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George Wallington – Virtuoso

George Wallington – Virtuoso
FLAC, EAC, LOG & CUE | Lossless Artwork | Size: 285 MB
Label/Cat#: Denon 35C38-7248 | Country/Year: Japan 1984, 1st Pressing
Genre: Jazz | Hoster: Filesonic/Uploaded/Wupload

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CD Info:

George Wallington – Virtuoso

Label: Denon
Catalog#: 35C38-7248
Format: CD, Album
Country: Japan
Released: Sep 1984
Genre: Jazz
Style: Bop

Tracklist:

1 Moon Flower
2 Clearness Of View
3 Beautiful Eyes
4 Melody
5 Virtuoso
6 Temporal
7 Beautiful To Behold
8 Heart Of Hearts
9 Oh Foolish Leaf
10 Sociability

Barcode and Other Identifiers:

Other (Japan Fix Price): ¥ 3.500

Biography

by Scott Yanow

George Wallington was one of the first and best bop pianists, ranking up there with Al Haig, just below Bud Powell. He was also the composer of two bop standards that caught on for a time: “Lemon Drop” and “Godchild.” Born in Sicily, Wallington and his family moved to the U.S. in 1925. He arrived in New York in the early ’40s and was a member of the first bop group to play on 52nd Street, Dizzy Gillespie’s combo of 1943-1944. After spending a year with Joe Marsala’s band, Wallington played with the who’s who of bop during 1946-1952, including Charlie Parker, Serge Chaloff, Allan Eager, Kai Winding, Terry Gibbs, Brew Moore, Al Cohn, Gerry Mulligan, Zoot Sims, and Red Rodney. He toured Europe with Lionel Hampton’s ill-fated big band of 1953, and during 1954-1960 he led groups in New York that included among its up-and-coming sidemen Donald Byrd and Jackie McLean (the latter succeeded by Phil Woods). Then, in 1960, Wallington gave up on the music business altogether and retired to work in his family’s air-conditioning company. 24 years later he re-emerged, recording three albums of original material before time ran out.

Review

by Scott Yanow

After 24 years off the scene, pianist George Wallington surprised many who had forgotten by him by recording this solo CD, the first of three. Although all ten of the selections are Wallington originals, his boppish style was largely unchanged from the 1950s, and some of the tunes are based on the chord changes of more common standards. However, the melodies are fresh, Wallington’s improvisations are full of joyful swing, and the overall results (available as a Japanese import through Denon) are quite appealing.

allmusicguide

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