Language Selection

Get healthy now with MedBeds!
Click here to book your session

Protect your whole family with Orgo-Life® Quantum MedBed Energy Technology® devices.

Advertising by Adpathway

         

 Advertising by Adpathway

Count Basie Proved He Still Had The Swing With ‘April In Paris’

6 months ago 70

PROTECT YOUR DNA WITH QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY

Orgo-Life the new way to the future

  Advertising by Adpathway


Hailed upon its release as an instant classic, Count Basie’s “April in Paris” is big band heaven and one of the great opening numbers on any album.

Verve Acoustic Sounds Series

Verve Acoustic Sounds Series

Verve Acoustic Sounds Series

Born on August 21, 1904, Basie is considered one of the greatest bandleaders of all time. And, on this particular release, it’s easy to hear why. April In Paris was recorded in New York over three separate dates, the first in July 1955, followed by two back-to-back days on January 4 and 5, 1956. It was one of the earliest albums to be released on Norman Granz’s new label, Verve Records, which had been launched around Christmas 1955.

Listen to April In Paris now.

The album helped reconnect jazz lovers with one of the finest bands of the swing era. Yet there is nothing retrospective about April in Paris; it is alive with vitality, elegance, sophistication, and modernity.

Count Basie plays organ and piano, and the rhythm section of Eddie Jones on bass and Sonny Payne drive the whole album with restrained intensity. Tip of the hat to Freddie Green, the man who established the rhythm guitar as an important instrument in jazz (and most other genres of music). He rarely took a solo, but added so much to countless recordings during his fifty years with Basie’s band. His sense of harmony and his ability to blend with his drummer created something unique and special.

April In Paris (Alternate Take)

Click to load video

The album’s title track was released by Clef Records in 1956 as a single and Down Beat said of it in their review, “Wild Bill Davis’ three-ending arrangement of ‘April’ is one of the most popular in Count’s book…But for want of being able to hear the band ‘live’ every night, this is a boon companion.” According to Francis Drake in Atlantic Monthly, “Band rehearsals generally found Basie penciling out everything in their scores he recognized as superfluous to the real matter at hand – that ineffable sensation jazz partisans call swing, practically a Basie patent.”

April In Paris can be bought here.

Read Entire Article

         

        

Start the new Vibrations with a Medbed Franchise today!  

Protect your whole family with Quantum Orgo-Life® devices

  Advertising by Adpathway