Big Band Bossa Nova (Remastered) Stan Getz

Album info

Album-Release:
1962

HRA-Release:
28.04.2014

Label: Verve Reissues

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Latin Jazz

Artist: Stan Getz

Album including Album cover

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  • 1Manha De Carnaval (Morning Of Carnival)05:49
  • 2Balanco No Samba03:00
  • 3Melancolico04:43
  • 4Entre Amigos03:00
  • 5Chega De Saudade (No More Blues)04:11
  • 6Noite Triste04:58
  • 7One Note Samba03:29
  • 8Bim Bom04:31
  • Total Runtime33:41

Info for Big Band Bossa Nova (Remastered)

For many North American music fans, Stan Getz was the figure associated most closely with the Brazilian jazz craze in the early 1960s. Unlike classic albums like Getz/Gilberto, however, 1962's „Big Band Bossa Nova“ sidesteps the delicate, airy quality of traditional bossa nova for a fusion music that folds in the bold, brassy sound of a large jazz ensemble.

Bossa nova purists may take issue with the fusion, which loses something of the form's elegance in translation, but there's still plenty to appreciate here. Tight, swinging arrangements, Getz's superb playing, and an excellent selection of tunes (Luis Bonfa's "Morning of the Carnival" and Antonio Carlos Jobim's "One Note Samba" are highlights), make this a thoroughly enjoyable listen.

„Fresh from the sudden success of Jazz Samba and "Desafinado," Stan Getz asked the 28-year-old, strikingly gifted Gary McFarland to arrange a bossa nova album for big band as a follow-up. Getz is always his debonair, wistful, freely-floating self, completely at home in the Brazilian idiom that he'd adopted only a few months before.“ (Richard Ginell, All Music)

„Getz’s melodic gift was never more evident; even the way he plays "straight" melody is masterful. Few jazzmen have had this gift - Lester Young did - and it has to do with singing by means of an instrument, for Getz doesn't just play a solo, he sings it,…“ (Don DeMichael, JazzMonthly)

Stan Getz, tenor saxophone
Doc Severisen, trumpet
Bernie Glow, trumpet
Joe Ferrante, trumpet
Clark Terry, trumpet
Nick Travis, trumpet
Ray Alonge, French horn
Tony Studd, trombone
Bob Brookmeyer, trombone
Willie Dennis, trombone
Ray Beckenstein, flute, clarinet
Gerald Sanfino, flute
Eddie Caine, alto flute
Babe Clark, clarinet
Walt Levinsky, clarinet
Romeo Penque, bass clarinet
Hank Jones, piano
Jim Hall, guitar
Tommy Williams, bass
Johnny Rae, drums
Jose Paulo, tambourine
Carmen Costa, cabassa
Gary McFarland, conductor

Recorded in New York, New York on August 27 & 28, 1962

Digitally remastered



Stan Getz
Tenor saxophonist Stan Getz was one of the most elegant melodists in modern jazz. His pleasantly meandering lines, but above all his velvety, soft and at the same time powerfully determined tone, have decisively shaped the sound of the demanding mainstream since the fifties and the bossa nova wave of the sixties.

Stanley Gayetzsky was born on February 2, 1927 in Philadelphia and grew up in the Bronx, the son of a Jewish printer. Encouraged vehemently by his ambitious mother, he played in school bands as a child, first playing the harmonica, bass and bassoon, and later the alto and tenor saxophone. He was gifted and had a scholarship to the Juilliard School almost in his pocket when he could no longer stand it at home and broke away from his family's narrow circumstances. He ran away, turned to jazz, went on tour with Dick Rodgers at the age of 15 and a year later was already heard in Jack Teagarden's ensemble, who immediately took over the guardianship of the teenager until he came of age. He quickly became one of the most accomplished composition players of his time and was engaged in the orchestras of Stan Kenton (1945/6), Jimmy Dorsey, Benny Goodman and Herbie Fields. He moved to the West Coast around 1946 and worked in Hollywood with his own trio, but also with Nat Cole and other orchestras.

Getz took the next important career step when he joined Woody Herman's bebop big band “Second Herd” in 1947, together with Jimmy Giuffre (later Serge Chaloff), Herbie Stewart and Zoot Sims as the “Four Brothers”. He was part of the brass section of those years and became known far beyond jazz specialist circles thanks to his sensational solo on “Early Autumn” (1948). Getz stayed with Herman until 1949, then worked as an established sideman and bandleader in a variety of projects alongside stars such as Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Dizzy Gillespie and as part of the renowned “Jazz At The Philharmonic” concerts. However, his increasing drug addiction put him under so much pressure that in the mid-1950s, after a pharmacy robbery and a suicide attempt, he ended up first in prison and then in a rehabilitation center.

After this involuntary career break, Getz made a remarkable comeback at the beginning of the sixties. In addition to the classical crossover recording “Focus” (1961), which is unique in jazz history, together with Eddie Sauter, it was above all the collaboration with the guitarist Charlie Byrd (“Jazz Samba”, 1962), the Brazilian composer Antonio Carlos Jobim and Gilberto couple (“The Girl From Ipanema”, 1965), who brought him back to the stage. Getz became a style role model of the bossa nova wave through buttery solos like in “Desafinado” and was again a much-booked soloist for a wide variety of projects well into the 1970s. Own bands with the pianist Chick Corea were enthusiastically celebrated at festivals such as in Berlin in 1966, but proved to have little lasting power.

During the following years, Getz tried out new line-ups, lived in Europe from 1969 to 1972 and was sometimes at the side of Airto Moreira and Tony Williams, sometimes with lyrical small groups such as the duo “The Peacocks” (1975) with the pianist Jimmy Rowles to hear. During the 1980s he developed an enormous recording activity from “Autumn Leaves” (1980) to “People Time” (1991), documented by several dozen albums. From 1985 onwards, he helped Stanford University set up the young Jazz Department and, as a lecturer, passed on his experiences to the next generation. The following year he was elected to the “Hall of Fame” by readers of the influential Down Beat magazine. Although he was already suffering from liver cancer, he remained on stage until the very end and could be seen live at the North Sea Festival in The Hague in 1990, where he was also presented with the renowned “Bird Award”. Stan Getz died on June 6, 1991 in Los Angeles.

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