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In Holland: Dutch Treat!
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In Holland: Dutch Treat!
Current price: $19.99
Barnes and Noble
In Holland: Dutch Treat!
Current price: $19.99
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Coleman Hawkins
' adventures as an American jazzman in Holland during the mid-'30s have been documented with regularity by numerous reissue labels.
Dutch Treat!
,
Avid
's 1998 double-disc anthology, appears to be the most thorough of them all, as it examines the recorded evidence in detail, presenting 25 masters and 24 alternate takes recorded in The Hague, Laren, and Hilversum between February 4, 1935, and June 14, 1938.
Hawkins
glows in the full glory of his early maturity, merrily jamming among capable players with names like
Toon Diepenbroeck
Sal Doof
Kees Kranenburg
Wim Poppink
George van Helvoirt
, and
Andre Van Den Ouderaa
.
is heard with a nine-piece ensemble known as
the Ramblers
and in trio and duet performances with drummer
Maurice van Kleef
and pianist
Freddy Johnson
. Vocals on
"Some of These Days,"
"I Only Have Eyes for You,"
and
"Hands Across the Table"
were sung by
Anny de Reuver
used his handsome speaking voice on
"What Harlem Is to Me."
A number of
Hawk
's original compositions are mixed in with
swing
standards
Tin Pan Alley
pop
tunes. They are
"Swinging in the Groove,"
"Blues Evermore,"
"Well, All Right Then,"
"Something Is Gonna Give Me Away,"
"Netcha's Dream,"
"A Strange Fact,"
known to the Dutch as
"Een Vreemd Feit."
The inclusion of alternate takes -- placed on a second disc so as to avoid repetition -- makes this a richly rewarding treat for those who love
and want to hear how good he sounded wherever he went during his amazing European sojourn during the years immediately preceding the Second World War. ~ arwulf arwulf
' adventures as an American jazzman in Holland during the mid-'30s have been documented with regularity by numerous reissue labels.
Dutch Treat!
,
Avid
's 1998 double-disc anthology, appears to be the most thorough of them all, as it examines the recorded evidence in detail, presenting 25 masters and 24 alternate takes recorded in The Hague, Laren, and Hilversum between February 4, 1935, and June 14, 1938.
Hawkins
glows in the full glory of his early maturity, merrily jamming among capable players with names like
Toon Diepenbroeck
Sal Doof
Kees Kranenburg
Wim Poppink
George van Helvoirt
, and
Andre Van Den Ouderaa
.
is heard with a nine-piece ensemble known as
the Ramblers
and in trio and duet performances with drummer
Maurice van Kleef
and pianist
Freddy Johnson
. Vocals on
"Some of These Days,"
"I Only Have Eyes for You,"
and
"Hands Across the Table"
were sung by
Anny de Reuver
used his handsome speaking voice on
"What Harlem Is to Me."
A number of
Hawk
's original compositions are mixed in with
swing
standards
Tin Pan Alley
pop
tunes. They are
"Swinging in the Groove,"
"Blues Evermore,"
"Well, All Right Then,"
"Something Is Gonna Give Me Away,"
"Netcha's Dream,"
"A Strange Fact,"
known to the Dutch as
"Een Vreemd Feit."
The inclusion of alternate takes -- placed on a second disc so as to avoid repetition -- makes this a richly rewarding treat for those who love
and want to hear how good he sounded wherever he went during his amazing European sojourn during the years immediately preceding the Second World War. ~ arwulf arwulf