Ahmad Jamal Saturday Morning Rar



In the 21st century, Jamal continued carving his own path with a series of live and studio albums that juxtaposed standards with his own compositions including 2003's In Search of Momentum, Blue Moon: The New York Session/The Paris Concert in 2012, and the following year's Saturday Morning: La Buissone Studio Sessions. Saturday Morning. By Ahmad Jamal Sep 10, 2013. 4.7 out of 5 stars 106. Audio CD $16.93 $. Live at Montreal Jazz Festival 1985 by AHMAD JAMAL.


Artist: Ahmad Jamal
Title: All Good
Year Of Release: 2020
Label: nagel heyer records
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) / MP3
Total Time: 1:15:00
Total Size: 367 / 172 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. Old Devil Moon
02. Sweet and Lovely
03. They Can't Take That Away from Me
04. We Live in Two Different Worlds

Ahmad Jamal Best Albums


05. Willow Weep for Me
06. Love for Sale
07. It's Easy to Remember
08. We Kiss in a Shadow
09. Black Beauty
10. Squeeze Me
11. Crazy She Calls Me
12. I Didn't Know What Time It Was
13. Aki and Ukthay
14. Snowfall
15. Falling in Love with Love
16. A Gal in Calico
17. The Surrey with the Fringe on Top
18. Ahmad's Blues
Saturday19. Isn't It Romantic
One of the most individualistic pianists, composers, and arrangers of his generation, Ahmad Jamal's disciplined technique and minimalist style had a huge impact on trumpeter Miles Davis, and Jamal is often cited as contributing to the development of cool jazz throughout the 1950s. Though he was an excellent, technically proficient player well-versed in the gymnastic idioms of swing and bebop, he chose to play in a pared-down and nuanced style. Which is to say that while he played with the skill of a virtuoso, it was often what he chose not to play that marked him as an innovator. Influenced by pianists Errol Garner, Art Tatum, and Nat King Cole, as well as big-band and orchestral music, Jamal developed his own boundary-pushing approach to modern jazz that incorporated an abundance of space, an adept use of tension and release, unexpected rhythmic phrasing and dynamics, and a highly melodic, compositional style evidenced beautifully on the best-selling 1958 offering Ahmad Jamal at the Pershing: But Not for Me. His style and depth only increased in the ensuing decades, displaying themselves on standard-setting trio albums including 1965's Extensions, charting crossover sets like 1979's Intervals, and 1986's Rossiter Road. In the 21st century, Jamal continued carving his own path with a series of live and studio albums that juxtaposed standards with his own compositions including 2003's In Search of Momentum, Blue Moon: The New York Session/The Paris Concert in 2012, and the following year's Saturday Morning: La Buissone Studio Sessions.
Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania on July 2, 1930, Jamal was a child prodigy and began playing piano at age three, discovered by his uncle. By the time he was seven years old, Jamal was studying privately with Mary Cardwell Dawson, the founder of the National Negro Opera Company. An accomplished musician by his teens, Jamal performed regularly in the local jazz scene and in 1949 toured with George Hudson's Orchestra. After leaving Hudson, he joined swing violinist Joe Kennedy's group the Four Strings, with whom he stayed until Kennedy's departure around 1950.
Chamber Music of the New JazzAfter leaving the Four Strings, Jamal relocated to Chicago, where he formed his own group, the Three Strings with bassist Eddie Calhoun and guitarist Ray Crawford. The precursor to the later Ahmad Jamal Trio, the Three Strings would, at different times, include bassists Richard Davis and Israel Crosby. During a stint in New York City, the Three Strings caught the ear of legendary Columbia record exec and talent scout John Hammond, who signed the group to the Columbia subsidiary OKeh in 1951. During this time, Jamal released several influential albums including Ahmad Jamal Trio Plays (also known as Chamber Music of the New Jazz) on Parrot (1955), The Ahmad Jamal Trio on Epic (1955), and Count 'Em 88 on Argo (1956). Some of the landmark songs recorded during these sessions include 'Ahmad's Blues' and 'Pavanne,' both of which had a profound impact on Miles Davis, who later echoed the spare, bluesy quality of Jamal's playing on his own recordings.
In 1958, Jamal took up a residency in the lounge of the Pershing Hotel in Chicago. Working with bassist Crosby and drummer Vernell Fornier, Jamal recorded the seminal live album Ahmad Jamal at the Pershing: But Not for Me. Comprised primarily of jazz standards, including his definitive version of the buoyant Latin number 'Poinciana,' the album showcased Jamal's minimalist phrasing and unique approach to small group jazz, emphasizing varied dynamics and nuanced shading as opposed to the high-energy freneticism commonly associated with jazz of the '40s and '50s.
Though somewhat misunderstood by critics at the time who did not fully appreciate the inventive qualities of Jamal's playing, the album proved a commercial success and remained on the Billboard album charts for over two years -- a rarefied achievement for a jazz musician of any generation.
Jamal at the PenthouseThe smash success of Ahmad Jamal at the Pershing: But Not for Me raised the musician's profile and allowed him to open his own club and restaurant, The Alhambra, in Chicago in 1959. During this time, Jamal released several albums on the Argo label including Ahmad Jamal Trio, Vol. 4 (1958), Ahmad Jamal at the Penthouse (1960), Happy Moods (1960), Ahmad Jamal's Alhambra (1961), and All of You (1961). Unfortunately, The Alhambra closed in 1961. The following year, Jamal disbanded his trio, moved to New York City, and took a two-year hiatus from the music industry.
Ahmad Jamal at the Top: Poinciana RevisitedIn 1964, he returned to performing and recording. Working with a new version of his trio that included bassist Jamil Nasser and drummer Frank Gant, with whom he would work until 1972, Jamal recorded several more albums for Argo (later renamed Cadet) including Naked City Theme (1964), The Roar of the Greasepaint (1965), and Extensions (1965), Rhapsody (1966), Heat Wave (1966), Cry Young (1967), and The Bright, the Blue and the Beautiful (1968). Also in 1968, Jamal made his Impulse Records debut with the live album Ahmad Jamal at the Top: Poinciana Revisited. This was followed by several more Impulse releases including The Awakening (1970), Freeflight (1971), and Outertimeinnerspace (1972), both of which culled tracks from his appearance at the Montreux Jazz Festival in 1971. These albums found Jamal moving toward an expansive, funk-infused style, sometimes playing a Fender Rhodes electric keyboard. Also during the '70s, Jamal moved to the 20th Century label and continued to release a steady stream of albums that attracted both hardcore jazz and crossover audiences. Of his '70s albums, both Genetic Walk (1975) and Intervals (1979) made the R&B charts.
Night SongThe '80s continued to be a productive time for Jamal, who kicked off the decade with such albums as Night Song on Motown (1980) and Live in Concert Featuring Gary Burton (1981). After signing with Atlantic, Jamal released several well-received albums that found him returning to his classic, acoustic small group sound including Digital Works (1985), Live at the Montreal Jazz Festival 1985 (1985), Rossiter Road (1986), Crystal (1987), and Pittsburgh (1989).
Chicago Revisited: Live at Joe Segal's Jazz ShowcaseThe '90s also saw a resurgence in interest and acclaim for Jamal, who was awarded the American Jazz Master Fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts in 1994. Though he never stopped interpreting standards, Jamal utilized his own compositions more and more as the decades passed. During this period, he delivered such albums as Chicago Revisited: Live at Joel Segal's Jazz Showcase on Telarc (1992), Live in Paris '92 on Verve (1993), I Remember Duke, Hoagy & Strayhorn on Telarc (1994), as well as a handful of superb releases for Birdology including The Essence, Pt. 1 (1995), Big Byrd: The Essence, Pt. 2 (1995), and Nature: The Essence, Pt. 3 (1997).
Olympia 2000In 2000, Jamal celebrated his 70th birthday with the concert album L'Olympia 2000 (released in October of the following year), which featured saxophonist George Coleman. He followed up with In Search of Momentum (2003), After Fajr (2005), It's Magic (2008), A Quiet Time (2010), and Blue Moon: The New York Session/The Paris Concert (2012). In 2013, Jamal released the album Saturday Morning: La Buissone Studio Sessions, featuring bassist Reginald Veal and drummer Herlin Riley. Also in 2013, Jamal opened Lincoln Center's concert season by performing live with the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra. A year later, he delivered the concert album Live at the Olympia, June 27, 2012: The Music and the Film of the Complete Concert, which featured Yusef Lateef. In 2017, Jamal delivered the small group session Marseille, which included contributions from French rapper Abd Al Malik and vocalist Mina Agossi. In 2019, at age 89, Jamal released Ballades, a recording he called a 'French-inspired love letter to my past.' Comprised of three solo compositions -- including his first of 'Poinciana' -- and three duets with longtime bassist James Cammack, the album was issued by Harcourt through Jazz Village in September. ~ Matt Collar


Ahmad Jamal - All Good FLAC.rar - 367.0 MB
Ahmad Jamal - All Good MP3.rar - 172.8 MB

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Ahmad Jamal – Saturday Morning (2013)
FLAC (tracks) 24 bit/88,2 kHz | Time – 01:14:18 minutes | 1,47 GB | Genre: Jazz
Studio Masters, Official Digital Download – Source: Q0buz | Digital Booklet | © Jazz Village

Following on from Blue Moon, Ahmad Jamal and his dream team are back with a joyful album made up of the kind of ballads to which only he holds the key. Each one is a moment of grace, shining like a star in the sky of American Classical Music it also features one wonderful Duke Ellington cover and a tribute to Horace Silver. With his light-fingered but rhythmic style, he sends us into a sensuous trance and leads us to a musical climax: a sound which is pure groove.

The pianist returns with the team that created last year s Grammy-nominated Blue Moon drums,bass and Latin-tinged percussion underscoring Jamal s expansive lyrical flights. On the centrepiece title track, he spins a catchy motif into a graceful ten-minute epic. Elsewhere, there s subtle funk and poignant balladry. It s often said about musical gents of a certain age that they ve never played better: with Jamal this is absolutely so.
— The Times

Last year’s Blue Moon was a great album even by the standards of a recording career that began 60 years before. On Saturday Morning, pianist Ahmad Jamal similarly mixes Broadway ballads and riffy originals. The long, original title track, which turns on an almost identical piano/bass hook to the one on Blue Moon, is just repetition of a good trick a killer motif that has been Jamal’s trademark ever since his 1950s hit Poinciana, but the freshness with which he balances the cyclical and the spontaneous is remarkable. I Got It Bad and That Ain’t Good uses the intro from Take the A Train in a typically mercurial treatment that’s nonetheless respectful to Ellington; I’m in the Mood for Love lets the tune out in gasps between thunderous chordal dances. Not so much a followup to Blue Moon as a companion piece.
— The Guardian

It s not unusual for jazz artists to have a late-career renaissance, even one that Claude Monet-style demands a reassessment of everything that went before. The pianist Ahmad Jamal, now 83, is currently on such a roll: his previous album, Blue Moon, was followed by a Barbican concert earlier this year that led to widespread accusations of genius. Indeed, Jamal was greeted as perhaps the greatest jazz musician left alive, which is rich, because highbrow critics have been dissing him as too showbiz since the 1950s. Needless to say, he was great then, and he s still great now. Saturday Morning closely echoes Blue Moon, using the same band and a repertoire that allows Jamal to demonstrate his orchestral approach to the piano and inimitable sense of swing.
— Independent on Sunday

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At 82, he was in tremendous form, winning standing ovations from a packed house with an elite quartet that embodied the classic Jamal virtues – rejecting jazz formulas and cliches to create infinite textures and possibilities, spontaneous compositions at once visceral and playful, witty and swinging. It was like the emancipation of the groove, the essence of jazz reclaimed by Jamal’s intellect, virtuosity and imagination, as piece after piece left the audience enraptured.
— Geoffrey Smith, BBC Music Magazine

Tracklist:
01 – Back To The Future
02 – I’ll Always Be With You
03 – Saturday Morning
04 – Edith’s Cake
05 – The Line
06 – I’m In The Mood For Love
07 – Firefly
08 – Silver
09 – I Got It Bad And That Ain’t Good
10 – One (Ahad)
11 – Saturday Morning (Radio Edit)
12 – Gyroscope
13 – Arabesque

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