CANNONBALL ADDERLEY — African Waltz

Jazz music community with review and forums

CANNONBALL ADDERLEY - African Waltz cover
4.00 | 2 ratings | 1 review
Buy this album from MMA partners

Album · 1961

Tracklist

A1 Something Different 2:59
A2 West Coast Blues 4:02
A3 Smoke Gets in Your Eyes 3:00
A4 The Uptown 2:12
A5 Stockholm Sweetnin' 3:37
B1 African Waltz 2:08
B2 Blue Brass Groove 4:46
B3 Kelly Blue 3:46
B4 Letter From Home 1:55
B5 I'll Close My Eyes 3:39

CD bonus:
11. This Here (2:57)

Total Time: 35:32

Line-up/Musicians

Nat Adderley, Clark Terry, Ernie Royal, Nick Travis,trumpets;
Bob Brookmeyer, Melba Liston, Jimmy Cleveland, Paul Faulise, trombones;
Cannonball Adderley, alto sax;George Dorsey, alto sax and flute;
Jerome Richardson, Oliver Nelson, tenor sax and flutes;Arthur Clarke, baritone sax;
Don Butterfield, tuba;
Wynton Kelly, piano;
Orchestra conducted by Ernie Wilkins
Sam Jones,bass;
Charlie Persip or Louis Hayes, drums; Ray Barretto, conga.

On African Waltz and Kelly Blue:
George Matthews, Arnett Sparrow, trombones, In place of Brookmeyer and MissListon;
Joe Newman, trumpet, In place of Travis;
Michael Olatunji, African drums, in place of Barretto

About this release

Riverside Records ‎– RLP 377 (US)

Recorded in Plaza Sound Studio , NYC February 28, May 9, May 15, 1961

Thanks to snobb for the updates

Buy CANNONBALL ADDERLEY - AFRICAN WALTZ music

More places to buy jazz & CANNONBALL ADDERLEY music

CANNONBALL ADDERLEY AFRICAN WALTZ reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

No CANNONBALL ADDERLEYAFRICAN WALTZ reviews posted by specialists/experts yet.

Members reviews

siLLy puPPy
After releasing his critically acclaimed and most popular albums of his career with such classics as “Something Else” on the Blue Note label, CANNONBALL ADDERLEY spent many years after pumping out album after album with totally new lineups with many of them including AFRICAN WALTZ ending up on the Riverside label. This album is completely different than ADDERLEY’s other albums which fall on the hard bop side of jazz. For AFRICAN WALTZ he has no less than 22 musicians on board including five trumpet players, four on trombone as well as other lesser used musical timbres such as bass trombone, tuba and of course ADDERLEY’s signature alto sax sound. This big band sound comes across as brash and bold with every track being carefully crafted for a full-on larger than life experience.

The album was built around the title track which was actually a surprise hit single in the UK for Johnny Dankworth. The huge big band experience was orchestrated by Ernie Wilkins, best known for his work with Count Basie, Tommy Dorsey, Harry James and Dizzy Gillespie and the well seasoned approach to taming the large musical beast shines through as everything is perfectly executed. Trombonist Bob Brookmeyer also contributed the arrangements of two tracks. While this is a big band album through and through, this was the early 60s and there is plenty of evidence of the milestones in jazz that had recently come into play. The hard bop still finds its way into the musical compositions with several bass lines lifted right out of the 50s bop scene. The modal jazz set forth by Miles Davis shines through as well.

Since the eleven tracks on board are short with none venturing over the five minute mark, they hit hard and offer a quick and to-the-point approach that focuses most of all on the melodic development and like much in the big band world of jazz don’t rely on improvisation as much as other types of the genre. The only rip roaring solos found on this one are by ADDERLEY, his brother Nat Adderley on cornet with some lesser roles by pianist Wynton Kelly. The album has a hardcore exotica feel to it as well. It sounds like a 60s movie soundtrack of some sort and despite the title really evokes nothing AFRICAN at all in mood or musical texture.

While this album delivers some extremely strong well played pieces with a unique albeit bloated lineup, to my ears it sounds extremely powerful and confident and as far as early 60s jazz goes, quite catchy without ever entering syrupy ballad territory. It captures all the best aspects of big band jazz but offers the wild swinging tapestry of instruments so common in hard bop and more improvisational types of jazz. While AFRICAN WALTZ failed to inspire the fans at the time and has since been relegated to the bottom of the pile of ADDERLEY releases, i find this to be an exciting and exhilarating big band jazz experience with every track delivering high quality performances. Woefully underrated in most jazz circles.

Ratings only

  • Fant0mas

Write/edit review

You must be logged in to write or edit review

JMA TOP 5 Jazz ALBUMS

Rating by members, ranked by custom algorithm
Albums with 30 ratings and more
A Love Supreme Post Bop
JOHN COLTRANE
Buy this album from our partners
Kind of Blue Cool Jazz
MILES DAVIS
Buy this album from our partners
The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady Progressive Big Band
CHARLES MINGUS
Buy this album from our partners
Blue Train Hard Bop
JOHN COLTRANE
Buy this album from our partners
My Favorite Things Hard Bop
JOHN COLTRANE
Buy this album from our partners

New Jazz Artists

New Jazz Releases

Yass Big Band : imMATHEMATICS Eclectic Fusion
TYMAŃSKI YASS ENSEMBLE / YASS BIG BAND
Buy this album from MMA partners
From the Mars Hotel : The Angel’s Share Jazz Related Rock
GRATEFUL DEAD
Buy this album from MMA partners
Maria Grand & Marta Sanchez : Anohin 21st Century Modern
MARIA GRAND
Buy this album from MMA partners
More new releases

New Jazz Online Videos

Fall
SUNNY KIM
js· 2 hours ago
Twilight
RANDY SCOTT
js· 1 day ago
Phoenix
GRÉGORY PRIVAT
js· 2 days ago
More videos

New JMA Jazz Forum Topics

More in the forums

New Site interactions

More...

Latest Jazz News

members-submitted

More in the forums

Social Media

Follow us