Recorded Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival

Recorded Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival is a live album by saxophonist John Handy, recorded in 1965 and released in 1966. It is Handy's most famous album and his debut on Columbia. The original album only features two long instrumental pieces, notable for their "free form", a peculiar use of harmonies and unusual instruments (violin and guitar along with more "classic" jazz instruments are uncommon in jazz music). The bonus track "Tears of Ole Miss (Anatomy of a Riot)", which was added to the now out-of-print 1996 CD edition, was originally featured on New View!.

Recorded Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival
Live album by
Released1966
RecordedSeptember 18, 1965
Monterey Jazz Festival, Monterey
GenreJazz
Length47:00
LabelColumbia
CS 9262
ProducerJohn H. Hammond
John Handy chronology
Jazz
(1962)
Recorded Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival
(1966)
The 2nd John Handy Album
(1966)

The album is mentioned in 1995 Charles Burnett's short film When It Rains. Influential critic Ralph J. Gleason called the lineup on the album "an exciting group and one of that will make jazz history."[1] Notwithstanding the praises and its relevance, Recorded Live at the Monterey Jazz Festival still remains a little-known album.

This album is also #67 in a list titled "The 100 Jazz Albums That Shook the World", published by 'jazzwise' magazine.[2]

It was accorded Five Stars in the Larkin, Colin (2007). Encyclopedia of Popular Music (4th ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0195313734.</ref>


Track listing

All compositions by John Handy.

  1. "If Only We Knew" - 27:29
  2. "Spanish Lady" - 19:31
  3. "Tears of Ole Miss (Anatomy of a Riot)" - 23:37 Bonus track on CD reissue, recorded on June 28, 1967 at Village Gate, New York City

Personnel

On bonus track

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gollark: What? No.
gollark: Those are outdated too and only useful, loosely speaking, as some kind of weird aesthetic statement.
gollark: It's some kind of ancient analog video system, it's been obsoleted several times over.
gollark: What are you even copying *from* onto VHS?

References

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