Elmo Hope – Informal Jazz (Mono)


58,00 


Weight 0,8 kg
Label

Analogue Productions (Prestige)

Catalog number

APRJ 7043

Genre

Jazz

Category

180 Gram Vinyl Record

No. of Discs

1

In stock

I am aware and agree, that the Record will be put out of the original shrink wrap (this will be included to the delivery).

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  • For sale individually and as part of Analogue Productions’ Prestige Mono Series
  • Cut from the analogue masters by renowned mastering engineer Kevin Gray
  • 180-gram pressing by Quality Record Pressings
  • Deluxe high-gloss tip-on album jacket

Overshadowed throughout his life by his friends Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk, Elmo Hope was a talented pianist and composer in his own right. He recorded in New York as a band leader (starting in 1953), and with greats Sonny Rollins, Lou Donaldson, Clifford Brown and Jackie McLean. But the loss of his cabaret card due to drug use made it difficult for him to make a living in New York. After touring with Chet Baker in 1957, Hope relocated to Los Angeles. He performed with Lionel Hampton in 1959, recorded with Harold Land and Curtis Counce, and returned to New York in 1961. A short prison sentence did little to help his drug problem; he died in May 1967.

Although the album is titled Informal Jazz, reality dictates that a good deal of thought and care went into the recording session. The dynamic drum and bass team of Philly Joe Jones and Paul Chambers is “hardly the kind of rhythm section playing heard at a jam session, except possibly in heaven,” All Music Guide notes. And Hope’s solo spots are the best part of the record — “It is a stretch to imagine an ’informal’ recording session where even material as complicated as this is played.”

Lastly, some of the most well-known and influential horn artists of the time make their presence known — tenor sax greats John Coltrane and Hank Mobley, as well as trumpeter Donald Byrd.

Originally released in 1956.

Elmo Hope, piano
Philly Joe Jones, drums
Paul Chambers, bass
John Coltrane, tenor sax
Donald Byrd, trumpet
Hank Mobley, tenor sax

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