This CD compilation presents, on 8 discs, 17 recording sessions made between 1951 and late 1956 by the extraordinary trumpeter, leader, composer, and perpetual catalyst–Miles Davis. Featured in this collection are such major artists as Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Sonny Rollins, Lee Konitz, and the original Davis Quintet: John Coltrane, Red Garland, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones. The expanse of Miles Davis's recordings for Prestige Records, the California analogue to New York's Blue Note, is huge. In terms of artistic development, the eight CDs in this box span Davis's development from tentative searching through the full bloom of his first great quintet, whose frontline boasted Davis and a young John Coltrane.
Uli Jon Roth 1973 made his debut in the rock scene at Scorpions when he replaced Michael Schenker on lead guitar, which surpassed the British space rock legends UFO. For many hard rock fans Scorpions were never again as well as at the time when Roth wrote most of the songs. 1978 left Roth of the Scorpions and earned a reputation as one of the best guitarists of the international rock scene in the episode with his power trio electric Sun. Especially with his virtuoso solo deposits, the native Düsseldorf sensation, his vocal contributions could keep up da hard. From the 1980s it became quiet around the man with long blond hair and the fancy wardrobe who retreated to his palace in Wales and dealt more with new age and classical music. He only appeared on the stage of international rock music in the late 1990s in again when he followed an invitation of Joe Satriani for the G3 tour…….
Axel Zwingenberger´s recordings with the last grand lady of the Vaudeville-Blues of the twenties, singer Sippie Wallace.
Includes many of Sippie Wallace's own groundbreaking compositions as well as other classic Blues songs, accompanied by Axel Zwingenberger at the piano.
Very few musical artists achieve a true signature style one that makes comparisons to other musicians impossible. But Texas guitarist Eric Johnson arguably comes as close to this echelon as any musician from the past quarter-century. Like fellow Lone Star State guitarists Johnny Winter, Billy Gibbons, and Stevie Ray Vaughan, Johnson blends the rock style of Jimi Hendrix and the blues power of Albert King.
On August 30, saxophone master James Carter will release his Blue Note Records debut James Carter Organ Trio: Live From Newport Jazz, a thrilling live performance of Carter’s imaginative soul jazz reinvention of Django Reinhardt that was captured at the 2018 Newport Jazz Festival.