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Standard Time, Vol. 5: The Midnight Blues | 
enlarge | Artist: Wynton Marsalis Label: Sony Category: Music
List Price: $11.98 Buy New: $11.50 You Save: $0.48 (4%)
Rating: 25 reviews Sales Rank: 1191404
Media: Audio Cassette Discs: 1
UPC: 074646892145 EAN: 0074646892145 ASIN: B0000062HF
Release Date: April 28, 1998 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: selling off store stock all cassettes new in package
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| Tracks:
| • | The Party's Over - Wynton Marsalis, Comden, Betty | | • | You're Blase - Wynton Marsalis, Hamilton, Ord | | • | After You've Gone - Wynton Marsalis, Creamer, Henry | | • | Glad to Be Unhappy - Wynton Marsalis, Hart, Lorenz | | • | It Never Entered My Mind - Wynton Marsalis, Hart, Lorenz | | • | Baby Won't You Please Come Home - Wynton Marsalis, Warfield, Charles | | • | Guess I'll Hang My Tears Out to Dry - Wynton Marsalis, Cahn, Sammy | | • | I Got Lost in Her Arms - Wynton Marsalis, Berlin, Irving | | • | Ballad of the Sad Young Men - Wynton Marsalis, Wolf, Thomas | | • | Spring Will Be a Little Late This Year - Wynton Marsalis, Loesser, Frank | | • | My Man's Gone Now - Wynton Marsalis, Gershwin, Ira | | • | The Midnight Blues - Wynton Marsalis, Marsalis, Wynton |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com essential recording Opening curiously with the classic reveler's benediction "The Party's Over," this 12-selection program of standard material finds Wynton Marsalis's buttery trumpet elegance in the superb company of Eric Reed on piano, Reginald Veal on bass, and Lewis Nash on drums. Augmenting this debonair quartet is the delicately balanced string orchestration of Robert Freedman, who some may recall from Marsalis's original with-strings date, Hot House Flowers. Removing the CD from its jewel-case tray reveals an inside back-cover photo of a recently vacated bed, leaving little doubt that this is another in Wynton's ongoing subseries of romantic interludes. His trumpet is aptly broad and gorgeous in tone, seeking the beauty spots inherent in these romantic short stories. "Baby Won't You Please Come Home" indeed! --Willard Jenkins
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| Customer Reviews:
Direction November 20, 2008 Torben Kragsbjerg (Denmark) This is a direction that suits Wynton Marsalis' playing very well. Like the Hothouse cd Marsalis is like a fish in the water on these recordings.
a satire of recognasance May 5, 2008 Paul Divito (salem,ma,usa.) this is a good cd,but it's a little to quiet for my taste.there are great standards on here,that wynton marsalis plays very well,but i am a little turned off by the syrupy string arrangements on here.this is one of those cd's you can listen to in those quiet times,when your lying in bed,before going to sleep,or,on a rainy day.although there are some fine things on this cd,it's a little to slow,and a little bland for my taste.but still a good cd,nonetheless.
Wynton Marsalis Standard Tiem, Vol. 5: the Midnight Blues July 17, 2007 Carolyn Thornburg (Dayton, OH USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I usually love Marsalis' style and skill, but this just is not pretty jazz. It sounds like a collection of tequniques rather than a collection of songs. Distracting rather than relaxing. I'm sorry I can't return it.
Gorgeous, full of feeling, like the horn of love itself... May 20, 2007 Doron Toister (NYC) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is one of the most beautiful jazz albums, or any album, I've ever listened to. I listen to it often (I've had it for years), when I'm lying down to sleep or just relaxing, and every note sounds like Wynton's singing through that amazing horn of his ... it's like he's talking, caressing, holding and tickling the most gorgeous, love-thirsty woman and making her feel loved, making her feel desirable, making love with every note. His tone is full and round and warm; his technical command of the trumpet and his brilliant use of effects that sound effortless, are astounding and downright shake-you-head stunning. I am in awe of his virtuosity, and am stilled to a silent closed-eyed reverence when I hear the rendentions of the ballads on this album. If you stop and relax, put down the daily movements of the world, and listen to the beauty and power of this work, it will grab you with a soft hand and cover you like a warm blanket. And if you're in the mood for love, put this record on in the background, turn down the lights and spread those candles, and invite your lover into the sound of this world....
Wynton is great, but brass and strings don't go together August 14, 2006 Brian D. Tomcik 5 out of 7 found this review helpful
After buying and listening to Wynton's Standard Time Volumes 1-3, I was anxious to get Volume 5. I was not thrilled with the CD. Wynton is fantastic as always but the trumpet in my opinion did not go with the strings at all.
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