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Barnes and Noble

Some Favorite Songs

Current price: $15.99
Some Favorite Songs
Some Favorite Songs

Barnes and Noble

Some Favorite Songs

Current price: $15.99

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Boots Randolph
was known for much beyond his breakthrough instrumental AM radio hit
"Yakety Sax,"
recording some 50 albums up until his death in 2007. This CD is a new release among the massive
Inner City
label reissue project, done before
Randolph
's passing, with a group of veteran musicians he played with in Nashville. Bassist
Tim Smith
(who also penned the heartfelt liner notes) issued a directive to have
Randolph'
s tenor sax embrace some of his favorite standards, and the overall result proves he could play them skillfully at an advanced age. The usage of synthesizer strings mars some of the tracks, a completely unnecessary sweetening, but the majority of these tunes are rendered faithfully in the acoustic jazz tradition. It's clear when you hear his full, rich tone on
"I'm Beginning to See the Light"
or
"Stompin' at the Savoy"
that his influences go back to
Coleman Hawkins
,
Lester Young
, or even
Zoot Sims
and
Flip Phillips
. Then again, he readily acknowledges
Don Byas
on the ballad/blues
"Candy,"
while a slower take of
"Billie's Bounce"
and the upbeat
"Take Me Out to the Ballgame,"
in tandem with guitarist
Roddy Smith
, both pay homage to
Charlie Parker
. A contemporary, calypso organ combo take of
"Dream Dancing"
shows
's longstanding studio side, as does
"I'll Walk Alone,"
while his slight vibrato comes to the fore during
"L.O.V.E."
"You'll Never Know."
It would have been better to hear the nostalgic
"As Time Goes By"
"'Round Midnight"
without the synthesizer underpinning, though the simulated strings and horns on
"Red Sails in the Sunset"
"Embraceable You"
are unobtrusive.
Smith
and drummer
Ray VonRotz
-- with
for over two decades -- swing the band quite nicely over this entire program. What is important here is that into his late seventies,
could still play rings around other swing-oriented saxophonists much younger than he. Generally dubbed a pop instrumentalist or country performer, he remained a jazzman at heart, as proven on this recording and many others made over a successful and rewarding commercial career. ~ Michael G. Nastos

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