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Search: Billy Eckstine

CDs (5) new/usedLPs (7) new/used7-inch (1)78 rpm (1)All (14)

Exact matches: 7
Add to Cartsearch match 1.  
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Billy EckstineEverything I Have Is Yours – The Best Of The MGM Years ... LP
Verve, Late 40s/1950s. Near Mint- 2LP Gatefold .... $2.99

Add to Cartsearch match 2.  
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Billy EckstineI Wanna Be Loved/Stardust ... 78 rpm
MGM, Early 50s. Very Good- .... $0.99

Add to Cartsearch match 3.  
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Billy EckstineSenior Soul/If She Walked Into My Life ... CD
Stax/Enterprise, 1972/1974. New Copy .... $3.99 18.98
2 early 70s sessions from Billy Eckstine – both recorded for Stax Records! First up is Senior Soul – a well-titled set not only given Billy's age, but also because of the surprisingly soulful undercurrent to the record – an extension into the genre even greater than Eckstine's previous recordings for Motown – and proof that he was really trying to stretch out towards new audiences at the time! Artie Butler handled the backings, and he uses a groove that's pretty full, but never overwhelming – more ebullient soul than some of Eckstine's more familiar jazz – with backing vocals and bright horns, yet still plenty of space for Billy to do his thing. The best numbers have Eckstine coming across with the 70s cool of Grady Tate on his vocal sides – and titles include "Thank You For The Moment", "A Song For You", "A Man Who Sings", "Today Was Tomorrow Yesterday", "I Believe In Music", and "Living Like A Gypsy". If She Walked Into My Life is extremely compelling stuff – and you've really got to give Billy credit for reinventing himself like this! The album features Billy's deep deep voice amidst arrangements by Artie Butler, Jimmy Jones, Mike Melvoin, and Billy Byers – sort of a blend of Grady Tate sophisti-jazz, and Scott Walker baroque, with a moody mellow sound that would make either of them proud. Titles include "The Taste Of My Tears", "I Am Yours", "Maybe This Time", "The Very Thought Of You", and "All In Love Is Fair".

Add to Cartsearch match 4.  
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Billy EckstineWish You Were Here/Slender Thread ... 7-inch
Motown, Mid 60s. Very Good+ .... $4.99
(White label promo.)

search match 5.  
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new Billy EckstineMister B & The Band ... LP
Savoy, 1945/1946. Used 2LP Gatefold .... $0.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
Amazing work from the early, legendary years of Billy Eckstine – that time when he was fronting one of the hippest backing groups a vocalist could hope to have! Eckstine's voice was already becoming the stuff of legend by the time of these recordings – but thanks to contributions from a host of famous boppers, his band was getting equal fame, too – a really legendary lineup that includes such greats as Miles Davis, Dizzy Gillespie,Kenny Dorham, and Fats Navarro on trumpets; Wardell Gray, Dexter Gordon, and Gene Ammons on tenor; Leo Parker on baritone; Art Blakey on drums; and many other huge names too! The band was virtually a school for a whole generation of jazzmen to come – allowing them to play together, get to know each other, and spin off in important small groups – much in the way the Kenton group a few years later allowed so much development on the west coast. And amidst all this great music, Billy's vocals have never sounded better – much bolder and hard-swinging than in later years!
(Side 1 has a mark that clicks a bit on track one. Cover has light wear, a promo stamp, masking tape on one of the bottom seams a couple of small rips at the opening.)

search match 6.  
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new Billy EckstineNo Cover No Minimum (with bonus tracks) ... CD
Roulette, 1960. Used .... $9.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
A really great album by Billy Eckstine – much more swinging and upbeat than some of his other 50s sessions, and with a strongly pronounced jazz flair overall! The album's supposedly recorded live in Vegas in the wee hours of the morning, and features Billy blowing a bit of trumpet as well as singing – all set to some nicely thumping orchestrations by Bobby Tucker, who really knows how to hit the right groove for this sort of a set. Titles include "Lady Luck", "Have A Song On Me", "Deed I Do", "Without A Song", "Moonlight In Vermont", and "Lush Life". CD features a huge amount of previously unissued bonus tracks – titles that include "Prelude To A Kiss", "Fools Rush In", "I Apologize", "Little Mama", "Prisoner Of Love", "Alright Okay You Win", and "In The Still Of The Night".

search match 7.  
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new Billy EckstineModern Sound Of Mr B ... LP
Mercury, 1964. Used .... $4.99 Out Of Stock
Well, we don't know if Mr B could ever be considered "modern", but this is a pretty groovy batch of 60s pop tunes – like "Mister Kicks", "People", "Wanted", "Wives & Lovers", and "A Beautiful Friendship" – all done to arrangements by Billy Byers, Benny Carter, and Bobby Tucker, with that great mid 60s Mercury pop feel to them. There's some nice jazz elements in the mix, and Billy's always a treat for us!
(Cover has a small piece of tape.)
 
Possible matches: 7
Add to Cartsearch match 8.  
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Oscar Lindsay — Sophisticated Sounds Of Oscar Lindsay ... LP
AMR, Early 60s. Very Good- .... $4.99
A beautiful groover from Chicago singer Oscar Lindsay – a deep-voiced vocalist who's clearly inspired by Billy Eckstine, but who also opens up here in a hipper small combo mode! Oscar's vocals are great – rich, but never sleepy – and with enough range to rate the "sophisticated" in the title, but enough soul to swing out when needed. The album's especially noteworthy because it boasts some great arrangements from Floyd Morris – who plays organ on the record in a combo that also includes Joe Diorio on guitar and John Young on piano. Titles include "My Shining Hour", "Lonely One", "You", "But Not For Me", "In The Wee Small Hours", and "Sing Hallelujah".
(Cover has light wear, some stains, and splitting on the top and bottom seams.)

Add to Cartsearch match 9.  
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Luba Raushiek — Luba – Chi Jazz ... LP
Erect, 1981. Very Good- .... $0.49
An obscure bit of Chicago jazz – featuring vocalist Luba Raushiek, kind of a self-styled spiritualist, with an approach that hits both traditional modes, and more far-out soulful ones – running through styles that range from Leon Thomas to Billy Eckstine, as was typical for a small club vocalist like this. The record's not great – but it's a valuable bit of Chicago jazz, as Raushiek did sing in quite a few of the city's clubs in the 70s and 80s, and he's helped here by players like John Young, Ari Brown, and Von Freeman. Titles include "Impressions", "Well You Needn't", "Enterprise", and "Love Makes The World Go Round".
(Cover's bottom seam has come unglued and has some flaking.)

search match 10.  
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Earl Coleman — Love Songs ... CD
1968. New Copy .... Around July 24, 2013
Earl Coleman was a syrupy voiced jazz vocalist – in the tradtion of Billy Eckstine or Johnny Hartman – and when he recorded this album for Atlantic in the late 60's, he'd already been kicking around the jazz scene since the days of bebop. The set is probably the best jazz session he ever cut, and is a nice set of mellow tracks that feature a group led by Billy Taylor, and which sound like some of Johnny Hartman's work from the same time. Titles include "Charade", "When Did You Leave Heaven", "I Wish I Knew", "Day In the Life Of a Fool", and "I Won't Tell A Soul".

search match 11.  
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Herb Jeffries — Say It Isn't So ... CD
1957. New Copy .... Around June 12, 2013
One of the best-ever recordings by Herb Jeffries – a smooth-toned jazz singer from the 50s, with a style that's very much in the mode of contemporaries like Al Hibbler or Billy Eckstine, with a nice cheesecake cover too! The backings are what make this set great – as Russ Garcia has crafted some incredibly edgey orchestrations to accompany Herb, much better than the backings that he gets on some of his other 50s sides. The album's a great batch of sad late night love tracks – and titles include "Say It Isn't So", "Glad To Be Unhappy", "The End Of A Love Affair", "I Only Have Eyes For You", "Dinner For One, Please James", and "When Your Lover Has Gone".

search match 12.  
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new Various — Newport In New York '72 – The Soul Sessions Vol 6 ... LP
Cobblestone, 1972. Very Good+ .... $1.99 Just Sold Out!
Hip live material – featuring work by Roberta Flack, BB King, Curtis Mayfield, LesMcCann, Billy Eckstine, and Herbie Mann!
(Cover has a two cutout holes.)

search match 13.  
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new Kenny Dorham — Blues In Bebop ... CD
Savoy, Late 40s. Used .... $9.99 Temporarily Out Of Stock
Some of the earliest recorded work from trumpeter Kenny Dorham – presented here in an overstuffed set that brings together most of his appearances on the Savoy label! The core standout tunes here are 10 numbers recorded in 1946 by The Bebop Boys – a combo that featured Dorham, Sonny Stitt, and Bud Powell coming together on tight, short, very upbeat bop material that ranked with some of the best early 78s of the genre. Titles by this group include "Seven Up", "Bebop In Pastel", "Serenade To A Square", "Fools Fancy", and "Bombay". Other material on the CD includes a solo by Kenny on "The Jitney Man" by Billy Eckstine, plus 3 tracks with the Milt Jackson Sextet from 1949 – including "Conglomeration", "Bruz", and "Roll Em Bags". Kenny also plays on three 1949 recordings with Charlie Parker – "Barbados", "Scrapple From The Apple", and "Bebop" – as well as four 1956 numbers with Cecil Payne – including "Grooving High", "Man Of Moods", and "Saucer Eyes".
(Out of print.)

search match 14.  
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new Johnny Hartman — I Just Dropped By To Say Hello ... LP
Impulse, 1963. Used .... $7.99 Out Of Stock
A beautiful album of dark-hued vocals – sung by Johnny Hartman with a quality that's as smokey as the image of him with a cigarette on the cover! The album set a whole new standard for male vocal jazz in the 60s – and is a distillation and refinement of earlier ideas in music by Billy Eckstine, taken down to more personal and fluid levels by Hartman – and recorded here with great small group baking that includes Illinois Jacquet on tenor, Kenny Burrell on guitar, Milt Hinton on bass, and Elvin Jones on drums. The vibe is very mellow, but never sloppy or sleepy – and titles include "Charade", "In The Wee Small Hours", "Stairway To the Stars", "Kiss & Run", "Our Time", "Don't You Know I Care", "If I'm Lucky", and "Don't Call It Love".
(Green label 70s pressing. Cover has some light wear.)
 
 
 

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