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Frank Morgan - Listen to the Dawn (1994)

Posted By: Oceandrop
Frank Morgan - Listen to the Dawn (1994)

Frank Morgan - Listen to the Dawn (1994)
Jazz | EAC Rip | FLAC (tracks)+CUE+LOG | 275 MB.
300dpi. Complete Scans (JPG) included | WinRar, 3% recovery
Audio CD (1994) | Label: PolyGram/Verve | Catalog# 314 518 979-2 | 52:37 min.

Review by Alex Henderson ~allmusic
"Listen to the Dawn" is a rare example of Frank Morgan recording an entire album without a pianist. The veteran alto saxophonist, who was only two weeks away from his 60th birthday when this post-bop/be bop CD was recorded, evidently wanted to try something a bit different – and it was a move that paid off creatively. Whether he's forming an intimate duo with guitarist Kenny Burrell or forming a quartet with Burrell, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Grady Tate, Morgan fares quite well without a pianist.

This isn't an album of fast tempos and high-speed aggression – from Burrell offerings like "Listen to the Dawn" and "Remembering" to highly personal interpretations of Gordon Jenkins' "Goodbye," Duke Ellington's "I Didn't Know About You" (which becomes a sexy bossa nova), and the standard "It Might as Well Be Spring," Morgan is especially introspective and really takes time to reflect. This compelling CD should not be missed.
Tracklist:
01. Listen to the Dawn (7:57)
02. Grooveyard (4:49)
03. Remembering (9:04)
04. Little Waltz (5:05)
05. It Might as Well Be Spring (5:01)
06. When Joanna Loved Me (9:07)
07. I Didn't Know About You (6:49)
08. Goodbye (4:46)

Frank Morgan - Listen to the Dawn (1994)

Personnel:
Frank Morgan - alto saxophone
Kenny Burrell - guitar
Ron Carter - bass (except #1, 5, 8)
Grady Tate - drums (same as Carter; except #1, 5, 8)

~allAboutJazz

Born: December 23, 1933 | Died: December 14, 2007 | Instrument: Alto Saxophone

It is a real rarity for a jazz musician to have his career interrupted for three decades and then be able to make a complete comeback. Frank Morgan showed a great deal of promise in his early days, but it was a long time before he could fulfill his potential. The son of guitarist Stanley Morgan (who played with the Ink Spots), he took up clarinet and alto early on. Morgan moved to Los Angeles in 1947 and was approached by Duke Ellington who wanted the then 15-year-old Frank to go on the road with his band. Frank's father wanted his son to finish school so the Ellington gig never materialized, but by the time he was 17, Frank was working at LA's Club Alabam, backing the likes of Josephine Baker and Billie Holiday. Morgan worked on the bop scene of early-'50s Los Angeles, recording with Teddy Charles (1953) and Kenny Clarke (1954), and under his own name for GNP in 1955. Unfortunately, around that same time Frank followed his idol and mentor Charlie “Bird” Parker into heroin addiction, and spent most of the next thirty years serving time for thefts to support his habit. Yet except for periods in the Los Angeles County jail system, he never strayed too far from music. At most penal institutions, there were bands made up of inmates, and Morgan was greeted as a celebrity. He was constantly made gifts of mouthpieces, drugs, food, cigarettes. “The greatest big band I ever played with was in San Quentin. Art Pepper and I were proud of that band. We had Jimmy Bunn and Frank Butler, and some other musicians who were known and some who weren't, but they could play. We played every Saturday night for what they called a Warden's Tour, which showed paying visitors only the cleanest cell blocks and exercise yards. But people would take that tour just to hear the band.”

When he was not incarcerated Frank performed occasionally around LA, but it was not until 1985 that Morgan, with the help of artist and future wife Rosalinda Kolb, managed to leave his life of “questionable interests” behind him and once again concentrate on his music. Resuming his recording career after a thirty-year hiatus, Frank was rediscovered and his unique history, combined with his equally unique sound and story-telling ability on his horn, made him a media star. He made multiple appearances on the Today Show in the '80s and '90s; starred in “Prison-Made Tuxedos,” an off-Broadway play about his life, in 1987; was the first subject of Jane Pauley's “Real Life” primetime TV show on NBC in 1990; and won the Downbeat Critics Poll for Best Alto Saxophonist in 1991.

In 1998 a new chapter was added to Frank's inspiring life story when he suffered a stroke while enroute to the Flint Jazz Festival in Michigan. Although doctors initially predicted he would never play again, Frank was gigging within six months. After a series of critically-acclaimed pre-stroke recordings for Contemporary, Antilles, and Telarc, in 2003 Frank signed a new recording agreement with New York-based HighNote Records, and today many fans and Jazz writers alike say he has never sounded better.

Frank Morgan's initial recordings for his new label, “City Nights” (HighNote HCD 7129) and “Raising the Standard” (HighNote HCD 7143), have received great reviews and significant airplay both here and abroad. Both albums were recorded live at New York's Jazz Standard on a series of triumphant evenings which heralded the reappearance of a vibrant and important voice in Jazz.

Frank Morgan - Listen to the Dawn (1994)

Frank Morgan (1933 - 2007)

Produced by John Snyder
Art Direction: Margery Greenspan
Design: Phil Yarnall
Photography by Jimmy Katz
Inlay photograph by Jules Allen
Product Manager: Nate Herr

Recorded April 19 and 20, and November 27, 1993 at Sear Sound, New York City
Recording Engineer: Jay Newland, assisted by Bill Emmons and Fred Kevorkian
Mastered at BMG Studios, New York City; December 8 and 9, 1993
Mastering Engineer: Jay Newland


EAC extraction logfile from 25. January 2008, 22:13 for CD
Frank Morgan / Listen to the Dawn

Used drive : HL-DT-STCDRW/DVD GCC4482 Adapter: 1 ID: 0
Read mode : Secure with NO C2, accurate stream, disable cache
Read offset correction : 6
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : No

Used output format : C:\Eac\Codecs\flac.exe (User Defined Encoder)
320 kBit/s
Additional command line options : -8 -V -T "artist=%a" -T "title=%t" -T "album=%g" -T "date=%y" -T "tracknumber=%n" -T "genre=%m" -T "comment=EAC Flac 1.1.2 -8" %s

Other options :
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Installed external ASPI interface


Track 1
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\01 - Listen to the Dawn.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:02.42

Peak level 98.0 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 56DCA560
Copy CRC 56DCA560
Copy OK

Track 2
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\02 - Grooveyard.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:02.82

Peak level 96.9 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 26535E4B
Copy CRC 26535E4B
Copy OK

Track 3
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\03 - Remembering.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.82

Peak level 99.9 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 2C5A6FAE
Copy CRC 2C5A6FAE
Copy OK

Track 4
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\04 - Little Waltz.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.66

Peak level 90.4 %
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Test CRC 2FFE3933
Copy CRC 2FFE3933
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Track 5
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\05 - It Might as well be Spring.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.33

Peak level 66.3 %
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Test CRC A37B2EC1
Copy CRC A37B2EC1
Copy OK

Track 6
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\06 - When Joanna Loved Me.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.26

Peak level 63.5 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC A6E68D98
Copy CRC A6E68D98
Copy OK

Track 7
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\07 - I Didn't Know About You.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.50

Peak level 97.7 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 0B9DE185
Copy CRC 0B9DE185
Copy OK

Track 8
Filename C:\Documents and Settings\frankmorgan\08 - Goodbye.wav

Pre-gap length 0:00:03.33

Peak level 78.9 %
Track quality 100.0 %
Test CRC 008C8AE7
Copy CRC 008C8AE7
Copy OK

No errors occured


End of status report

[CUETools log; Date: 06.01.2012 15:03:54; Version: 2.0.9]
Pregap length 00:00:32.
[CTDB TOCID: mv1FzN4WU8Zzlo8.A8kF6STG15s-] disk not present in database.
[AccurateRip ID: 0010aee1-006eaa98-790c5508] found.
Track [ CRC ] Status
01 [52c1efae] (0/2) No match
02 [c3a0aacf] (3/5) Accurately ripped
03 [ade6c35a] (4/6) Accurately ripped
04 [fcf871e3] (4/6) Accurately ripped
05 [dcdd4ea5] (4/6) Accurately ripped
06 [363351e2] (0/2) No match
07 [e7392438] (4/6) Accurately ripped
08 [b55080f0] (4/6) Accurately ripped

Track Peak [ CRC32 ] [W/O NULL] [ LOG ]
– 99,9 [D795D38B] [19552383]
01 98,0 [56DCA560] [CD987033] CRC32
02 96,9 [26535E4B] [FD741F9D] CRC32
03 99,9 [2C5A6FAE] [50B07662] CRC32
04 90,4 [2FFE3933] [4274617F] CRC32
05 66,3 [A37B2EC1] [E3A0A469] CRC32
06 63,5 [A6E68D98] [BB66DB62] CRC32
07 97,7 [0B9DE185] [6773F2AC] CRC32
08 78,9 [008C8AE7] [25709420] CRC32

Thanks to the original releaser.

Frank Morgan - Listen to the Dawn (1994)

(links are interchangeable)