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Glenn Zottola - Too Marvelous for Words (2015)

Glenn Zottola - Too Marvelous for Words (2015)

BAND/ARTIST: Glenn Zottola

  • Title: Too Marvelous for Words
  • Year Of Release: 2015
  • Label: Classic Jazz Records
  • Genre: Jazz
  • Quality: flac lossless (tracks)
  • Total Time: 00:32:27
  • Total Size: 143 mb
  • WebSite:
Tracklist

01. Too Marvelous for Words
02. Body and Soul
03. Oh, Lady Be Good
04. Embraceable You
05. Three Little Words
06. Poor Butterfly
07. Sometimes I'm Happy
08. You Go to My Head
09. When Your Lover Has Gone
10. Fine and Dandy

In his career,Glenn Zottola has been best known as a brilliant and swinging trumpeter who occasionally doubled quite effectively on alto. But on this special project, he is heard as a talented tenor-saxophonist who draws on the sounds and styles of Lester Young and Coleman Hawkins, finding his own voice somewhere in between. Glenn sounds quite at home playing with the vintage rhythm sections yet gives the music his own twist and never tries to just merely copy or recreate the past.
Relatively few jazz musicians have been equally comfortable on both brass and reed instruments. Benny Carter, Ira Sullivan and Scott Robinson come to mind along with just a handful of others. Glenn was never told that it was difficult to play both brass and reeds, so he developed his own musical conceptions, giving one the impression that it is effortless. But that is consistent with his career for he has often made the difficult seem natural.

Although he has loved playing tenor since he picked up his first saxophone when he was 13, Glenn Zottola
had never recorded a full set on that instrument. Making this CD even more unique is that Glenn is heard playing along with some of the earliest performances recorded for the acclaimed Classic Jazz series. Dating from 1952, the rhythm sections feature such notables as pianists Nat Pierce and Don Abney, and guitarists Mundell Lowe and Jimmy Raney taking short solos while bassist Milt Hinton, Oscar Pettiford and Wilbur Ware, and drummers Osie Johnson, Kenny Clarke and Bobby Donaldson give quiet and steady support. Because Glenn has a timeless and very flexible style, he adapts his playing on this unique set, sounding a bit like a cousin of Lester Young and Stan Getz. His style, hinting at swing, bop and cool jazz, fits the era perfectly.

Performing 10 standards including “Too Marvelous For Words,” “Body And Soul,” “Three Little Words” and “Fine And Dandy,” Glenn Zottola plays creatively within the style of 1952 cool swing without sacrificing his own individuality. If given a blindfold test, few listeners would guess that Glenn’s playing took place nearly 60 years after that of the rhythm sections and some might speculate that this was a long lost session recorded at the Lighthouse.


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