Description
Horace Silver, the influential hard bop/soul jazz pianist, songwriter and bandleader, was riding high in 1965. His Song for My Father had become a hit, he had put together a new and brilliant quintet, and he had the opportunity to use the masterful trombonist J.J. Johnson as a guest on his new album for Blue Note Records. On the resulting album, The Cape Verdean Blues, Johnson joins one of Silvers greatest bands, a group boasting two brilliant new stars: tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson and the young trumpeter Woody Shaw.
Henderson and Shaw push Silver to take some of his most forward looking solos, and the pianists compositions in turn push the soloists to think melodically and play with deep soul. The Cape Verdean Blues is a tribute to the West African homeland of Silvers father. Pretty Eyes was Silvers first original waltz. Nutville is both complex and uniquely catchy. The Cape Verdean Blues is simply one of the most inspired sessions of Silvers long and outstanding career.
In handling one of jazzs all-time best-sounding recordings, Rudy Van Gelders original Blue Note two-track analog tapes were meticulously mastered to XRCD by engineer Alan Yoshida and producer Joe Harley. This XRCD comes with deluxe hardbound book-style packaging with original liner notes and high resolution B&W session photos. The package alone is worth the investment. This edition of The Cape Verdean Blues represents the highest-quality analog to digital transfers from tape to CD available, and is among the finest digital releases you will ever hear.






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