funics

Posts Tagged ‘Listen Here’

Grilles d’Accords (Chords Tables )

In A Night In Tunisia, Blues for Yna Yna, Canyon Lady, Chitlins Con Carne, Cold Duck Time, Good Bye Pork Pie Hat, Listen Here, Partitions, Recado Bossa Nova, Watermelon Man, Well You Needn't on January 5, 2010 at 4:16 pm

Quelques grilles concernant nos principaux morceaux. (Chords tables for:)

ou directement dans la librairie.

Listen Here – Eddie Harris

In Album, Bio, Listen Here on February 20, 2009 at 10:01 pm
  • Date de sortie d’origine: novembre 1992
  • Label: Enja
  • ASIN : B000025TZM

listenher1

Liste des titres

  • 1. Funkaroma
  • 2. I Need Some Money
  • 3. Listen Here Hi Life
  • 4. People Get Funny When They Get a Little Money
  • 5. Is It In?
  • 6. How Can I Find Some Way to Tell You
  • 7. Walkin’ the Walk
  • 8. Fusion Jazz Dance

The Electrifying Eddie Harris (Album review) Listen Here

In Album, Listen Here on January 25, 2009 at 3:32 pm

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THE ELECTRIFYING EDDIE HARRIS:

Recorded in New York, New York on March 14-15, 1968.

Recorded at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York, New York on April 20, 1967. Includes original release liner notes by Ray Allen, this LP is one of tenor saxophonist Eddie Harris’s most significant albums. Rolling Stone called Eddie’s hit single Listen Here a space funk classic with it’s inventive use of electronic effects also features the groovy Sham Time and the incredible Theme In Search Of A Movie New exclusive liner notes by Mitch Myers audiophile Re mastering from the original master tapes 80 gram HQ vinyl & original artwork”


2 LPs
on 1 CD: THE ELECTRIFYING EDDIE HARRIS (1967)/PLUG ME IN.

Personnel:

Eddie Harris (tenor saxophone, electric saxophone); King Curtis, David Newman (tenor saxophone); Haywood Henry (baritone saxophone); Melvin Lastie, Joe Newman (trumpet); Jodie Christian (piano); Melvin Jackson (bass); Richard Smith (drums); Ray Barretto, Joe Wohletz (percussion).

Producer: Arif Mardin.
Engineer: Phil Iehle.

Personnel: Eddie Harris (electric tenor saxophone); Haywood Henry (baritone saxophone); Melvin Lastie, Jimmy Owens, Joe Newman, James Bossy (trumpet); Tom McIntosh, Garnet Brown (trombone); Jodie Christian (piano); Melvin Jackson, Ron Carter (bass); Chuck Rainey (electric bass); Richard Smith, Grady Tate (drums).

Producer: Joel Dorn.

Tracks:

  • Theme In Search Of A Movie
  • Listen Here
  • Judie’s Theme
  • Sham Time
  • Spanish Bull
  • I Don’t Want No One But You

Eddie Harris – Bio

In Bio, Listen Here on September 8, 2008 at 12:36 pm

Eddie Harris was born on October 20th, 1934 in Chicago, Illinois. He began his career as a singer in various Baptist churches around Chicago, and started appearing at these churches from the age of five.

Eddie started playing the piano and began playing very well by ear. He was mainly playing just church songs at the time. A few years later, Eddie’s cousin began teaching him how to read musical notation. Eddie Harris went to John Farren Elementary School and to Burke Elementary. He went to Du Sable High School and Hyde Park High School. He continued his education at Illinois University Navy Pier, Roosevelt University and the Paris Conservatoire, where he studied classical saxophone. Eddie first started playing the vibraphone while attending Du Sable High School, under the guidance of the formidable Capt. Walter Dyette, the music teacher who was mentor to many future jazz greats. “Chafing under the strict discipline of Capt. Dyette,” (writes Lloyd Sachs) Eddie transferred to Hyde Park High School. Eddie turned down an athletic scholarship to study music at Roosevelt College, where he met jazz promoter Joe Segal, who hired him to sit in with such immortals as Charlie Parker and Lester Young. Eddie was drafted into the Army, at which time they put him into electronics. He later joined an Airborne unit and soon became disgusted with seeing many of the soldiers being injured, so he auditioned for, and made, the talent-laden 7th Army Jazz Band, which performed and toured extensively. After leaving the Army, Eddie lived in New York, where he worked all the time, from pit bands to jazz bands, to small combos and playing piano in the late afternoon at a dance studio.

Due to an illness in the family, Eddie returned to Chicago in 1960. He married Sarah Elizabeth Turner, and they had two daughters, Lolita Maria and Yvonne Marie. Eddie was signed as a pianist by Vee-Jay Records, but he got to play tenor on his own arrangement of the theme from the movie “Exodus.” The album was called Exodus to Jazz , and the single cut Exodus was released as a 45 RPM. It was the first jazz record to score a “Gold Record” certification, and made the Billboard Top 40 as a pop single. The record sold more than 2 million copies — unheard of from a jazz artiste at that time. “Wounded by accusations of selling out, Eddie didn’t perform ‘Exodus’ for years,” writes Lloyd Sachs.

After two years, Eddie left Vee-Jay Records and began recording for Columbia. In 1965 he released an album called The In Sound which included the song Freedom Jazz Dance, which has been recorded by many other artistes including Miles Davis. In 1967, his album The Electrifying Eddie Harris featured the song Listen Here which also became a hit. In June 1969, Eddie recorded an album at the Montreux Jazz Festival with Les McCann’s group, which included Leroy Vinnegar on bass. It was called Swiss Movement , went to #29 on the Billboard pop album chart, and included the song Compared To What.  

Eddie’s December 1969 album Free Speech is “considered by many jazz aficionados as one of the first, if not THE first, jazz fusion album,” writes Stephen K. Peeples. “He further demonstrated his willingness to stretch the boundaries of jazz” (writes Peter Watrous) when he recorded Eddie Harris in the U.K. which included rock musicians Stevie Winwood and Jeff Beck. From 1969 to 1971, Eddie also wrote the music for “The Bill Cosby Show.” He also invented several unique hybrid instruments, such as the “saxobone,” which was essentially a tenor fitted with a trombone mouthpiece.

He also frequently sang and worked comedy routines into his performances. Eddie even released a comedy album called Why Does This Always Happen To Me? and another one called The Reason Why I’m Talking Shit . Good luck trying to find a copy! Eddie was a tireless performer, composer and innovator.

He published numerous books of interest to jazz students and musicians, including The Eddie Harris Fake Book; Jazz Licks; Skips; Fusionary Jazz Duets and several others. He recorded albums on numerous labels large and small, including MCA, Virgin, Blue Note, Atlantic, Flying Heart, Moonwalker, Enja, Steeplechase, RCA and more. He continued to practice daily and placed great value on it. He held musicians to a rigorous standard, and continued performing until he was disabled by disease. In his obit in the Chicago Tribune, Howard Reich writes: “Though medical treatments in the last year left him thin and weak, Harris played a weeklong engagement in May (1996) at the Jazz Showcase in Chicago. Short on wind and barely able to stand, he nevertheless summoned the strength to produce an extremely moving performance. What he had lost in technical facility he counterbalanced with the urgency and melodic appeal of his work.” Eddie Harris died on November 5th, 1996 at USC/University Hospital in Los Angeles, California. He was 62

Listen Here – Eddie Harris live

In Listen Here, Live on August 29, 2008 at 10:56 pm