Big Dog 92-7 Music Guide

Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar

RELEASE
September 27, 2005
LABEL
Sony Music Distribution
GENRES
Jazz, World Fusion, Bop, Mainstream Jazz, Electric Blues, Early Jazz, Western Swing, Hard Bop, Jazz-Funk, Contemporary Jazz, Brazilian Jazz, Guitar Virtuoso, Swing, Jazz Blues, Jazz-Pop, Fusion

Album Review

This expansive four-disc anthology essentially covers the recorded history of the guitar in the 20th century, beginning with the ragtime banjo that set the table for the role of the guitar in a jazz setting in the early 1900s, and then touching all the bases clear through to the post-postmodern possibilities of the instrument in the 21st century. Don't let the subtitle throw you, though, because Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar interprets jazz guitar in the broadest of strokes, as it includes not only pantheon jazz players like Eddie Lang, Django Reinhardt, Charlie Christian, Les Paul, Wes Montgomery, and John McLaughlin but also provides an uncommon sweep by featuring Hawaiian stylists Roy Smeck and Sol Hoopii; Western swing aces Leon McAuliffe and Eldon Shamblin; country jazzman Hank Garland; rock virtuosos Jimi Hendrix, Carlos Santana, and Jeff Beck; fusion funksters Larry Carlton, Al DiMeola, and Mike Stein; and hard to classify avant-garde players like Derek Bailey, Sonny Sharrock, James Blood Ulmer, and Marc Ribot. In all, 78 guitarists from some 33 labels are represented. Arranged roughly by date of recording from first to last (there are some deviations to trace the development of a particular style), it is easy to follow the track listing for Progressions in the well-organized 148-page book that accompanies the discs, and what emerges is a portrayal of the massive influence the guitar has had on every form of popular music in the past century. One could quibble about players who were left out, and things are slightly tilted toward electric players as the set progresses, although that is probably understandable, since getting the guitar plugged in is what made it work in large ensembles in the first place. It's hard to argue with a piano, but a case could be made (and this set assembles ample evidence) that the electric guitar was the defining popular musical instrument of the 20th century, and certainly the dominant ensemble instrument for the last half of it. Progressions: 100 Years of Jazz Guitar suggests that the possibilities for the guitar are far from exhausted as the musical time line begins to edge deeper into the 21st century. A beautiful set.
Steve Leggett, Rovi

Track Listing

  1. St. Louis Tickle
  2. Chain Gang Blues
  3. Savoy Blues
  4. The Only, Only One (For Me)
  5. Add a Little Wiggle
  6. Clowin' the Frets
  7. California Blues
  8. How'm I Doin'/Dinah
  9. Who's Sorry Now
  10. Danzon
  11. China Boy
  12. Minnehaha
  13. Swingin' on the Strings
  14. Honeysuckle Rose
  15. Guitar Swing
  16. Love Me or Leave Me
  17. Whispering
  18. Pickin' for Patsy
  19. Little Rock Getaway
  20. Solo Flight
  21. Buck Jumpin'
  22. Twin Guitar Special
  23. I'm Walkin' This Town
  24. Palm Springs Jump
  25. Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good to You
  26. Red Cross
  27. Ol' Man Rebop
  28. On Green Dolphin Street
  29. What Is This Thing Called Love?
  30. Body and Soul
  31. My Baby Just Cares for Me
  32. Running Wild
  33. Mountain Melody
  34. Yardbird Suite
  35. The Boy Next Door
  36. Tocata
  37. I've Got You Under My Skin
  38. Águas de Março (Waters of March)
  39. Bluesette
  40. Midnight Blue
  41. Unit 7
  42. Naptown Blues
  43. Move
  44. Easy Living
  45. Jean de Fleur
  46. Night and Day
  47. Clockwise
  48. Just Friends
  49. A Taste of Honey [Live]
  50. How Insensitive
  51. Gypsy Queen
  52. June 15, 1967
  53. As We Used to Sing
  54. Should Be Reversed
  55. Manic Depression
  56. Birds of Fire
  57. Coral
  58. Ralph's Piano Waltz
  59. The Prowler
  60. Bright Size Life
  61. Aqui, Oh! (Check This Out)
  62. Midnight in San Juan
  63. Europa (Earth's Cry Heaven's Smile)
  64. Inner City Blues
  65. Thumper
  66. Spiral
  67. Captain Fingers
  68. Mr. Spock
  69. Race with Devil on Spanish Highway
  70. Cause We've Ended as Lovers
  71. Church
  72. Ron Carter
  73. Hottentot
  74. Postizo
  75. Fat Time