Why Am I Treated So Bad!

Why Am I Treated So Bad! is an album by the Cannonball Adderley Quintet, recorded at the Capitol studios in Hollywood in 1967.[2][3]

Why Am I Treated So Bad!
Studio album by
Released1967
RecordedMarch 6 & 23, 1967
StudioCapitol Tower, Hollywood
GenreJazz
LabelCapitol
ProducerDavid Axelrod
The Cannonball Adderley Quintet chronology
74 Miles Away
(1967)
Why Am I Treated So Bad!
(1967)
In Person
(1968)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

The song "I'm on My Way", was written by his nephew Nat Adderley, Jr., who at the time was an 11-year-old living in Teaneck, New Jersey.[4]

Track listing

(CD re-issue)

  1. "Introduction" – 0:13
  2. "Mini Mama" (Curtis Fuller) – 6:41
  3. "I'm on My Way" (Nat Adderley, Jr.) – 7:49
  4. "Why Am I Treated So Bad" (Roebuck Staples) - 7:47
  5. "One for Newk" (Josef Zawinul) – 5:15
  6. "Yvette" (Josef Zawinul) – 2:21
  7. "The Other Side" (Nat Adderley) – 9:04
  8. "The Scene" (Josef Zawinul) – 2:39
  9. "Heads Up! Feet Down!" (Jimmy Heath) – 7:00
  10. "The Girl Next Door" (Hugh Martin, Ralph Blane) – 12:07

Personnel

gollark: Like I said, if you just break out all the various web bits into separate protocols, you then have to deal with irritating things like enforcing the same security on each, actually tying them together into one system to do what you want (because you quite plausibly want the file upload/download bits to be part of the same service), lots of open ports and possibly different server software, and implementing similar protocols over and over again.
gollark: No. They use multipart.
gollark: Share the authentication stuff.
gollark: One open port.
gollark: You can reuse a bunch of existing machinery.

References

  1. Jurek, Thom (2011). "Why Am I Treated So Bad! - Cannonball Adderley | AllMusic". allmusic.com. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
  2. Jurek, Thom. Album review at allmusic
  3. Capitol Records discography accessed August 18, 2015
  4. Stewart, Zan. "Born to swing: Nat Adderley Jr. returns to his roots", The Star-Ledger, September 10, 2009. Accessed September 10, 2009.
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