Subway Night

Last updated
Subway Night
Subway Night.jpg
Studio album by
Released1972 (1972)
Genre Jazz
Label RCA
Producer David Amram
David Amram chronology
No More Walls
(1971)
Subway Night
(1972)
Havana/New York
(1972)

Subway Night is an album by jazz hornist David Amram. It was released in 1972 under RCA Records. [1]

Contents

Track listing

  1. "Fabulous Fifties"
  2. "Little Momma"
  3. "Credo"
  4. "Subway Night"
  5. "Professor and the Panhandler"
  6. "Horn and Hardart Succotash Blues"
  7. "Neon Casbah"
  8. "East and West"
  9. "Ballad for Red Allen"
  10. "Message to the Politicians of the World"
  11. "Mean Dean"

Personnel

Related Research Articles

Walter Sinclair Hartley was an American composer of contemporary classical music.

Gian Paolo Chiti is an Italian composer and pianist.

<i>Consummation</i> (The Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra album) 1970 studio album by Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra

Consummation is an album by the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra. It was released in 1970 on Blue Note Records and re-released in 2002. It was recorded at A&R Studios in New York City. The album was nominated for a 1970 Grammy award in the "Best Jazz Performance - Large Group..." category. All tracks were included in Mosaic's limited edition boxed set, The Complete Solid State Recordings of the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Orchestra.

The Abnuceals Emuukha Electric Symphony Orchestra was a group of Hollywood session musicians organized by Frank Zappa in 1967 to record music for his first solo album Lumpy Gravy. Some of these musicians are thought to have worked together in various combinations under the leadership of Ken Shroyer as far back as 1959. However, it was Zappa who gave them the name several years later.

<i>Miles & Quincy Live at Montreux</i> 1993 live album by , Miles Davis and Quincy Jones

Miles & Quincy: Live at Montreux is a collaborative live album by American jazz trumpeter Miles Davis and conductor Quincy Jones. It was recorded at the 1991 Montreux Jazz Festival and released by Warner Bros. Records in 1993.

<i>Rita Coolidge</i> (album) 1971 studio album by Rita Coolidge

Rita Coolidge is the self-titled debut album by Rita Coolidge.

<i>Miles Davis & Gil Evans: The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings</i> 1996 box set by Miles Davis and Gil Evans

Miles Davis & Gil Evans: The Complete Columbia Studio Recordings is a box set of music by jazz musicians Miles Davis and Gil Evans originally released on CD in 1996 and remastered and re-released in 2004. It collects work from 1957 through 1968 at Columbia Records recording studios.

<i>All Killer, No Filler: The Anthology</i> 1993 compilation album by Jerry Lee Lewis

All Killer, No Filler: The Anthology is a 1993 box set collecting 42 songs by rock and roll and rockabilly pioneer Jerry Lee Lewis from the mid-1950s to the 1980s, including 27 charting hits. The album has been critically well received. In 2003, Rolling Stone listed the album at #245 in its list of "Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time", maintaining its rating in a 2012 revised list, and dropping to #325 in the 2020 update. Country Music: The Rough Guide indicated that "[t]his is the kind of full-bodied, decades-spanning treatment that Lewis's long, diverse career more than well deserves."

<i>One Shot Deal</i> 2008 live album by Frank Zappa

One Shot Deal is an album by Frank Zappa, posthumously released in June 2008.

<i>Directions</i> (Miles Davis album) 1981 compilation album by Miles Davis

Directions is a compilation album by American jazz musician Miles Davis, released in 1981 by Columbia Records. It collects previously unreleased outtakes that Davis recorded between 1960 and 1970. Directions was the last of a series of compilation albums—mostly consisting of, at that time, previously unreleased music—that Columbia released to bridge Davis' recording hiatus that ended with the Man with the Horn in July 1981.

<i>Heads</i> (Bob James album) 1977 studio album by Bob James

Heads is the fifth album by the jazz musician Bob James, released in October 1977. It was his first album released on his newly formed Tappan Zee label, which was distributed by Columbia Records. All of his Tappan Zee albums are distributed by E1 Music. The album reached number one on the Billboard Jazz Albums chart.

<i>Giant Box</i> 1973 studio album by Don Sebesky

Giant Box is a double album by American arranger/conductor and composer Don Sebesky recorded in 1973 and released on the CTI label.

<i>Journey</i> (Arif Mardin album) 1974 studio album by Arif Mardin

Journey is the second album released by record producer Arif Mardin as leader. Released on the Atlantic label in 1974, it features "a veritable who's who of funk and jazz greats", many of them regular session and studio musicians who appear on Mardin-produced albums for other artists.

<i>Snowfall on the Sahara</i> 1999 studio album by Natalie Cole

Snowfall on the Sahara is a studio album by American singer Natalie Cole. It was released by Elektra Records on June 22, 1999, in the United States.

<i>Stars</i> (Janis Ian album) 1974 studio album by Janis Ian

Stars is the sixth studio album by American singer-songwriter Janis Ian, and the first of her seven for Columbia Records. Ian had previously had a three-year hiatus from the music industry since her 1971 album Present Company. In two years away from the music business, Ian wrote over 100 songs after moving to Los Angeles. She returned to play at the Philadelphia Folk Festival on August 17, 1973, and was signed by Columbia Records after several other companies rejected the songs she had written.

References