Jazz: The Smithsonian Anthology

~ Release by Various Artists (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Tracklist

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#TitleArtistRatingLength
1One by One
double bass:
Reggie Workman (on 1963-06-16)
drums (drum set):
Art Blakey (on 1963-06-16)
piano:
Cedar Walton (on 1963-06-16)
tenor saxophone:
Wayne Shorter (US jazz saxophonist and composer) (on 1963-06-16)
trombone:
Curtis Fuller (on 1963-06-16)
trumpet:
Freddie Hubbard (on 1963-06-16)
recorded at:
Birdland (NYC, 1949–1965) in Manhattan, New York, New York, United States (on 1963-06-16)
recording of:
One by One (on 1963-06-16)
composer:
Wayne Shorter (US jazz saxophonist and composer)
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers6:19
2The Girl From Ipanema
recording engineer:
Phil Ramone
producer:
Creed Taylor
bass guitar:
Tommy Williams (jazz bassist) (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
double bass [bass]:
Tommy Williams (jazz bassist) (in 1963-03)
drums (drum set):
Milton Banana (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
drums (drum set) [drums]:
Milton Banana (in 1963-03)
guest piano and piano:
Antônio Carlos Jobim (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
guitar:
João Gilberto (Brazilian bossa nova guitarist, singer, and composer) (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
tenor saxophone:
Stan Getz (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
vocals:
Astrud Gilberto (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19) and João Gilberto (Brazilian bossa nova guitarist, singer, and composer) (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
performer:
João Gilberto (Brazilian bossa nova guitarist, singer, and composer) and Antônio Carlos Jobim
recorded at:
A&R Recording Studio (original studio, 1958–1967) in New York, New York, United States (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
part of:
Billboard: The 500 Best Pop Songs (as of October 2023) (number: 461)
recording of:
The Girl From Ipanema (from 1963-03-18 until 1963-03-19)
lyricist:
Vinicius de Moraes (O poetinha)
composer:
Antônio Carlos Jobim
translator:
Norman Gimbel
publisher:
Copyright Control (not for release label use! this is only for copyrights and publishing relationships), Corcovado Music Corp., Duchess Music Corporation (BMI-affiliated), MCA Music Ltd., New Thunder Music Co., Songs of Universal, Inc. (BMI), Universal Duchess Music Corp., Universal Music Publishing Ltd. (UK subsidiary of Universal Music Publishing Group), Windswept Music (London) Ltd. and Words West LLC
sub-publisher:
Universal Music Publishing Ltd. (Hong Kong)
translated version of:
Garota de Ipanema
part of:
The Real Book (compilation of jazz standards, volume I)
Stan Getz & Astrud Gilberto3.655:22
3A Love Supreme, Part I: Acknowledgement
recording engineer:
Rudy van Gelder (on 1964-12-09)
producer:
Bob Thiele (producer & songwriter)
double bass [bass]:
Jimmy Garrison (on 1964-12-09)
drums (drum set):
Elvin Jones (jazz drummer) (on 1964-12-09)
piano:
McCoy Tyner (jazz pianist) (on 1964-12-09)
tenor saxophone:
John Coltrane (on 1964-12-09)
vocals:
John Coltrane (in 1964-12)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Verve Music Group (now known as Verve Label Group; not for release label use!) (in 2002)
recorded at:
Van Gelder Studio (Englewood Cliffs, July 20, 1959 –) in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, United States (on 1964-12-09)
part of:
Rolling Stone: 500 Greatest Songs of All Time: 2021 edition (number: 315)
recording of:
A Love Supreme, Part 1: Acknowledgement (on 1964-12-09)
composer:
John Coltrane
publisher:
Jowcol Music
part of:
A Love Supreme (entire suite)
John Coltrane Quartet7:46
4E.S.P.
double bass:
Ron Carter (US jazz double-bassist) (on 1965-01-20)
drums (drum set):
Tony Williams (American jazz drummer) (on 1965-01-20)
piano:
Herbie Hancock (US jazz pianist, keyboardist, bandleader and composer) (on 1965-01-20)
tenor saxophone:
Wayne Shorter (US jazz saxophonist and composer) (on 1965-01-20)
trumpet:
Miles Davis (jazz trumpeter, bandleader, songwriter) (on 1965-01-20)
recorded at:
Columbia Studio ‘D’ in Hollywood, Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1965-01-20)
recording of:
E.S.P. (on 1965-01-20)
composer:
Wayne Shorter (US jazz saxophonist and composer)
Miles Davis Quintet5:28
5Haig & Haig
double bass:
Bob Cranshaw (in 1966)
drums (drum set):
Dave Bailey (US jazz drummer) (in 1966)
piano:
Hank Jones (piano) (in 1966)
trumpet:
Clark Terry (American swing trumpeter) (in 1966)
valve trombone:
Bob Brookmeyer (in 1966)
recording of:
Haig & Haig (in 1966)
composer:
Clark Terry (American swing trumpeter)
Clark Terry-Bob Brookmeyer Quintet44:28
6King of the Road
producer:
Creed Taylor
drums (drum set):
Grady Tate (on 1966-09-28)
electric guitar and guitar:
Wes Montgomery (on 1966-09-28)
Hammond organ and Hammond organ [organ]:
Jimmy Smith (US jazz organist) (on 1966-09-28)
percussion:
Ray Barretto (on 1966-09-28)
recorded at:
Van Gelder Studio (Englewood Cliffs, July 20, 1959 –) in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, United States (on 1966-09-28)
instrumental cover recording of:
King of the Road (on 1966-09-28)
lyricist:
Roger Miller (US singer/songwriter/actor, “King of the Road”)
composer:
Roger Miller (US singer/songwriter/actor, “King of the Road”) (in 1964)
publisher:
Burlington Music Co., Ltd.
Jimmy Smith and Wes Montgomery4:10
7Isfahan
alto saxophone:
Johnny Hodges (on 1966-12-20) and Russell Procope (on 1966-12-20)
baritone saxophone:
Harry Carney (on 1966-12-20)
double bass:
John Lamb (bass) (on 1966-12-20)
drums (drum set):
Rufus Jones (drums, aka Speedy Jones) (on 1966-12-20)
piano:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) (on 1966-12-20)
tenor saxophone:
Paul Gonsalves (on 1966-12-20) and Jimmy Hamilton (US jazz clarinettist/saxophonist, arranger, composer) (on 1966-12-20)
trombone:
Lawrence Brown (jazz trombonist) (on 1966-12-20), Chuck Connors (trombonist) (on 1966-12-20) and Buster Cooper (on 1966-12-20)
trumpet:
William “Cat” Anderson (on 1966-12-20), Mercer Ellington (on 1966-12-20), Herbie Jones (on 1966-12-20) and Cootie Williams (on 1966-12-20)
recording of:
Isfahan (on 1966-12-20)
composer:
Duke Ellington (US composer, pianist & jazz bandleader) and Billy Strayhorn
Duke Ellington and His Orchestra4:11
8The New National Anthem (from A Genuine Tong Funeral)
baritone saxophone and tuba:
Howard Johnson (tuba & baritone saxophone) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
bass:
Steve Swallow (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
drums (drum set):
Bob Moses (jazz drummer/composer) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
guitar:
Larry Coryell (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
piano:
Carla Bley (American jazz pianist and composer) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
soprano saxophone:
Steve Lacy (jazz saxophonist and composer 1934–2004) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
tenor saxophone:
Gato Barbieri (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
trombone:
Jimmy Knepper (trombonist) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
trumpet:
Michael Mantler (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
vibraphone:
Gary Burton (jazz vibraphonist and composer) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
conductor:
Carla Bley (American jazz pianist and composer) (from 1967-11-20 until 1967-11-21)
Gary Burton6:38
9Matrix
double bass:
Miroslav Vitouš (Miroslav Vitous) (in 1968-03)
drums (drum set):
Roy Haynes (American jazz drummer and bandleader) (in 1968-03)
piano:
Chick Corea (jazz pianist) (in 1968-03)
Chick Corea6:25
10Miles Runs the Voodoo Down
bass clarinet:
Bennie Maupin (on 1969-08-20)
double bass:
Dave Holland (British jazz bassist and composer) (on 1969-08-20)
drums (drum set):
Jack DeJohnette (on 1969-08-20)
drums (drum set) and percussion:
Don Alias (on 1969-08-20)
electric bass guitar:
Harvey Brooks (US electric bassist) (on 1969-08-20)
electric piano:
Chick Corea (jazz pianist) (on 1969-08-20) and Joe Zawinul (jazz and fusion keyboard player) (on 1969-08-20)
guitar:
John McLaughlin (guitarist) (on 1969-08-20)
percussion and shakers:
Jim Riley (on 1969-08-20)
sopranino saxophone:
Wayne Shorter (US jazz saxophonist and composer) (on 1969-08-20)
trumpet:
Miles Davis (jazz trumpeter, bandleader, songwriter) (on 1969-08-20)
recording of:
Miles Runs The Voodoo Down (on 1969-08-20)
composer:
Miles Davis (jazz trumpeter, bandleader, songwriter)
Miles Davis2:49
11Celestial Terrestrial Commuters
engineer:
Jim Green (US recording engineer/studio manager, Columbia Studios, NY) and Ken Scott (UK record producer & engineer)
producer:
Mahavishnu Orchestra
bass guitar:
Rick Laird (in 1972-08)
drums (drum set):
Billy Cobham (in 1972-08)
guitar:
John McLaughlin (guitarist) (in 1972-08)
Moog and keyboard:
Jan Hammer (in 1972-08)
violin:
Jerry Goodman (in 1972-08)
engineered at:
CBS (New York City, encompassing studios at 7th Ave, and 52nd & 30th St) in New York, New York, United States and Trident Studios (London, UK) in Soho, Westminster, London (Greater London), England, United Kingdom
recording of:
Celestial Terrestrial Commuters (in 1972-08)
composer:
John McLaughlin (guitarist)
publisher:
Chinmoy Music, Inc.
Mahavishnu Orchestra42:53
12Watermelon Man
congas, other instruments, shekere and tambourine:
Bill Summers (in 1973-09)
drums (drum set):
Harvey Mason (jazz drummer) (in 1973-09)
electric bass guitar:
Paul Jackson (jazz bassist) (in 1973-09)
Rhodes piano, clavinet and synthesizer:
Herbie Hancock (US jazz pianist, keyboardist, bandleader and composer) (in 1973-09)
soprano saxophone:
Bennie Maupin (in 1973-09)
recording of:
Watermelon Man (in 1973-09)
composer:
Herbie Hancock (US jazz pianist, keyboardist, bandleader and composer)
publisher:
Hancock Music and Warner Chappell Music Ltd (1996–2019)
Herbie Hancock6:29
13Long Yellow Road
alto saxophone:
Gary Foster (woodwind instrumentalist) (on 1974-04-04) and Dick Spencer (on 1974-04-04)
baritone saxophone:
Bill Perkins (jazz saxophonist) (on 1974-04-04)
bass trombone:
Phil Teele (on 1974-04-04)
double bass:
Gene Cherico (on 1974-04-04)
drums (drum set):
Peter Donald (on 1974-04-04)
piano:
穐吉敏子 (Toshiko Akiyoshi) (on 1974-04-04)
tenor saxophone:
Tom Peterson (plays woodwinds) (on 1974-04-04) and Lew Tabackin (on 1974-04-04)
trombone:
Charles Loper (American trombonist) (on 1974-04-04), Jim Sawyer (on 1974-04-04) and Britt Woodman (on 1974-04-04)
trumpet:
John Madrid (on 1974-04-04), Mike Price (jazz trumpeter) (on 1974-04-04), Don Rader (US jazz trumpeter and music arranger) (on 1974-04-04) and Bobby Shew (on 1974-04-04)
Toshiko Akiyoshi - Lew Tabackin Big Band6:27
14Jitney No. 2
recording engineer:
Stephan Sulke (on 1974-07-02)
piano:
Cecil Taylor (on 1974-07-02)
recorded at:
Montreux Jazz Festival 1974 (1974-06-28 – 1974-07-07)
phonographic copyright (℗) by:
Black Lion Records Ltd. (in 1975)
live recording of:
Silent Tongues: Jitney (on 1974-07-02)
composer:
Cecil Taylor
publisher:
Unit Core Music Corp. (publisher for Cecil Taylor)
part of:
Silent Tongues
Cecil Taylor4:11
15Bright Size Life
drums (drum set):
Bob Moses (jazz drummer/composer) (in 1975-12)
electric bass guitar:
Jaco Pastorius (in 1975-12)
electric guitar:
Pat Metheny (in 1975-12)
recording of:
Bright Size Life (in 1975-12)
composed in:
Stoughton, Massachusetts, United States (in 1974-01)
composer:
Pat Metheny (in 1974-01)
Pat Metheny4:43
6CD