Settin' the Pace
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Average customer review:Track Listing
Disc 1:
- I've Found a New Baby
- Rosetta
- Sweet Lorraine
- Blowed and Gone
- Blowing the Blues Away
- Groovin' High
- Blue 'N' Boogie
- Lonesome Lover Blues
- Last Night
- Honeysuckle Rose
- Takin' Off
- If I Had You
- Street Beat
- Blow Mr. Dexter
- Dexter's Deck
- Dexter's Cuttin' Out
- Dexter's Minor Mad
- Looking for a Boy
Disc 2:
- Long Tall Dexter
- Dexter Rides Again
- I Can't Escape from You
- Dexter Digs In
- Jump Call
- Mischievous Lady
- Lullaby in Rhythm
- Chase
- Chromatic Aberration
- It's the Talk of the Town
- Blues Bikini
- Hunt
- Byas a Drink
Disc 3:
- Disorder at the Border
- Cherokee
- After Hours Bop
- I'll Follow You
- Bop!
- I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance With You
- Sweet and Lovely
Disc 4:
- Hornin' In
- Duel
- Settin' the Pace
- So Easy
- Dexter's Riff
- Wee Dot
- Lion Roars
- Dexter's Mood
- Dextrose
- Index
- Dextivity
- Sid's Delight
- Move
- Ain't Gonna Quit You Baby
- Helen's Advice
- Knockin' Myself Out
- Airplane Blues
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #156815 in Music
- Released on: 2001-01-22
- Number of discs: 4
- Formats: Box set, Import
Editorial Reviews
Album Description
55 tracks from 1943 to 1950...mostly be-bop with Dizzy Gillespie, Fats Navarro, Ben Webster, Billy Eckstine, Sonny Criss and more. Includes 44 page illustrated booklet. Four standard jewel cases with individual artwork, housed together in a deluxe slipcase.
Customer Reviews
An essential collection of the first great bop tenor player
As I parse through this collection I am amazed that Proper was able to compile such a complete collection surveying the early years of Dexter Gordon. It's all here, the historic Savoy sides that Dexter led between 1945 through 1947 which include a stellar cast of sidemen such as Bud Powell, Max Roach, Fats Navarro and Leo Parker. There is also the historic Dial sides w/ Wardell Gray and Teddy Edwards that produced tracks like "The Chase" (w/ Gray), and "The Duel" (w/ Edwards). A set containing the Savoy and Dial sides would be fantastic on it's own but Proper has also included a number of other tracks of Dexter featured with the Billy Eckstine Band, Dizzy Gillespie's Sextet, Red Norvo, and Benny Carter's band. Also included is the historic 9/4/45 date led by Sir Charles Thompson for the Apollo label that also featured Charlie Parker! And if that wasn't enough there are 5 lenghty tracks recorded on 7/6/47 at the Elk's Auditorium in Los Angeles and billed as the "Hollywood Jazz Concert". These tracks include Howard McGhee, Trummy Young, Sonny Criss, Wardell Gray, Hampton Hawes, and Barney Kessel and although the sound is not superb on the live tracks, the performances are excellent and give the listener an inside look at what the Central Avenue scene must have been like in the mid to late 1940s.
All in all this collection is an excellent compilation of one of the true greats of modern jazz.
The emergence of bop tenor
The kings of bop were Dizzy and Bird - on trumpet and alto, and there were Bud Powell, Monk, Kenny Clarke and Max Roach on piano and drums. It may be true that the tenor sax is just not suitable for bebop, just as the soprano sax is certainly not - but for other reasons. The tenor sound is just too big for the fast flurry of arpeggio notes, that is part of bop playing.
Dexter Gordon was one tenor player who managed to excell playing bebop without loosing any of the sound qualities of his instrument. His deep and elastic sound was part of the great tenor tradition, yet perfectly modern. I am convinced that the evolution of Sonny Rolling, Joe Henderson and John Coltrane, could not have been what it was without the influence of Dexter's sound.
It is interesting to compare Gordon with the great Wardell Gray, who is co featured on many tracks - especially the third cd. Gray's harmonic ideas were modern - but rhythmically he was part of the older tradition.
These recordings, spanning an era between 1943 and 1950, are crucial to the development of bop tenor saxophone playing. They contain exciting live jam session recordings as well as studio recording, and great playing from all musicians involved - Fats Navarro, Gray, Teddy Edwards, Howard Mcgee, Leo parker, and of course Dexter Gordon himself. I recommend the four CD package to anyone interested in the tenor sax and in bebop.
Great Early Dexter Compilation
This set contains four discs packed with the best of Dexter Gordon's 1940s output. That is, the best of the best. Dexter made great recordings in several eras, but none had the crackling excitement of this period.
This set contains about all anyone reasonably needs from the period, including full length versions of records such as The Hunt and The Chase that inspired and were written about by the Beats such as Kerouac. Yet, it's not one of those collections that purports to be "scholarly" and ends up being more scholarly than enjoyable because it's loaded with incomplete and alternate takes of the same tune. This is a collection you can listen to in its entirety, and will want to replay, not embalm.
The sound is very acceptable for the time period. I have some of this material on a quality early-80s vinyl reissue and the CDs sound better. Like the other Proper Boxes I've bought, the production quality is quite high for the money.




