Franz Koglmann & Lee Konitz - We Thought About Duke FLAC
| Genre: |
Jazz |
| Performer: |
Franz Koglmann & Lee Konitz |
| Title: |
We Thought About Duke |
| Style: |
Free Jazz |
| Date of release: |
1995 |
| Label: |
hat ART |
| Catalog Number: |
hat ART CD 6163 |
| Country: |
Switzerland |
| FLAC album size: |
1749 mb |
| MP3 album size: |
2054 mb |
Tracklist
| 1 | –Monoblue Quartet & Lee Konitz | Lament For Javanette | 5:15 |
| 2 | –Pipe Trio | Thoughts About Duke I | 6:30 |
| 3 | –Pipe Trio & Lee Konitz | Thoughts About Duke III | 4:33 |
| 4 | –Monoblue Quartet & Lee Konitz | The Mooche | 5:49 |
| 5 | –Pipe Trio & Lee Konitz | Ko-Ko | 4:14 |
| 6 | –Pipe Trio & Lee Konitz | PyramidWritten-By – Juan Tizol | 5:52 |
| 7 | –Monoblue Quartet & Lee Konitz | Thoughts About Duke II | 4:34 |
| 8 | –Monoblue Quartet & Lee Konitz | Love Is In My Heart | 5:29 |
| 9 | –Pipe Trio & Lee Konitz | Dirge | 6:08 |
| 10 | –Monoblue Quartet & Lee Konitz | Zweet Zursday | 8:01 |
Versions
| Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
|---|
| hatOLOGY 543 | Franz Koglmann & Lee Konitz | Franz Koglmann & Lee Konitz - We Thought About Duke (CD, Album, RE) | hatOLOGY | hatOLOGY 543 | Switzerland | 2002 |
Credits
- Alto Saxophone – Lee Konitz (tracks: 1 to 3, 5 to 10)
- Bass – Klaus Koch (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 6, 9)
- Clarinet, Tenor Saxophone – Tony Coe (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 6, 9)
- Design Concept [Graphic Concept] – fuhrer vienna
- Guitar – Burkhard Stangl (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 6, 9)
- Photography By – Josef Werkmeister
- Producer – Ulrich Kurth, Werner X. Uehlinger
- Recorded By, Mixed By, Mastered By – Peter Pfister
- Trombone – Rudolf Ruschel (tracks: 2, 4, 7, 8, 10)
- Trumpet, Flugelhorn, Arranged By – Franz Koglmann
- Tuba – Raoul Herget (tracks: 2, 4, 7, 8, 10)
- Written-By – Billy Strayhorn (tracks: 3, 10), Duke Ellington (tracks: 1 to 3, 6, 9), Franz Koglmann (tracks: 4, 5, 8)
Notes
If the music on this disc is any indication, Franz Koglmann understands Ellington as a vortex - a center of energy drawing in inspiration from a wide variety of sources (internal and external) and his compositions flowing out in so many directions. As a composer Koglmann makes use of many of these same sources and resources, including the stability of a regular cast of musicians, which enables him to compose for specific sounds and particular abilities as did Ellington, famously. ... Through intense interaction, Ellington's music breathes and changes and evolves. Ellington lives. Art Lange.
Original jewel case packaging.
Barcodes
Companies
- Record Company – Hat Hut Records Ltd.
- Phonographic Copyright (p) – Hat Hut Records Ltd.
- Copyright (c) – Hat Hut Records Ltd.