Coleman Hawkins (Remastered) Coleman Hawkins

Album info

Album-Release:
1965

HRA-Release:
09.03.2021

Label: Jazz King Records

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Jazz Blues

Artist: Coleman Hawkins

Album including Album cover

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FLAC 96 $ 11.90
  • 1 Runnin' Wild 03:21
  • 2 I'll Never Be The Same 07:16
  • 3 Blue Room 04:46
  • 4 When Your Lover Has Gone 05:00
  • 5 The Breeze And I 03:16
  • 6 What's New 05:51
  • 7 I'll String Along With You 04:51
  • 8 My Own Blues 06:08
  • Total Runtime 40:29

Info for Coleman Hawkins (Remastered)



Coleman Hawkins was the first important tenor saxophonist and he remains one of the greatest of all time. A consistently modern improviser whose knowledge of chords and harmonies was encyclopedic, Hawkins had a 40-year prime (1925-1965) during which he could hold his own with any competitor.

Coleman Hawkins started piano lessons when he was five, switched to cello at age seven, and two years later began on tenor. At a time when the saxophone was considered a novelty instrument, used in vaudeville and as a poor substitute for the trombone in marching bands, Hawkins sought to develop his own sound. A professional when he was 12, Hawkins was playing in a Kansas City theater pit band in 1921, when Mamie Smith hired him to play with her Jazz Hounds. Hawkins was with the blues singer until June 1923, making many records in a background role and he was occasionally heard on instrumentals. After leaving Smith, he freelanced around New York, played briefly with Wilbur Sweatman, and in August 1923 made his first recordings with Fletcher Henderson. When Henderson formed a permanent orchestra in January 1924, Hawkins was his star tenor. ...

Coleman Hawkins, tenor saxophone
Eddie Bert, trombone
Ernie Royal, trumpet
Sidney Gross, guitar
Earl Knight, piano, organ
Wendell Marshall, double bass
Osie Johnson, drums

Digitally remastered

No biography found.

This album contains no booklet.

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