, arresting listeners with his un-curtained, vulnerable, flawless music, vividly recorded.

    EAC extraction logfile from 14. May 2009, 11:51 for CD
    Booker Little / Booker Little

    Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-760A Adapter: 0 ID: 0
    Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
    Read offset correction : 30
    Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

    Used output format : Monkey's Audio Lossless Encoder v3.99 DLL
    Fast Lossless Compression

    Other options :
    Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
    Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
    Installed external ASPI interface


    Range status and errors
    Selected range
    Filename D:\Booker_Little\Booker Little - Booker Little.ape

    Peak level 98.8 %
    Track quality 100.0 %
    CRC 5ADA44AC
    Copy OK

    No errors occured

    End of status report


    Tracks:
    1. Opening Statement
    2. Minor Sweet
    3. Bee Tee's Minor Plea
    4. Life's a Little Blue
    5. Grand Valse
    6. Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)

    Artists:
    Tommy Flanagan Piano
    Roy Haynes Drums
    Wynton Kelly Piano
    Scott LaFaro Bass
    Booker Little Trumpet
    Nat Hentoff Liner Notes
    Irving Joseph Producer
    Bill MacMeeken Engineer
    Al Weintraub Engineer
    Tadashi Narita, Japanese Remaster Producer

    Original issue: Apr 13, 15 1960 (Time)
    Japanese reissue: 2001 (M&I Company, Japan)