Shelly Manne - Steps to the Desert (2004)
Jazz | EAC Rip | APE (image)+CUE+LOG | 317 MB.
300dpi. Complete Scans (JPG) included | WinRar, 3% recovery
Audio CD (2004) | Label: Contemporary Records | Catalog# CCD-7609-2 | 51:50 min.
Jazz | EAC Rip | APE (image)+CUE+LOG | 317 MB.
300dpi. Complete Scans (JPG) included | WinRar, 3% recovery
Audio CD (2004) | Label: Contemporary Records | Catalog# CCD-7609-2 | 51:50 min.
Review by Elliott Simon ~allAboutJazzTracklist:
In 1963, with guitarist Al Viola, bassist Monty Budwig, Shorty Rogers on trumpet, saxophonist Teddy Edwards and pianist/vibraphonist Victor Feldman, Manne released one of only a handful of sessions from that time period to approach Jewish music from a modern jazz perspective.
On this reissue retitled as Steps to the Desert , the context of familiar melodies like "Hava Nagila" and a bop version of "Tzena Tzena" serve as springboards for inventive soloing by these top players. Manne gives both "Zamar Nodad" and the theme from "Exodus" a Latin bossa feel. On the latter, Viola beautifully states the melody providing solo opportunities for Rogers' muted trumpet and Edwards' sax. The powerful arrangements and solos on tunes like the au courant sounding "Bokrei Lachisi" presage further developments that would wait over three decades for fruition.
01. Hava Nagila (Come Let's Be Happy) (3:53)
02. Bei Mir Bist Du Schoen (4:13)
03. Yossel, Yossel (3:07)
04. Zamar Nodad (3:47)
05. Bokrei Lachish (5:33)
06. Tzena (3:34)
07. Exodus (4:38)
08. Die Greene Koseene (4:28)
09. My Yiddishe Momme (3:41)
10. Orchah Bamidbar (Steps to the Desert) (4:16)
11. Zamar Nodad (single edit) (2:34)
12. Exodus (single edit) (2:53)
13. Tzena (single edit) (2:26)
14. Hava Nagila (single edit) (2:47)
Personnel:
Shelly Manne - drums
Shorty Rogers - flugelhorn (#1, 4-6), trumpet
Teddy Edwards - tenor saxophone
Victor Feldman - piano, vibes
Al Viola - guitar
Monty Budwig - bass
~allAboutJazz
Born: June 11, 1920 | Died: September 26, 1984 | Instrument: Drums
As a jazz drummer, studio musician, bandleader and businessman, Shelly Manne was one of the most prolific instrumentalists of modern times. “I’ve really had the best of both worlds,” he said in 1983. “I’ve kept busy playing jazz, and between engagements I’ve had the studios to fall back on.”
The New York City-born musician was the son of Max Manne, a percussionist who pioneered the synchronization of sound with motion pictures and cartoons, and nephew of Morris Manne, who did sound effects for Popeye cartoons. Shelly was introduced to jazz as a youth and was greatly influenced by Jo Jones and Dave Tough. During the early 1940s, he subbed for Tough, who suffered from alcoholism and epilepsy, in both the Benny Goodman and Joe Marsala bands. In the ’50s, Manne played the role of Tough in two motion pictures: The Five Pennies and The Gene Krupa Story.
A first-generation bebopper who played on Dizzy Gillespie’s earliest recordings as leader, Manne developed a national reputation for his 1946-1952 membership in Stan Kenton’s hugely popular “progressive jazz” orchestra. In 1954, two years after relocating to Southern California, he launched a lucrative Hollywood studio career, beginning with Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window. For the next two and a half decades, Manne was the percussionist of choice for such composers as Elmer Bernstein, Jerry Goldsmith, Henry Mancini, and John Williams, contributing to countless motion picture and television soundtracks.
Manne would always cancel a studio date when there was a chance to play jazz with his combo, Shelly Manne & His Men, which featured such players as pianist Russ Freeman, trumpeter Conte Candoli, and saxophonists Charlie Mariano, Richie Kamuca, and Frank Strozier over the years. Manne & His Men recorded extensively for Contemporary between 1953 and 1970 and also cut albums for Atlantic and Capitol.
Manne, pianist André Previn, and bassists Leroy Vinnegar or Red Mitchell made a series of trio albums for Contemporary-billed alternately as Shelly Manne & His Friends or André Previn & His Pals-including the best-selling Modern Jazz Performances of Songs from “My Fair Lady” in 1956. A consistent winner of Down Beat’s Readers Poll, the drummer also cut a series of LPs for the label with guitarist Barney Kessel and bassist Ray Brown, billed collectively as the Poll Winners. And Manne appeared as a sideman on numerous Contemporary dates, including albums by Benny Carter, Ornette Coleman, Hampton Hawes, Helen Humes, Red Norvo, Art Pepper, and Sonny Rollins.
The busy musician also managed to operate a nightclub, Shelly’s Manne-Hole, which rivaled the Black Hawk and Jazz Workshop (both in San Francisco) as the West Coast’s top spot for touring jazz groups. He ran the club at its original Hollywood location from 1960 to ’72, booking Miles Davis, Bill Evans, Thelonious Monk, and other major artists. Manne & His Men regularly performed at the club and cut two live albums there for Contemporary in 1961. Shelly’s Manne-Hole relocated to the Wilshire area of Los Angeles in 1973 but closed the following year.
During the last decade of his life, Manne cut back on soundtrack work. “Nearly all the music you hear on TV now or in a lot of movies is pop-oriented, like they’re trying to get a record out of what they’re doing,” he complained in 1983. “They want you to sound like somebody else.”
Playing jazz, however, allowed Manne to be his own swinging, highly empathetic self, and he had more time than ever to devote to it-at the helm of a trio featuring pianist Mike Wofford; as co-leader of a quartet with saxophonists Lew Tabackin and Zoot Sims; and with Ray Brown, saxophonist-flutist Bud Shank, and guitarist Laurindo Almeida in the L.A. Four.
“Being a drummer,” Manne once stated, “you can create but not dominate-and mostly you just have to sit back there and play time so that the horn players can get their propelling force from you. It’s much more difficult leading from behind the drums than just drumming, but it’s something I wouldn’t give up. It’s something I have to do because when you’re got a group and they’re really swinging. . . . there’s no other experience quite like it.”
Born: June 11, 1920 | Died: September 26, 1984 | Instrument: Drums
As a jazz drummer, studio musician, bandleader and businessman, Shelly Manne was one of the most prolific instrumentalists of modern times. “I’ve really had the best of both worlds,” he said in 1983. “I’ve kept busy playing jazz, and between engagements I’ve had the studios to fall back on.”
The New York City-born musician was the son of Max Manne, a percussionist who pioneered the synchronization of sound with motion pictures and cartoons, and nephew of Morris Manne, who did sound effects for Popeye cartoons. Shelly was introduced to jazz as a youth and was greatly influenced by Jo Jones and Dave Tough. During the early 1940s, he subbed for Tough, who suffered from alcoholism and epilepsy, in both the Benny Goodman and Joe Marsala bands. In the ’50s, Manne played the role of Tough in two motion pictures: The Five Pennies and The Gene Krupa Story.
A first-generation bebopper who played on Dizzy Gillespie’s earliest recordings as leader, Manne developed a national reputation for his 1946-1952 membership in Stan Kenton’s hugely popular “progressive jazz” orchestra. In 1954, two years after relocating to Southern California, he launched a lucrative Hollywood studio career, beginning with Alfred Hitchcock’s Rear Window. For the next two and a half decades, Manne was the percussionist of choice for such composers as Elmer Bernstein, Jerry Goldsmith, Henry Mancini, and John Williams, contributing to countless motion picture and television soundtracks.
Manne would always cancel a studio date when there was a chance to play jazz with his combo, Shelly Manne & His Men, which featured such players as pianist Russ Freeman, trumpeter Conte Candoli, and saxophonists Charlie Mariano, Richie Kamuca, and Frank Strozier over the years. Manne & His Men recorded extensively for Contemporary between 1953 and 1970 and also cut albums for Atlantic and Capitol.
Manne, pianist André Previn, and bassists Leroy Vinnegar or Red Mitchell made a series of trio albums for Contemporary-billed alternately as Shelly Manne & His Friends or André Previn & His Pals-including the best-selling Modern Jazz Performances of Songs from “My Fair Lady” in 1956. A consistent winner of Down Beat’s Readers Poll, the drummer also cut a series of LPs for the label with guitarist Barney Kessel and bassist Ray Brown, billed collectively as the Poll Winners. And Manne appeared as a sideman on numerous Contemporary dates, including albums by Benny Carter, Ornette Coleman, Hampton Hawes, Helen Humes, Red Norvo, Art Pepper, and Sonny Rollins.
The busy musician also managed to operate a nightclub, Shelly’s Manne-Hole, which rivaled the Black Hawk and Jazz Workshop (both in San Francisco) as the West Coast’s top spot for touring jazz groups. He ran the club at its original Hollywood location from 1960 to ’72, booking Miles Davis, Bill Evans, Thelonious Monk, and other major artists. Manne & His Men regularly performed at the club and cut two live albums there for Contemporary in 1961. Shelly’s Manne-Hole relocated to the Wilshire area of Los Angeles in 1973 but closed the following year.
During the last decade of his life, Manne cut back on soundtrack work. “Nearly all the music you hear on TV now or in a lot of movies is pop-oriented, like they’re trying to get a record out of what they’re doing,” he complained in 1983. “They want you to sound like somebody else.”
Playing jazz, however, allowed Manne to be his own swinging, highly empathetic self, and he had more time than ever to devote to it-at the helm of a trio featuring pianist Mike Wofford; as co-leader of a quartet with saxophonists Lew Tabackin and Zoot Sims; and with Ray Brown, saxophonist-flutist Bud Shank, and guitarist Laurindo Almeida in the L.A. Four.
“Being a drummer,” Manne once stated, “you can create but not dominate-and mostly you just have to sit back there and play time so that the horn players can get their propelling force from you. It’s much more difficult leading from behind the drums than just drumming, but it’s something I wouldn’t give up. It’s something I have to do because when you’re got a group and they’re really swinging. . . . there’s no other experience quite like it.”
Produced by Lester Koenig
Recorded at Contemporary's Studio, Los Angeles
Recording Date: December 17-20, 1962
Engineer: Howard Holzer
Remastering, 2004 - Joe Tarantino (Fantasy Studios, Berkeley)
Design: George Kershaw
Cover Photo: Roger Marshutz
Liner notes by Lester Koenig; January 3, 1963
Tracks #11-14 are bonus tracks
EAC extraction logfile from 14. May 2007, 14:26 for CD
Shelly Manne / Steps to the desert
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Shelly Manne / Steps to the desert
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Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Read offset correction : 12
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : Yes
Used output format : C:\Program Files\Monkey's Audio\MAC.exe (Monkey's Audio Lossless Encoder)
High Lossless Compression
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Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Installed external ASPI interface
Range status and errors
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Thanks to the original releaser.
mp3@320 version of this album is available on AvaxHome:
Shelly Manne - Steps to the Desert (mp3@320)
(inks are interchangeable)