Dizzy Gillespie and the Double Six of Paris 1964 studio album by Dizzy Gillespie, Les Double Six, and Bud Powell
Dizzy Gillespie and the Double Six of Paris is a 1963 studio album collaboration between Dizzy Gillespie and Les Double Six , also known as the Double Six of Paris, a French vocal group who sings in vocalese to songs associated with Dizzy Gillespie. Gillespie, pianist Bud Powell , and a rhythm section accompany; two of the songs feature his quintet, with James Moody .[ 6] It was reissued on CD in 1989.
The vocal parts by the Double Six were overdubbed on top of recordings by Gillespie, Powell, Pierre Michelot , and Kenny Clarke that had been made in July 1963. Two tracks were recorded with James Moody , Kenny Barron , Chris White , and Rudy Collins in Chicago in September 1963.[ 7]
Reception
Leonard Feather described the album as "unique and unprecedented" and described the music as "sensational." Commenting on the vocalists, he wrote, "The results impress partly as a technical tour de force, and the Double Six must be respected for its accuracy and peerless intonation, but these values are a means to an artistically complete end."[ 3]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz gave the album 3.5 of 4 stars, applauding Gillespie's "superb solos" and the Double Six's "supremely athletic vocals."[ 4]
Track listing
"Emanon" (Gillespie, Shaw) – 3:44
"Anthropology " (Gillespie, Parker ) – 2:45
"Tin Tin Deo" (Fuller, Pozo) – 4:15
"One Bass Hit" (Brown, Fuller, Gillespie) – 3:26
"Two Bass Hit" (Gillespie, Lewis) – 3:31
"Groovin' High " (Gillespie, Paparelli) – 2:27
"Ooh-Shoo-Be-Doo-Bee" (Carroll, Gillespie, Graham) – 3:04
"Hot House " (Dameron ) – 3:01
"Con Alma " (Gillespie) – 3:35
"Blue 'n' Boogie " (Gillespie, Paparelli) – 3:08
"The Champ" (Gillespie) – 3:06
"Ow!" (Gillespie) – 2:43
Personnel
Vocalists
Instrumentalists
Dizzy Gillespie – trumpet , vocal (7)
James Moody – alto saxophone (7, 9)
Kenny Barron – piano (7, 9)
Bud Powell – piano (1–3, 6, 8, 10–12)
Pierre Michelot – bass (1–3, 6, 8, 10–12)
Chris White – bass (7, 9)
Kenny Clarke – drums (1–3, 6, 8, 10–12)
Rudy Collins – drums (7, 9)
Arrangers
References
Studio albums Live albums Compilation albums Soundtracks Compositions Books Related articles
Years given are for the recording(s), not first release, unless stated otherwise.
Albums as leader or co-leader
You Had Better Listen (with Jimmy Owens , 1967)
Sunset to Dawn (1973)
Peruvian Blue (1974)
In Tandem (and Ted Dunbar , 1975)
Lucifer (1975)
Innocence (1978)
Together (and Tommy Flanagan , 1978)
Golden Lotus (1980)
Kenny Barron at the Piano (1981)
Imo Live (1982)
Spiral (1982)
Green Chimneys (1983–87)
1+1+1 (1984)
Autumn in New York (1984)
Landscape (1984)
Scratch (1985)
The Red Barron Duo (and Red Mitchell , 1986)
Two as One (and Buster Williams , 1986)
What If? (1986)
Live at Fat Tuesdays (1988)
Rhythm-a-Ning (and John Hicks , 1989)
Invitation (1990)
Live at Maybeck Recital Hall, Volume Ten (1990)
The Only One (1990)
Confirmation (and Barry Harris , 1991)
Lemuria-Seascape (1991)
The Moment (1991)
Quickstep (1991)
Sambao (1992)
Other Places (1993)
Wanton Spirit (1994)
Swamp Sally (and Mino Cinelu , 1995)
Things Unseen (1995)
Live at Bradley's (1996)
Live at Bradley's II (1996)
Night and the City (and Charlie Haden , 1996)
Spirit Song (1999)
Canta Brasil (2000)
Freefall (and Regina Carter , 2000)
Images (2003)
Super Standard (2004)
The Traveler (2007)
Minor Blues (2009)
Kenny Barron & the Brazilian Knights (2012)
The Art of Conversation (and Dave Holland , 2014)
Book of Intuition (2015)
Concentric Circles (2018)
Without Deception (and Dave Holland , 2020)
The Source (2023)
Beyond This Place (2024)
Member ofSphere WithBill Barron WithRon Carter WithStan Getz WithDizzy Gillespie WithFreddie Hubbard WithYusef Lateef WithJames Moody WithBuddy Rich With others
Many a New Day: Karrin Allyson Sings Rodgers & Hammerstein (Karrin Allyson , 2015)
Live at the Blue Note (Franco Ambrosetti , 1992)
Mustang (Curtis Amy , 1967)
Old Bottles - New Wine (Ray Anderson , 1985)
The Best Thing for You (Chet Baker , 1977)
You Can't Go Home Again (Chet Baker, 1977)
Studio Trieste (Chet Baker and Hubert Laws , 1982)
Bad Benson (George Benson , 1974)
Code Red (Cindy Blackman , 1990)
The Oracle (Cindy Blackman, 1995)
Shining Hour (Larry Coryell , 1989)
Quicksand (Ted Curson , 1974)
Continuum (Ray Drummond , 1994)
Booker 'n' Brass (Booker Ervin , 1967)
Tex Book Tenor (Booker Ervin, 1968)
All That Jazz (Ella Fitzgerald , 1989)
Awakening (Sonny Fortune , 1975)
Two for the Blues (Frank Foster and Frank Wess , 1983)
Frankly Speaking (Frank Foster and Frank Wess, 1984)
Tiger in the Rain (Michael Franks , 1978)
Man & Woman (George Freeman , 1974)
Panorama: Live at the Village Vanguard (Jim Hall , 1996)
Light and Lively (Louis Hayes , 1989)
Una Max (Louis Hayes, 1989)
The Gap Sealer (Albert Heath , 1972)
Kwanza (The First) (Jimmy Heath , 1973)
Now! (Bobby Hutcherson , 1969)
In the Vanguard (Bobby Hutcherson, 1986)
New Agenda (Elvin Jones , 1975)
Time Capsule (Elvin Jones, 1977)
The Bassist! (Sam Jones , 1979)
We're Goin' Up (Eric Kloss , 1967)
Jazz Nocturne (Lee Konitz , 1992)
Number Two Express (Christian McBride , 1995)
Brownie: Homage to Clifford Brown (Helen Merrill , 1995)
Never Never Land (Jane Monheit , 2000)
Peace and Rhythm (Idris Muhammad , 1971)
A Time for Love (Arturo Sandoval , 2010)
This Bud's for You... (Bud Shank , 1984)
Solid (Woody Shaw , 1986)
Kamau (Charles Sullivan , 1995)
Pure Dynamite (Buddy Terry , 1972)
A Bluish Bag (Stanley Turrentine , 1967)
Jazz French Horn (Tom Varner , 1985)
Listen Here (Roseanna Vitro , 1982)
Natural Essence (Tyrone Washington , 1967)
Two at the Top (Frank Wess and Johnny Coles , 1983)
New York, New Sound (Gerald Wilson , 2003)