Stan Getz & Astrud Gilberto/ The Lost Recordings
BY NARENDRA KUSNUR
Stan Getz & Astrud
Gilberto/ The Lost Recordings
Genre: Jazz
Label: The Lost Recordings
Rating: **** 1/2
One of the best tenor
saxophonists in jazz, Stan Getz also did some amazing work in Latin music,
specially bossa nova. His rendition of the compositions of Antonio Carlos
Jobim, most notably ‘The Girl From Ipanema’, ‘Corvocado’ and ‘Desafinado’, are
classics.
Getz had worked with Brazilian
singer Astrud Gilberto in the early 1960s, though he collaborated more with her
husband Joao, including the iconic Getz/ Gilberto album. Astrud Gilberto’s
career took an upward spiral after that, and though the two didn’t play for
almost two years, they came back for this show at the Berlin Jazz Festival in
November 1966. This previously-unreleased set thus makes for a collector’s
item, specially for Getz fans.
Astrud, in fact, appears only
in the second half, and in the first, Getz plays with the phenomenal
vibraphonist Gary Burton, bassist Chuck Israel and drummer Roy Haynes. In fact,
when this concert was held, Burton was only 23.
The youngster dazzles towards
the end of the Miles Davis composition ‘On Green Dolphin Street’, and quickly
follows up on the opening part of ‘The Singing Song’. Burton is also the
featured artiste on ‘Edelweiss’ from The Sound Of Music soundtrack, though his
interpretation sounds quite different in the middle half.
The set list is a mix of jazz
standards, popular pieces and bossa nova beauties. Getz is at his melodic best
on the Jobim piece ‘O Grande Amor’, getting into Latin jazz mood again on the
‘Desafinado’ excerpt. The standard ‘The Shadow Of Your Smile’ appears in two
versions, instrumental and vocal.
For her part, Astrud Gilberto
does a mix of Portuguese and English, excelling on ‘Corvocado’ and ‘The
Telephone Song’, which she had recorded herself. Expectedly ‘The Girl From
Ipanema’ comes at the end, followed by the encore of Bob Brookmeyer’s ‘Jive
Hoot’, with Haynes’ energetic drum solo.
Spread over an hour and 22
minutes, the 16-track set keeps you engrossed. It’s ideal listening for both
those new to Getz and those familiar with his work.
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