Standard Time, Vol. 6: Mr. Jelly Lord Wynton Marsalis

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CD

  • Release Date: 02/01/2008
  • Original Release: 1999
  • Sales Rank: 26,926
  • Label: SBME SPECIAL MKTS.
  • UPC: 886972399126

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  • Editorial Reviews
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Track List
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Standard Time, Vol. 6: Mr. Jelly Lord

1LISTENRed Hot Pepper 3:41
2LISTENNew Orleans Bump 4:32
3LISTENKing Porter Stomp 3:10
4LISTENThe Pearls 3:51
5LISTENDeep Creek 5:14
6LISTENMamanita 2:48
7LISTENSidewalk Blues 5:12
8LISTENJungle Blues 6:50
9LISTENBig Lip Blues 3:17
10LISTENDead Man Blues 4:40
11LISTENSmoke-House Blues 4:51
12LISTENBilly Goat Stomp 2:58
13LISTENCourthouse Bump 3:28
14LISTENBlack Bottom Stomp 4:20
15LISTENTom Cat Blues 2:09

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

On MR. JELLY LORD, Wynton Marsalis offers a homage to fellow Crescent City native Ferdinand Lamenthe ("Jelly Roll") Morton that does full justice to a choice selection of the seminal jazz composer's incomparable oeuvre. Joined by a select crew of regular cohorts, New Orleans repertoire specialists, and by guest pianists Danilo Perez (an unaccompanied "Mamanita") and Harry Connick, Jr. ("Billy Goat Blues"), Marsalis extracts an ensemble tone that simultaneously addresses Morton's idiomatic essence while interpreting it with a modernist vocabulary.Not least, Mr. Marsalis unleashes his magnificent trumpet more than has been his wont on recent recordings. "King Porter Stomp" is an exquisite mute feature. There's a nuanced open-horn reading of the insinuating theme of "The Pearls," and, on "Dead Man Blues," a soaring Armstrong-esque oration articulated with golden tone and phrased with rhythmic complexity that recalls '60s vocabulary extenders Booker Little and Woody Shaw.The virtuosic solo on the penultimate track, "Black Bottom Stomp," remains pure Wynton Marsalis.The album concludes with a duet between Marsalis and pianist Eric Reed on "Tom Cat Blues"--- recorded by wax cylinder in the Thomas Edison Laboratories where phonographic technology was developed -- that blurs the lines between past and present in the manner Marsalis intends. It's a fitting end to one of his essential recordings. Ted Panken, Barnes & Noble



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