Product Details
Night Lights

Night Lights
Gerry Mulligan

List Price: $14.98
Price: $11.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details

Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com

22 new or used available from $10.55

Average customer review:
In 1963, Gerry Mulligan brought an outstanding sextet to the Nola Studios in New York City to create an album that paid homage to the bossa nova and samba craze. The result of their piano-less collaboration was Night Lights, summed up by jazz critic Murray Horwitz as an album in which "Poland meets Brazil."

Track Listing

  1. Night Lights [1963 Version]
  2. Morning of the Carnival (Manha de Carnaval) [From Black Orpheus]
  3. In the Wee Small Hours of the Morning
  4. Prelude in E minor
  5. Festival Minor
  6. Tell Me When
  7. Night Lights [1965 Version][*]

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #14617 in Music
  • Released on: 1990-10-25
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Dimensions: .18 pounds

Editorial Reviews

Album Description
Limited edition Japanese 200 gram vinyl LP pressing of this classic album. Universal. 2007.


Customer Reviews

Absolutely beautiful5
The soul and the depth that Mulligan, Brookmyer, Farmer and Hall exude is awe inspiring. The recording is very mellow. The tempos range from kinda slow to really slow. But the playing has such intense feeling; it just cuts right through you. When I finish listening to this cd, I feel like crying. Not because the playing is so melancholy, but because I don't believe that I'll ever hear something so deep and beautiful as this recording. This is as good as it gets.

GORGEOUS MUSIC!!!5
Mulligan was one of my favorite musicians. Not only the BEST on baritone, but an incredible writer and extraordinary arranger. On Night Lights, you have the "mellow" Mulligan refined and distilled to his best. And Art Farmer & Bob Brookmeyer are so "perfect". I used to hear them all, live, and only Brookmeyer still survives. Timeless and beautiful music that will be enjoyed forever.

Great Music5
I saw this recommended in an essential list compiled by NPR. Art Farmer as a side man was enough of a hook, but after listening to this music, I'm looking at Mulligan's other recordings. This is a beautiful piece of work.