Sunny Murray (album)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sunny_Murray_(album) an entity of type: Thing

Sunny Murray, also known as Sunny Murray Quintet, is an album by American free jazz drummer Sunny Murray, his second as a leader. It was recorded in New York City in January, 1966, and released on the ESP-Disk label. The album features Murray on drums along with alto saxophonists Byard Lancaster and Jack Graham, trumpeter Jacques Coursil, and bassist Alan Silva. A remastered version, which includes an interview between Murray and ESP founder Bernard Stollman, was issued by ESP-Disk in 2007. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sunny Murray (album)
rdf:langString Sunny Murray
xsd:integer 69620166
xsd:integer 1116490874
rdf:langString Sunny_Murray_Sunny_Murray.jpg
rdf:langString ESP-Disk 1032
<second> 2461.0
xsd:integer 1969
xsd:integer 1965
rdf:langString January, 1966
xsd:integer 1966
rdf:langString The Penguin Guide to Jazz
rdf:langString New York City
rdf:langString studio
rdf:langString Sunny Murray, also known as Sunny Murray Quintet, is an album by American free jazz drummer Sunny Murray, his second as a leader. It was recorded in New York City in January, 1966, and released on the ESP-Disk label. The album features Murray on drums along with alto saxophonists Byard Lancaster and Jack Graham, trumpeter Jacques Coursil, and bassist Alan Silva. A remastered version, which includes an interview between Murray and ESP founder Bernard Stollman, was issued by ESP-Disk in 2007. According to Murray, he used a thirty-six-inch bass drum on the album "because there's something about that instrument that homogenizes the group." Murray recalled that he met Coursil at a restaurant after saxophonist Clarence Sharpe recommended that he speak with the dishwasher: "There's a cat works in the kitchen. He's pretty good, Murray. You ought to check him out." Following the release of the album, Murray was awarded DownBeat magazine's "New Star" award in the drum category. When he learned that the award did not involve a cash component, Murray went to DownBeat offices and "revolted": "I took some paper from the secretary's trash can, and I made a bonfire on the floor and I started to burn my Downbeat award. The secretary called the police. There was smoke everywhere, and Don [DeMichael, Editor] came out of the office throwing water on the fire..."
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 5291

data from the linked data cloud