Hot House (composition)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Hot_House_(composition) an entity of type: Thing

Hot House estas ĵaza normkanto, kiun komponis en 1945 Tadd Dameron. Alie ol multaj aliaj el liaj komponaĵoj Hot House estas biboptemo baziĝanta sur la harmonisinsekvoj de fama kanto, nome de What Is This Thing Called Love?. rdf:langString
Hot House ist ein Jazzstandard, der 1945 von Tadd Dameron komponiert wurde. Anders als zahlreiche weitere seiner Kompositionen beruht Hot House auf den Harmoniefolgen eines bekannten Songs, nämlich What Is This Thing Called Love?. rdf:langString
"Hot House" is a bebop standard, composed by American jazz musician Tadd Dameron in 1945. Its harmonic structure is identical to Cole Porter's "What Is This Thing Called Love?" (see contrafact). The tune was made famous by Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker as a quintet arrangement and become synonymous with those musicians; "Hot House" became an anthem of the Be-bop movement in American jazz. The most famous and referred to recording of the tune is by Parker and Gillespie on the May 1953 live concert recording entitled Jazz at Massey Hall, after previously recording it for Savoy records in 1945 and at Carnegie Hall in 1947. The tune continues to be a favorite among jazz musicians and enthusiasts: rdf:langString
rdf:langString Hot House (Jazzstandard)
rdf:langString Hot House
rdf:langString Hot House (composition)
xsd:integer 1396264
xsd:integer 1110521102
rdf:langString Hot House estas ĵaza normkanto, kiun komponis en 1945 Tadd Dameron. Alie ol multaj aliaj el liaj komponaĵoj Hot House estas biboptemo baziĝanta sur la harmonisinsekvoj de fama kanto, nome de What Is This Thing Called Love?.
rdf:langString Hot House ist ein Jazzstandard, der 1945 von Tadd Dameron komponiert wurde. Anders als zahlreiche weitere seiner Kompositionen beruht Hot House auf den Harmoniefolgen eines bekannten Songs, nämlich What Is This Thing Called Love?.
rdf:langString "Hot House" is a bebop standard, composed by American jazz musician Tadd Dameron in 1945. Its harmonic structure is identical to Cole Porter's "What Is This Thing Called Love?" (see contrafact). The tune was made famous by Dizzy Gillespie and Charlie Parker as a quintet arrangement and become synonymous with those musicians; "Hot House" became an anthem of the Be-bop movement in American jazz. The most famous and referred to recording of the tune is by Parker and Gillespie on the May 1953 live concert recording entitled Jazz at Massey Hall, after previously recording it for Savoy records in 1945 and at Carnegie Hall in 1947. The tune continues to be a favorite among jazz musicians and enthusiasts: * In 1962, Bud Powell recorded it on his Bouncing with Bud album for Delmark records * In 1964, Charles McPherson played it with Carmell Jones on his Prestige album Bebop Revisited! for the Prestige label * In 1976, Barry Harris who was the pianist on the 1964 version played a trio version on his Barry Harris Plays Tadd Dameron - Xanadu Records * In 1982, Chaka Khan covered the tune as part of "Be Bop Medley," on her album Chaka Khan. * In 1988, Emily Remler was the first jazz guitarist to record it, on her album East To Wes. According to the liner notes by Nat Hentoff the composition was one of Remler's favorites from the Be-bop era. * In 1990, Mal Waldron & Steve Lacy covered the tune on their album Hot House. * In 1999, guitarist Larry Coryell covered the tune on his album Private Concert. * In 2001 it was arranged for big band for Warner Brothers Publications; this was recorded later on the big band CD Up Your Brass. * In 2010, tenor saxophonist James Moody performed the tune on his Grammy-winning final recording Moody 4B.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 4357

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