Full description not available
J**S
not a great jazz recording
Very enjoyable; not a great jazz recording, but fun to listen to on aa slow or rainy day. Or even at night.
H**S
Four Stars
super Jazz !
G**B
Among my favorite Turrentine
This is one of my favorite Stanley Turrentine recordings, though I'll admit upfront I don't have anywhere near a complete collection. Like Joyride and Rough and Tumble, this one features Stan in front of a larger ensemble, playing groove-oriented soul jazz (rather than hard bop) centered around material drawn from popular music. In fact, the ensemble is almost identical to that on Rough and Tumble, with the main difference being Julian Priester's trombone replacing Grant Green's guitar.Of the three albums, this one is definitely my favorite. The album blasts out of the gate with the dancing groove of Duke Pearson's "The Magilla". Then after a lovely read of "When the Sun Comes Out", we get an intense read of Armando Boza's "La Fiesta" which is an absolute cracking composition, arrangement and performance. Duke Pearson, the arranger, was going for a totally different (and more interesting, to my mind) feel here than on Rough and Tumble. The second half of the album takes a mellower tack - the bossa interpretation of "Sunny", the lush ballad "Maybe September", and then the most straight-ahead selection - a swinging "You're Gonna Hear from Me".The Spoiler is the kind of album that shows commercially-accessible jazz doesn't have to compromise its integrity. Excellent stuff.
D**E
An effortless masterpiece!
"The Spoiler" was the Duke Pearson/Stanley Turrentine follow up to "Rough'n'tumble" with the elegant guitar work of Grant Green from that album replaced by the trombone of Julian Priester in an octet that supports Turrentine with skill,affection and obvious enjoyment. Duke Pearson's arrangements are magnificent, whatever the tempo or the melody, and although it's perhaps invidious to pick out luminary performances from other players, Blue Mitchell and McCoy Tyner turn in stellar performances. Mitchell had played with Turrentine in Earl Bostic's band and their skillful interplay proves this, whilst Tyner fits in behind and around Turrentine's style magnificently (listen to his work on "When the sun comes out" as an example). However the album is undoubtedly a showcase for Turrentine who was at his very best on every track. Pearson's arrangement often reveal a willingness to experiment, witness his use of James Spalding's flute on a couple of the tracks. The bonus track on the album is from an earlier period, and an earlier band, with Turrentine as a member of Max Roach's band. The album clocks in at just over 38 minutes, but is as good an outing as forms any part of Turrentines output. If push comes to shove my favourite two tracks are the aforementioned "When the sun comes out" and a wonderful take on the Andre Previn composed "You're gonna hear from me", but it's an album to savour in whole, not in part. Highly recommended.
M**C
Stanley at his best!
His version of "Sonny" is my all-time favorite! Arrangements by Pearson provide the album with such fluidity. Great album all together. A must buy for Turrentine fans!
J**F
Yeah Stanley
I've never heard a song by Stanley Turentine that I didn't like. This continues that tradition.
R**Z
Four Stars
good team its correct
J**Y
WAOOOOOH
A posséder à tout prix. C'est magnifique,grandiose et historique. Je me régale inlassablement depuis que ma commande fut satisfaite! Achat gagnant.
I**7
かっこいい!
スタンリー・タレンタインはブルージーでどれも最高!このアルバムのSunnyが気に入ってます。
E**O
The spoiler
Il prodotto corrisponde alla descrizione del venditore e mi e' stato consegnato nei tempi previsti.Ottime condizioni del cd audio.
Trustpilot
2 months ago
1 day ago