Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Jazz of Two Cities
1957 studio album by Warne Marsh From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Jazz of Two Cities, is an album by saxophonist Warne Marsh recorded in 1956 and originally released on the Imperial label.[1][2][3] The album was later released in stereo as The Winds of Marsh which featured different takes of four of the numbers.
Remove ads
Reception
The Allmusic review noted "This is some very fine music by a band with an exceptionally rich collective imagination. It is clear that, in the hands of this combo, every theme is treated like a question with an absolutely limitless amount of harmonic and melodic answers".[4]
Remove ads
Track listing
- "Smog Eyes" (Ted Brown) – 3:30
- "Ear Conditioning" (Ronnie Ball) – 5:13
- "Lover Man" (Jimmy Davis, Ram Ramirez, James Sherman) – 4:27
- "Quintessence" (Ball) – 2:13
- "Jazz of Two Cities" (Brown) – 4:38
- "Dixie's Dilemma" (Warne Marsh) – 4:20
- "Tschaikovsky's Opus #42, Mt. 3" (Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky) – 3:59
- "I Never Knew" (Ted Fio Rito, Gus Kahn) – 5:10
Personnel
- Warne Marsh. Ted Brown – tenor saxophone
- Ronnie Ball – piano
- Ben Tucker – bass
- Jeff Morton – drums
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads