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Stan Kenton|City Of Glass

City Of Glass

Stan Kenton

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Musically, Stan Kenton was perhaps the most ambitious of all big band leaders short of Duke Ellington. Moreover, he sought -- at least through 1956 -- to establish his band as the most conspicuously modern and futuristic of all big bands, a property that Duke Ellington repeatedly achieved without really trying. Such cultivation of a cult of modernism did not endear Kenton to those who genuinely felt an enthusiasm for such music, and that audience mainly ignored him; Kenton's own core audience respected much of his modernistic efforts, but in some cases merely tolerated them. While Kenton's 1950 album City of Glass, devoted to an ultra-modern, multimovement suite by Kenton arranger Robert F. "Bob" Graettinger, sold enough copies to keep it in the Capitol Records catalog for a time, to many of Kenton's fans it became the one Kenton album they had, but didn't listen to. For 50 years, City of Glass really didn't have an audience, however it was finally discovered by the avant-gardists; too busy hating Kenton for his pretensions, they turned onto City of Glass to realize they had missed a masterwork of the genre.
Canadian composer Graettinger lived, like Mozart, only to the age of 34, but unlike Mozart did not go about creating timeless, endlessly pleasing melodies with a universal appeal. His music is white hot, dense, consistently confrontational, and makes revolutionary use of instrumental resources, and he would have had a much easier time making his way, say, at IRCAM in the 1990s than in the commercial big band world of the late '40s and early '50s. Fortunately he had a strong adherent in Stan Kenton, and Capitol Jazz's City of Glass: Stan Kenton Plays Bob Graettinger documents what survives of their collaboration in respect to commercial recordings, ranging from Thermopylae, recorded in New York in 1947, to Graettinger's weird arrangement of the standard "You Go to My Head," dating from September 1952. There was more material, and this has been covered in part by the Ebony Band's Channel Classics disc City of Glass, where Graettinger's efforts stand alongside edgier creations of some of his colleagues on the Kenton arrangement staff, Pete Rugolo and Franklyn Marks. However, Graettinger genuinely stands in a class of his own; his music seldom swings and his thematic ideas range from asymmetrical figures that twist around in the foreground over dense, thick orchestrations to others so fleeting that it takes two or three listens to make sure you heard what you did.
Nevertheless, some of Graettinger's work carries over some of the immediacy and appeal inherent to popular music, even if its aspirations are clearly more classical, ambitious, and adventurous, and this extreme combination can be addictive to listeners who are attracted to both sides of the issue. The one caveat is that Capitol -- famed for its "High Fidelity" sound from the mid-'50s and perhaps the first label to utilize that tag for its products -- wasn't quite there in 1950 when City of Glass was recorded; the famous pancake stack Capitol Tower at Hollywood and Vine wasn't even built yet. So the harsh high end on certain of these recordings is something that just comes with the territory; if you have an equalizer, make suitable adjustments and turn City of Glass up as loud as you can stand it; it's a definite lease breaker, sounds great in your car at full blast, and if you like something that's like being punched in the face repeatedly at three in the morning after drinking 50 cups of coffee, then this is the ultimate experience.

© TiVo

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City Of Glass

Stan Kenton

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1
Thermopolae
00:02:56

Malcolm Addey, Engineer, Mastering Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Michael Cuscuna, Producer - Jay Ranellucci, Engineer, StudioPersonnel - Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1947 Capitol Records, LLC

2
Everything Happens To Me
00:03:02

Matt Dennis, ComposerLyricist - Tom Adair, ComposerLyricist - Stan Kenton, MainArtist

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1949 Capitol Records, LLC

3
Incident In Jazz
00:03:27

Shorty Rogers, Trumpet, AssociatedPerformer - Bud Shank, Alto Saxophone, AssociatedPerformer - Shelly Manne, Drums, AssociatedPerformer - Bob Gioga, Bass Clarinet, AssociatedPerformer - June Christy, Vocals, AssociatedPerformer - Buddy Childers, Trumpet, AssociatedPerformer - Stan Kenton, Piano, MainArtist, AssociatedPerformer - Art Pepper, Alto Saxophone, AssociatedPerformer - Bob Fitzpatrick, Trombone, AssociatedPerformer - BOB Cooper, Tenor Saxophone, AssociatedPerformer - Laurindo Almeida, Guitar, AssociatedPerformer - Maynard Ferguson, Trumpet, AssociatedPerformer - Milt Bernhart, Trombone, AssociatedPerformer - Jim Cathcart, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Gregory Bemko, Viola, AssociatedPerformer - HARRY BETTS, Trombone, AssociatedPerformer - John Graas, French Horn, AssociatedPerformer - Leonard Selic, Viola, AssociatedPerformer - Jim Holmes, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Don Bagley, Upright Bass, AssociatedPerformer - Bill Russo, Trombone, AssociatedPerformer - Gene Englund, Tuba, AssociatedPerformer - Bob Graettinger, Composer - Jim Conkling, Producer - Bart Caldarell, Tenor Saxophone, AssociatedPerformer - Sam Singer, Viola, AssociatedPerformer - Jack Wolfe, Cello, AssociatedPerformer - Alex Law, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Don Paladino, Trumpet, AssociatedPerformer - Ernesto "Chico" Alvarez, Trumpet, AssociatedPerformer - Stan Harris, Viola, AssociatedPerformer - Zachary Bock, Cello, AssociatedPerformer - Lloyd Otto, French Horn, AssociatedPerformer - Anthony Doria, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Carl Ottobrino, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - David Schckne, Violin, AssociatedPerformer - Earl Cornwell Herbert Offner, Violin, AssociatedPerformer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1950 Capitol Records, LLC

4
House Of Strings
00:04:17

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer - Jim Conkling, Producer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1950 Capitol Records, LLC

5
A Horn
00:04:06

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1951 Capitol Records, LLC

6
City Of Glass (First Movement): Entrance Into The City
00:04:33

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1951 Capitol Records, LLC

7
City Of Glass (First Movement): The Structures
00:03:49

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1951 Capitol Records, LLC

8
City Of Glass (Second Movement "Dance Before" The Mirror)
00:04:24

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1952 Capitol Records, LLC

9
City Of Glass (Third Movement): Reflections
00:03:55

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1951 Capitol Records, LLC

10
Modern Opus
00:03:16

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1952 Capitol Records, LLC

11
A Cello
00:05:01

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1952 Capitol Records, LLC

12
You Go To My Head
00:03:22

J. Fred Coots, ComposerLyricist - Haven Gillespie, ComposerLyricist - Stan Kenton, MainArtist

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1953 Capitol Records, LLC

13
A Trumpet
00:04:49

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1953 Capitol Records, LLC

14
An Orchestra
00:04:05

Stan Kenton, MainArtist - Bob Graettinger, Composer

Blue Note is a registered trademark of Capitol Records, Inc. (C)(P) 1995 Capitol Records, Inc. Manufactured by Capitol Records, Inc., Hollywood and Vine Streets, Hollywood, California. All rights reserved. Unauthorized duplication is a violation of applic ℗ 1953 Capitol Records, LLC

Album review

Musically, Stan Kenton was perhaps the most ambitious of all big band leaders short of Duke Ellington. Moreover, he sought -- at least through 1956 -- to establish his band as the most conspicuously modern and futuristic of all big bands, a property that Duke Ellington repeatedly achieved without really trying. Such cultivation of a cult of modernism did not endear Kenton to those who genuinely felt an enthusiasm for such music, and that audience mainly ignored him; Kenton's own core audience respected much of his modernistic efforts, but in some cases merely tolerated them. While Kenton's 1950 album City of Glass, devoted to an ultra-modern, multimovement suite by Kenton arranger Robert F. "Bob" Graettinger, sold enough copies to keep it in the Capitol Records catalog for a time, to many of Kenton's fans it became the one Kenton album they had, but didn't listen to. For 50 years, City of Glass really didn't have an audience, however it was finally discovered by the avant-gardists; too busy hating Kenton for his pretensions, they turned onto City of Glass to realize they had missed a masterwork of the genre.
Canadian composer Graettinger lived, like Mozart, only to the age of 34, but unlike Mozart did not go about creating timeless, endlessly pleasing melodies with a universal appeal. His music is white hot, dense, consistently confrontational, and makes revolutionary use of instrumental resources, and he would have had a much easier time making his way, say, at IRCAM in the 1990s than in the commercial big band world of the late '40s and early '50s. Fortunately he had a strong adherent in Stan Kenton, and Capitol Jazz's City of Glass: Stan Kenton Plays Bob Graettinger documents what survives of their collaboration in respect to commercial recordings, ranging from Thermopylae, recorded in New York in 1947, to Graettinger's weird arrangement of the standard "You Go to My Head," dating from September 1952. There was more material, and this has been covered in part by the Ebony Band's Channel Classics disc City of Glass, where Graettinger's efforts stand alongside edgier creations of some of his colleagues on the Kenton arrangement staff, Pete Rugolo and Franklyn Marks. However, Graettinger genuinely stands in a class of his own; his music seldom swings and his thematic ideas range from asymmetrical figures that twist around in the foreground over dense, thick orchestrations to others so fleeting that it takes two or three listens to make sure you heard what you did.
Nevertheless, some of Graettinger's work carries over some of the immediacy and appeal inherent to popular music, even if its aspirations are clearly more classical, ambitious, and adventurous, and this extreme combination can be addictive to listeners who are attracted to both sides of the issue. The one caveat is that Capitol -- famed for its "High Fidelity" sound from the mid-'50s and perhaps the first label to utilize that tag for its products -- wasn't quite there in 1950 when City of Glass was recorded; the famous pancake stack Capitol Tower at Hollywood and Vine wasn't even built yet. So the harsh high end on certain of these recordings is something that just comes with the territory; if you have an equalizer, make suitable adjustments and turn City of Glass up as loud as you can stand it; it's a definite lease breaker, sounds great in your car at full blast, and if you like something that's like being punched in the face repeatedly at three in the morning after drinking 50 cups of coffee, then this is the ultimate experience.

© TiVo

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