Midnight at Minton's
Midnight at Minton's is a 1941 album by jazz musician Don Byas, first released in 1973. It is a live recording of a jam session at Minton's Playhouse, the famous New York City nightclub at which the emerging style of bebop was being pioneered.
Midnight at Minton's | |
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Live album by | |
Released | 1973 |
Recorded | 1941 |
Genre | Jazz |
Length | 38:51 |
Label | High Note Records |
Producer | Jerry Newman |
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic |
It features one of the earliest known recordings of Thelonious Monk, who was then playing piano in Minton's house band.[2][3]
The album is taken from private recordings made by Columbia University student Jerry Newman on a portable acetate disc recorder. Newman made the recordings for "Delayed on Disc" broadcasts on college radio station WKCR — the discs were rushed back to the radio studio shortly after being cut and presented in the style of a live broadcast from the venue.[4]
In a review for Allmusic, Michael G. Nastos concludes that, "the music itself is priceless, the document of a transitional period from swing to bop, and some of the people that made it happen, especially the underappreciated genius Byas."[5]
Track listing
- "Stardust" (Hoagy Carmichael, Mitchell Parish) – 9:04
- "Exactly Like You" (Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh) – 9:03
- "Uptown" (Don Byas) – 2:45
- "Body and Soul" (Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton, Johnny Green) – 7:29
- "I Can't Give You Anything But Love" (Fields, McHugh) – 4:07
- "(Back Home Again in) Indiana" (James F. Hanley, Ballard MacDonald) – 6:23
Personnel
- Don Byas – tenor saxophone
- Joe Guy – trumpet
- Thelonious Monk – piano
- Kenny Clarke – drums
- Helen Humes – vocals (1,2)
Similar albums
- Live at Minton's - Musidisc 30 JA 5121 (France, LP)
- Midnight at Minton's - Onyx ORI 208 (LP)
- Midnight at Minton's - Polydor 2310341 (LP)
References
- Allmusic review
- "Bebop", Scott Yanow
- "Jazz: The First 100 Years", Henry Martin and Keith Waters
- A History of WKCR's Jazz Programming Archived 2006-02-22 at the Wayback Machine
- Allmusic review