The Beginning and the End | |
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Compilation album by | |
Released | 1973 |
Recorded | March 21, 1952 & June 25, 1956 |
Venue | Music City Club |
Genre | Hard bop Bebop |
Length | 34:22 |
Label | Columbia |
Producer | Don Schlitten |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings | [2] |
The Beginning and the End (Columbia Records, 1973) is a Clifford Brown compilation album. The album opens with two tracks that Clifford Brown recorded with Chris Powell's Blue Flames in 1952, and ends with recordings of a session held at Music City Club in Philadelphia in 1956. [1] According to the liner notes, they are "The first and last recorded performances of one of the greatest soloists in the history of Jazz." [3] According to Nick Catalano's biography of Clifford Brown, the Music City Club session could have taken place on May 31, 1955. [4]
The AllMusic reviewer concluded that "Clifford Brown's playing on this date is so memorable that the LP is essential for all jazz collections." [1] Fellow trumpeter Christian Scott said that as a child he heard the album and thought that Brown "had a lot of heart and was compassionate". [5] Returning to the album much later, he realised that Brown "was playing some pretty impossible things on the instrument [...] There's stuff that this guy did with the instrument that many fifty year old trumpet players would never attempt". [5]
Tracks 1–2
Tracks 3–5
Clifford Benjamin Brown was an American jazz trumpeter. He died at the age of 25 in a car accident, leaving behind four years' worth of recordings. His compositions "Sandu", "Joy Spring", and "Daahoud" have become jazz standards. Brown won the Down Beat magazine Critics' Poll for New Star of the Year in 1954; he was inducted into the DownBeat Hall of Fame in 1972.
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