The Bebop Years
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- Body and Soul
- Dinah
- When Day Is Done
- Smack
- I Surrender, Dear
- I Can't Believe That You're in Love With Me
- Dedication
- Rocky Comfort
- One O'Clock Jump
- 9-20 Special
- Feedin' the Bean
- Esquire Bounce
- My Ideal
- Voodte
- How Deep Is the Ocean?
- Hawkins Barrel House
- Stumpy
- Lover, Come Back to Me
- Blues Changes
- Crazy Rhythm
- Get Happy
- Man I Love
Disc 2:
- Sweet Lorraine
- My Ideal
- I Only Have Eyes for You
- 'S Wonderful
- I'm in the Mood for Love
- "Bean" at the Met
- Woody 'N You
- Bu-Dee-Daht
- Yesterdays
- Flame Thrower
- Imagination
- Night and Day
- Cattin' at Keynote
- Disorder at the Border
- Feeling Zero
- Rainbow Mist
- Blue Moon
- Father Co-Operates
- Just One More Chance
- Through for the Night
- On the Sunny Side of the Street
- Three Little Words
Disc 3:
- Battle of the Saxes
- Louise
- Pick-Up Boys
- Porgy
- Uptown Lullaby
- Salt Peanuts
- Make Believe
- Don't Blame Me
- Just One of Those Things
- Hallelujah
- Stompin' at the Savoy
- On the Sunny Side of the Street
- All the Things You Are
- Every Man for Himself
- Look Out Jack!
- Under a Blanket of Blue
- El Salon de Gutbucket
- Undecided
- Recollections
- Drifting on a Reed
- Flyin' Hawk
- On the Bean
- Hawk's Variations, Pts. 1 & 2
Disc 4:
- April in Paris
- Rifftide
- Stuffy
- What Is There to Say?
- Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams (And Dream Your Troubles Away)
- Bean Soup
- It's the Talk of the Town
- Say It Isn't So
- I Can't Get Started
- Cocktails for Two
- Sweet Lorraine
- Nat Meets June
- How High the Moon
- Bean-A-Re-Bop
- Isn't It Romantic?
- Way You Look Tonight
- Phantomesque
- Angel Face
- Picasso
- It's Only a Paper Moon
- Bah-U-Bah
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #45077 in Music
- Released on: 2001-05-28
- Number of discs: 4
- Formats: Box set, Import
- Dimensions: .52 pounds
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
Hawkins reached a new level of creativity during the 1940's. THis box-set focuses on those yeard, presenting the original master of the tenor sax in a wide variety of settings, including his encounters with young modernists like Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk. 88 tracks in all. Includes 56 page booklet containing the full Hawkins story, rare photographs and discography. 2000 release. 4 standard jewel cases housed together in a deluxe slipcase.
Customer Reviews
An astounding value!
This is an excellent compilation of Hawkins' work between 1939 and 1949. Most of the selections date from 1943 to 1947 and were recorded for several record labels, including Victor, Bluebird, Okeh, Brunswick, V-Disc, Commodore, Signature, Keynote, Apollo, Savoy, Clef, Regis, Capitol, Aladdin, Joe Davis, and Selmer. Sidemen include Roy Eldridge, Benny Carter, Cootie Williams, Count Basie, Art Tatum, Oscar Pettiford, Teddy Wilson, Dizzy Gillespie, Budd Johnson, Ben Webster, Earl Hines, Don Byas, John Kirby, Jonah Jones, Buck Clayton, Thelonious Monk, Howard McGhee, Milt Jackson, Hank Jones, Harry Carney and Miles Davis. As you would expect with such a wide variety of source material, the sound quality varies a bit. However, it ranges from good to excellent and in most cases is on par (or identical:)) with the best previous CD issues of the same music. The set comes with a 56 page booklet that includes a lengthy essay with analysis of each session, several photographs, and a very thorough discography (you can read the complete essay and discography at Proper's website). The essay is good, though it could have used some editing. Also, the photos look like they were duplicated from printed sources. The most important thing, however, is that the music is consistently excellent. These discs show Hawkins at his absolute best, whether in a small group, big band, or solo. For the price the set is an astounding value!
Prime Forties Recordings From a Tenor Sax Legend
This is a magnificent collection of the Forties work of tenor sax great Coleman Hawkins, the father of the jazz saxophone. Much of it has been previously released in bits and pieces, but it has never been collected in a single package, and never with such tremendous sound. The set also includes an informative booklet with a number of rarely-scene photographs.
Hawkins began his performing career as a teenager, backing blues singer Mamie Smith in the early 1920's. Before Hawkins, the saxophone was not a major instrument in jazz, and it was seldom featured as a solo instrument. When Hawkins joined Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra in 1924, that began to change. Perhaps inspired by fellow bandmember Louis Armstrong, who spent about a year with Henderson, Hawkins quickly developed his own distinctive style as a soloist. When Armstrong left, Coleman Hawkins became the dominant soloist with the Henderson band, a position he held until 1934. He set the standard for the jazz saxophonist during the first part of the Swing era, and he strongly influenced such other figures as Ben Webster, Benny Carter, Chu Berry and many others. After a productive five-year stay in Europe, Hawkins returned to the U.S. and started his own group in 1939. One of his first records was the ballad "Body and Soul," which became a major pop hit and remains one of the most memorable recordings in jazz history. It set a standard for jazz improvisation that has seldom been matched.
"Body and Soul" first song in this boxed set, and really doesn't belong with the other recordings here, which cover the period 1943-1947. Hawkins' big band failed within a year, and he soon began working with the smaller groups that make up the bulk of these recordings. He worked for a series of small New York-based record companies, both as a leader and a sideman. During this period, the bebop movement began to make inroads into the New York jazz scene. Hawkins was as skilled and schooled as any musician in jazz, and he quickly grasped the innovative ideas that the beboppers were offering in their music. Even though he never fully embraced bebop in his own playing, he often worked with its rising young stars, such as Thelonious Monk, Miles Davis, Howard McGhee, Fats Navarro and others. Working with these new talents reinvigorated the middle-aged Hawkins, and these are some of the finest recordings of his long career. He also influenced a new generation of saxophonists such as Dexter Gordon and Sonny Rollins.
The title of this set is a little misleading; these recordings are more swing than bebop. Nevertheless, this is a wonderful collection that every jazz fan should own. Too often overlooked at the start of the 21st century, Coleman Hawkins was one of the titans of jazz, and this is his finest work. Proper Records, an English label, has one again done a terrific job of compiling the work of an under-appreciated and deserves much praise.
Great overview of his early prime years
I would recommend this for anyone wanting to get an overview of Hawk's playing from his early prime years. His playing reached a peak in '38 and as far as I can tell pretty much stayed there until his death in the '60s. This contains his legendary recording 'Body and Soul' from '38 and goes to '49.
For comparison I would recommend also getting "The Lester Young Story" also a great 4CD set from Proper covering the same time period.




