Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

The Peacocks

 
Album Review: The Peacocks
 

Review

Though Stan Getz is credited as the leader of The Peacocks, and his immediately identifiable tenor saxophone is well represented, this session is actually headed by pianist and vocalist Jimmy Rowles, with Getz as producer. It is essentially a series of laid-back duets between Rowles and Getz, or a small amount of quartet recordings complemented by bassist Buster Williams and drummer Elvin Jones. The range of emotion and dynamics presented offers a unique listening experience for anyone not particularly familiar with the veteran Los Angeles based Rowles, supported by a variety of players who fully understand his muse. Not without his own innate sense of style, rhythm, and energy, Rowles is the centerpiece in a stack of standards, music of Duke Ellington, modern jazz compositions, and one original. He has a dry vocal style cum Mose Allison or even Tony Bennett, most evident on "I'll Never Be the Same" or the reserved but heartfelt blues ballad/waltz "My Buddy." Without singing, Rowles and Getz sail through the stride flavored Ellington evergreen "What Am I Here For?" and the elegant "Serenade in Sweden," while the title track is the haute cuisine piece, a Rowles original that languishes in pensive, dark and midnight slow liquid colors. Of the ensemble pieces, Wayne Shorter's "Lester Left Town" brims with fermented bubbles, as Getz glides through the melody with a restrained Jones and perky piano from Rowles. A song of slow lingering and reflection on the passing of youth, "This Is All I Ask" is an old man's refrain, fondly remembering bygone glory with a request for one final chance. The stand-out track, completely set apart from the rest, is "The Chess Players," a devilish genius word play set to Wayne Shorter's instrumental melody by Jon Hendricks, featuring the lyricist, family members, wife Judith and daughter Michelle, and Getz's wife Beverly. It's a killer song, rousingly upbeat and wild, as the chorale threatens they're "coming to get you," "you better believe it," and they "must have your love." Rowles does a modified free solo piano adaptation of "Body & Soul," and an interesting medley of Cedar Walton's modal "Mosaic" affixed to a short snippet of "Would You Like to Take a Walk?" as an appropriate coda for this program. With few Jimmy Rowles recordings in the world, this has to rank as his best, clearly the most entertaining, and a project Getz was ever proud to bring to the jazz world. It is definitive, deserving of the Columbia Jazz Masterpieces tag, and a must-have item in your modern jazz collection. ~ Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
I'll Never Be the Same Gus Kahn, Frank Signorelli, Matty Malneck (4:07)
Lester Left Town Wayne Shorter (5:53)
Body and Soul Johnny Green, Edward Heyman, Robert Sour, Frank Eyton (5:51)
What Am I Here For? Frankie Laine, Duke Ellington (4:57)
Serenade to Sweden Duke Ellington (5:39)
The Chess Players Wayne Shorter (5:43)
The Peacocks Jimmy Rowles (5:42)
My Buddy Walter Donaldson, Gus Kahn (4:26)
The Hour of Parting Gus Kahn, Mischa Spoliansky (3:35)
Rose Marie Rudolf Friml, Oscar Hammerstein II, Otto Harbach, Herbert Stothart (2:54)
This Is All I Ask Gordon Jenkins (4:23)
Skylark Hoagy Carmichael, Johnny Mercer (4:01)
Mosaic/Would You Like to Take a Walk Cedar Walton, Harry Warren, Mort Dixon, Billy Rose (1:33)

Credits

Stan Getz (Sax (Tenor)), Stan Getz (Producer), Stan Getz (Main Performer), Michele Hendricks (Vocals), Elvin Jones (Drums), Jimmy Rowles (Piano), Jimmy Rowles (Vocals), Jon Hendricks (Vocals), Judith Hendricks (Vocals), Doug Pomeroy (Mixing), John Snyder (Reissue Producer), Stan Tonkel (Engineer), Buster Williams (Bass), Mark A. Humphrey (Liner Notes), Donald Elfman (Executive Producer), John Berg (Design), Allen Weinberg (Art Direction), Vic Anesini (Remixing), Paul M. Martin (?), Paul M. Martin (Computer Graphics), Seymour Chwast (Illustrations), Beverly Getz (Vocals), Beverly Getz (Sequencing), Kerin J. Kolonoskie (Design)
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a word or phrase...
All Community Q&A Reference topics
 
Wikipedia: The Peacocks
Top

The Peacocks, a large multi-story shopping centre, was opened in 1992 in Woking, England and designed by many including an individual named Syed Ahmed.[citation needed] Within a 20 minute drive, the Peacock's catchment area is over 870,000 people[citation needed], and rail transport is convenient as Woking railway station has frequent services to a number of nearby towns. The Peacocks features more than 80 individual outlets including the lead department store (Debenhams) embracing 137,000 square feet (13,000 m²).[citation needed]

There is a food hall on the lower concourse, mostly serving fast food and capable of seating 400. A variety of shops of various sizes offer the usual range of outlets that can be expected in any reasonably large English town (clothing and jewelry at a variety of price ranges, mobile phone retailers, 'youth' fashion, music and book stores, etc.). Above the shopping concourse is the entrance to the New Victoria Theatre and The Ambassadors cinemas complex.

External links

This article about a retailer in the United Kingdom is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

5 main anchors - including the 137,000 sq ft Debenhams, Next, Primark, TK Maxx and Toys R Us 77 retailers - well known high street and independent retailers 600 seat food court - A broad mix of 9 caterers from salads to fast food to coffee and muffins 6 screen cinema - seating for 1500 2 theatres - the largest of which seats over 1300 594,000 sq ft in size 2300 car parking spaces 661,000 people in catchment 170,000 shoppers per week 9million shoppers per year


 
Shopping: The Peacocks
Top
 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "The Peacocks" Read more

 

Mentioned in