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New and Groovy
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New and Groovy
Current price: $30.99
Barnes and Noble
New and Groovy
Current price: $30.99
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Featuring selections like
"Come and Get It,"
"Too Close for Comfort" and the hard boppin' "Selim,"
New and Groovy
was appropriately titled. The soul of
Lytle's
vibes came with an ambience that's reflected in each one of these compositions, most of them written by the Ohioan. The vibesman's masterful articulation surfaces on the number he wrote in tribute to
Miles Davis
, "Selim" (Miles spelled backwards).
Wynton Kelly
,
Davis'
pianist during the trumpeter's bebop days, jams his way through the first several verses with his prudent key strokes before yielding to
swinging entrance. The song retains that zestful intensity throughout. With a fast-paced, gospel-seasoned rhythm backed by a hammering tambourine,
Lytle
masquerades his way through "The Pulpit" as his vibes personify a preacher delivering an uplifting sermon. Songs like "Screamin' Loud" earned
the nickname "fast hands." In the vamp of the song, he wails away on two bars of the vibraphone. He admirably increases his hand speed to a rate where the sound is identical to that of a telephone ringing. Before settling into a jazzy, flowing groove, "Too Close for Comfort" begins with an intermittent intro and percussive backbeat;
enunciates each note with fervor. This album remains one of the top jazz albums in Europe. ~ Craig Lytle
"Come and Get It,"
"Too Close for Comfort" and the hard boppin' "Selim,"
New and Groovy
was appropriately titled. The soul of
Lytle's
vibes came with an ambience that's reflected in each one of these compositions, most of them written by the Ohioan. The vibesman's masterful articulation surfaces on the number he wrote in tribute to
Miles Davis
, "Selim" (Miles spelled backwards).
Wynton Kelly
,
Davis'
pianist during the trumpeter's bebop days, jams his way through the first several verses with his prudent key strokes before yielding to
swinging entrance. The song retains that zestful intensity throughout. With a fast-paced, gospel-seasoned rhythm backed by a hammering tambourine,
Lytle
masquerades his way through "The Pulpit" as his vibes personify a preacher delivering an uplifting sermon. Songs like "Screamin' Loud" earned
the nickname "fast hands." In the vamp of the song, he wails away on two bars of the vibraphone. He admirably increases his hand speed to a rate where the sound is identical to that of a telephone ringing. Before settling into a jazzy, flowing groove, "Too Close for Comfort" begins with an intermittent intro and percussive backbeat;
enunciates each note with fervor. This album remains one of the top jazz albums in Europe. ~ Craig Lytle