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Stan Getz “The Getz Quartets” (1949-1950) <i> Prestige</i>

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These are the sessions that established tenor man Getz, fresh out of Woody Herman’s “Four Brothers” sax section, as a bandleader in his own right and as a pilot in the then-new, “Cool School” of jazz.

Getz’s dreamy, cloud-like tone paired with intelligent, deceptively clever improvisations and an ethereal atmosphere--particularly on ballads such as “My Old Flame” and the original composition “Mar-Cia”--hallmarked his early output.

Some critics of the day derided Getz’s relative lack of energy and less-than-showy technique in the face of the omnipresent bop movement of the period, but his quietly dignified vision went on to become a prime influence on jazz great John Coltrane, among others. And, as Getz demonstrated on “Crazy Chords,” he could trade flashy chops with the best of them when of a mind to do so.

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Best remembered among mainstream audiences for his later excursions into more commercial, bossa nova music (such as “The Girl From Ipanema”), Getz’s real legacy lies in the laid-back but heady sides he laid down in the early ‘50s.

It should be noted, however, that the recording quality of these early gems does leave much to be desired.

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