The Balkan in My Soul (Remastered) Benny Baily and his Orchestra
Album info
Album-Release:
1968
HRA-Release:
06.10.2017
Album including Album cover
- 1 6 + 3 in Macedonia 03:08
- 2 I Remember Sarajevo 02:59
- 3 Hassan Effendi 04:09
- 4 Macedonian Ballad 03:07
- 5 South Balkan Express 02:47
- 6 Blue Adriatic 02:54
- 7 Belgrade Bells 03:41
- 8 Adriatic Sunset 02:28
- 9 The Bridge of Mostar 02:49
- 10 The Sofisticated Gipsy 02:31
- 11 Sailing to the Island 02:28
- 12 Zamira 02:59
Info for The Balkan in My Soul (Remastered)
A big band album centered around American trumpeter Benny Bailey is understandable; Bailey was one of the great stylists on the instrument. But why music with the Balkans as theme? Benny had connections to the area through tours and work with the many top-flight jazz musicians with Balkan roots. There is also a connection between jazz and the polyrhythmic music of the Balkans: both are grounded in the rich musical traditions of Africa, Europe and Asia, and in their own particular ways have swing and a sense of the blues as central features. There was also Benny’s musical connection with Yugoslavian Bobby Gutesha, the album’s arranger and producer. Bobby had an eventful career in Germany composing and arranging for film and the top big bands. His skills ran the gamut from swing pieces for Benny Goodman to modernist music arrangements for Miles Davis. American tenor sax giant Don Menza is on board to share the solo work. Four pieces feature Bailey with the big band’s rhythm section: I Remember Sarajeo with Benny on emotive plunger-muted flugelhorn, Bailey’s relaxed jazz waltz Blue Adriatic, and the medium-tempo Adriatic Sunset and Sailing to the Islands. The other eight tightly arranged big band compositions include the purely orchestral 6 + 3 In Macedonia, a swinging Hassan Effendi, the emotive Macedonian Ballad, the up-tempo South Balkan Express with Menza’s rapid-fire sax joining Bailey, the comfy swing of Belgrade Belles with muscular tenor, muted trumpet and hints of Basie, The Bridge of Mostar with muted trumpet, The Sophisticated Gypsy featuring Menza’s flashy solo, and the bluesy Zamira with soulful solos from Bailey and Menza. A classy album with a unique slant and Bailey at his inimitable best.
Benny Bailey, trumpet, flugelhorn
Horst Jankowski, piano
Don Menza, tenor saxophone
Max Greger Orchestra
Recorded January 1968 at Deutsche Grammophon-Munich, Horst Jankowski Studio Stuttgart
Engineered by Claus H. Reisser, Hans Falkenberg
Produced by Mladen Gutesha
Digitally remastered
No biography found.
This album contains no booklet.