Sonny Clark – Leapin’ And Lopin’ (1961/2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 192 kHz]

Sonny Clark - Leapin' And Lopin' (1961/2014) [FLAC 24 bit, 192 kHz] Download

Artist: Sonny Clark
Album: Leapin’ And Lopin’
Genre: Jazz
Release Date: 1961/2014
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 192 kHz
Duration: 41:16
Total Tracks: 6
Total Size: 1,67 GB

Tracklist:

1. Sonny Clark – Somethin’ Special (06:19)
2. Sonny Clark – Deep In A Dream (06:43)
3. Sonny Clark – Melody For C (07:45)
4. Sonny Clark – Eric Walks (05:39)
5. Sonny Clark – Voodoo (07:37)
6. Sonny Clark – Midnight Mambo (07:12)

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Leapin’ and Lopin’ was jazz pianist Sonny Clark’s Blue Note release. The record was Clark’s last as a leader and one of his final albums before his premature death. Leapin’ and Lopin’ is considered an ultimate recording by the hard bop enthusiast, one that continues to be influential in mainstream jazz.Sonny Clark’s fifth Blue Note recording as a leader is generally regarded as his best, especially considering he composed four of the seven tracks, and they all bear his stamp of originality. What is also evident is that he is shaping the sounds of his quintet rather than dominating the proceedings as he did on other previous dates. Tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse and trumpeter Tommy Turrentine play very little harmony on the date, but their in-tune unison lines are singularly distinctive, while bassist Butch Warren and a young drummer Billy Higgins keep the rhythmic coals burning with a steady glowing red heat. Among the classic tunes is the definitive hard bop opener “Somethin’ Special” which lives up to its title in a most bright and happy manner, with Clark merrily comping chords. “Melody for C” is similarly cheerful, measured, and vivid in melodic coloration. The showstopper is “Voodoo,” the ultimate yin/yang, dark, late night, sly and slinky jazz tune contrasted by Clark’s tinkling piano riffs. Warren wrote the exciting hard bopper “Eric Walks” reminiscent of a Dizzy Gillespie tune, while Turrentine’s “Midnight Mambo” mixes metaphors of Afro-Cuban music with unusual off-minor phrases and the stoic playing of Rouse. Tenor saxophonist Ike Quebec plays a cameo sans the other horns on the soulful ballad “Deep in a Dream,” exhibiting a vocal quality on his instrument, making one wonder if any other sessions with this group were done on the side. Top to bottom Leapin’ and Lopin’ is a definitive recording for Clark, and really for all time in the mainstream jazz idiom.

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