1408407270 Collect Anime!: Music: Back in New York
 Search
 Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Music » Traditional Vocal Pop » Back in New YorkJuly 6, 2009  
Categories
DVD Animation
VHS Animation
Manga & Comic Books
VideoGame Anime Heroes
Action Figures
Music
Anime Posters
Board Games

Related Categories
• Traditional Vocal Pop
Broadway & Vocalists
Styles
Music
• General
Jazz
Styles
Music
• Bebop General
Bebop
Jazz
Styles
Music
• General AAS
Bebop
Jazz
Styles
Music
• Swing General
Swing Jazz
Jazz
Styles
Music
• General AAS
Swing Jazz
Jazz
Styles
Music
• CD Album
CD
Format (binding)
Refinements
Music
• Music Deals
Features & Promotions
Refinements
Music
• Main Albums (Discography Pages)
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music
• Main Albums
Edition (format)
Refinements
Music


Buy Aeon Flux Stuff
Buy PSP Stuff
Buy Diamonds
Buy Books on Tape
Buy Bonsai
Buy Seeds online

Back in New York
Back in New York
enlarge
List Price: $18.98
Buy New: $6.90
You Save: $12.08 (64%)
Buy New/Used from $4.44

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars(based on 2 reviews)
Sales Rank: 139771
Category: Music

Artist: Scott Hamilton
Publisher: Concord Records
Studio: Concord Records
Manufacturer: Concord Records
Label: Concord Records
Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 5 x 0.5

MPN: 2274
UPC: 013431227427
EAN: 0013431227427
ASIN: B0007XT862

Release Date: April 5, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Tracks:

  • What Is This Thing Called Love?
  • Wonder Why
  • Blue 'n' Boogie
  • I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
  • Lullaby of the Leaves
  • Fine and Dandy
  • Bouncing with Bud
  • Love Letters
  • This Is Always
  • I've Just Seen Her

Similar Items:

  • Nocturnes & Serenades
  • Jazz Signatures
  • After Hours
  • Heavy Juice
  • Ballad Essentials

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars It Wouldn't Be Wise To Dismiss Anything Scott Hamilton Has Done   February 3, 2008
  3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Scott Hamilton is by far one of the greatest tenor saxophonist working today. His tone is what attracted me to his music and what a gorgeous tone it is! He also is a master player who always sounds fresh and has great improvisational ideas. He is truly a remarkable musician.

"Back In New York" is a fine album. Here, Hamilton is joined by the Bill Charlap Trio: Bill Charlap on piano, Peter Washington on bass, and Kenny Washington on drums. Hamilton has found some musical soulmates in these musicians. I think this is one of Hamilton's best albums of his long career, but then again saying something like this doesn't mean much, because he has remained consistent throughout his career. Instead of going off on some crazy tangent like "free jazz," he has carried the spirit of swing and sophistication with him.

It's hard describing music, so I'm going to let the sound clips do the talking for me, and I can only hope that more and more people pick-up his albums. This album is a good start, but trust me when I say, you'll soon realize that there's not really a good place to start, because all his albums are just too good.



5 out of 5 stars It would be easy to dismiss this disc as inconsequential   April 25, 2005
  54 out of 60 found this review helpful

. . . it would also be wrong.

Scott Hamilton, recently described, not unfairly, one supposes, in a recent prominent jazz publication, as a "journeyman saxophonist," here delivers the record of his life. And if he is just slightly overshadowed by the finest straight-ahead jazz rhythm section on the scene--Bill Charlap (piano), Peter Washington (bass), and Kenny Washington (drums)--that is nothing to be embarrassed about; almost anyone alive would be.

Indeed, it is the impossibly deep swinging vibe laid down by these three that vaults this session out of the doldrums of competency into the precincts of gloriousness. How long have Charlap and the Washingtons been together now--five years? Ten? I don't know, but somewhere along the way they've achieved an interactive conversational capability that would be scary if it weren't so wonderful. That they've managed to lure the entirely willing Hamilton into their magical web is not so much a surprise as the level his playing consequently achieves.

I have to confess that this kind of session--a rather straightforward reading of hoary jazz chestnuts--isn't ordinarily my thing; I've enough romantic Houston Person and Fathead Newman sides to paper a small office cubicle, and I find myself seldom listening to them. Not because there isn't a certain level of creativity, even sometimes genius, but because no matter how well such dates come off they leave me wishing for something more adventurous. This set, however, achieves something rare in jazz recordings, a kind of serendipity that blesses certain sessions with what can only be described as jazz fairy dust. Everything just works here: the program, achieving a kind of thrust that although somewhat unlikely eventually arrives at inevitability; perfectly balanced production, where each instrument's voice achieves pure clarity while perfectly blending with its counterparts; top-drawer playing by all; and some kind of je ne sais quois, a visit by the ever-fickle jazz gods deigning to grace this disc with their often-sought-but-seldom-delivered favor.

Very much worth acquiring.


Copyright ©2005-2006 Collect Anime! in association with Amazon.com