Ludwig, Gene / Love Notes Of Cole Porter
Album: | Love Notes Of Cole Porter | Collection: | Jazz | |
Artist: | Ludwig, Gene | Added: | Feb 2011 | |
Label: | Big O Records |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2011-02-27 | Pull Date: | 2011-05-01 | Charts: | Jazz |
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Week Ending: | Apr 10 | Apr 3 | Mar 20 | Mar 6 |
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Airplays: | 1 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
Recent Airplay
1. | Mar 20, 2015: | Rebop
What Is This Thing Called Love |
4. | Apr 02, 2011: | Music Casserole
Dream Dancing |
|
2. | Nov 30, 2013: | Music Casserole
Why Can't You Behave? |
5. | Mar 15, 2011: | Rebop
What Is This Thing Called Love |
|
3. | Apr 08, 2011: | No Cover, No Minimum
What Is This Thing Called Love |
6. | Mar 01, 2011: | Rebop
What Is This Thing Called Love |
Album Review
Fo
Reviewed 2011-02-24
Reviewed 2011-02-24
GENE LUDWIG: Love Notes of Cole Porter
Big O, 2011
ORGAN JAZZ – This is the final recording of Gene Ludwig, a grooving Hammond B-3 organist who had a solid career from the 1960s on. He was a pillar of the Pittsburgh jazz scene, but otherwise is known mostly by organ aficionados. This set, all Cole Porter tunes, shows that Ludwig still had a nice touch up top and solid bassline pedaling down below. The tracks featuring a quartet with tenor sax are generally stronger than the trios.
Fo’s Picks: 1, 3, 5, 8, 10
1. 6:30 – uptempo burner: sax comes out swinging, guitar cools it, organ twists
2. 6:51 – easy ‘n’ breezy: organ trips lightly, sax is soulful, guitar floats sweetly
3. 4:38 – classic swinger: nice singing guitar solo, sax glides, slippery organ
4. 7:20 – “intermission music” sound with a light latin beat; good organ solo though
5. 4:20 – insistent midtempo swing settles into an easy groove for flowing solos
6. 5:59 – daydreaming trio ballad: soap-opera organ lightens in solo, slow guitar
7. 4:34 – relaxed trio stroll: organ solo sticks to narrow riffs, easygoing guitar
8. 5:10 – nice lazy tune: soulful sax leads off, organ gets real comfortable
9. 5:21 – upbeat trio: keeps up a steady swing, organ sounds very loose
10. 7:49 – slow-dance trio, sways gently: sweet-toned guitar and organ solos
[ Fo ] 02/24/11
Big O, 2011
ORGAN JAZZ – This is the final recording of Gene Ludwig, a grooving Hammond B-3 organist who had a solid career from the 1960s on. He was a pillar of the Pittsburgh jazz scene, but otherwise is known mostly by organ aficionados. This set, all Cole Porter tunes, shows that Ludwig still had a nice touch up top and solid bassline pedaling down below. The tracks featuring a quartet with tenor sax are generally stronger than the trios.
Fo’s Picks: 1, 3, 5, 8, 10
1. 6:30 – uptempo burner: sax comes out swinging, guitar cools it, organ twists
2. 6:51 – easy ‘n’ breezy: organ trips lightly, sax is soulful, guitar floats sweetly
3. 4:38 – classic swinger: nice singing guitar solo, sax glides, slippery organ
4. 7:20 – “intermission music” sound with a light latin beat; good organ solo though
5. 4:20 – insistent midtempo swing settles into an easy groove for flowing solos
6. 5:59 – daydreaming trio ballad: soap-opera organ lightens in solo, slow guitar
7. 4:34 – relaxed trio stroll: organ solo sticks to narrow riffs, easygoing guitar
8. 5:10 – nice lazy tune: soulful sax leads off, organ gets real comfortable
9. 5:21 – upbeat trio: keeps up a steady swing, organ sounds very loose
10. 7:49 – slow-dance trio, sways gently: sweet-toned guitar and organ solos
[ Fo ] 02/24/11
Track Listing