Holiday Soul Bobby Timmons

Cover Holiday Soul

Album info

Album-Release:
1964

HRA-Release:
21.10.2015

Label: Concord Records

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Mainstream Jazz

Artist: Bobby Timmons

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1Deck The Halls03:12
  • 2White Christmas07:06
  • 3The Christmas Song05:20
  • 4Auld Lang Syne04:40
  • 5Santa Claus Is Coming To Town06:29
  • 6Winter Wonderland05:36
  • 7We Three Kings05:06
  • 8You're All I Want For Christmas04:52
  • Total Runtime42:21

Info for Holiday Soul

Bobby Timmons became famous for his funky piano solos and for his ability to write catchy songs. He was actually a well-rounded pianist who was more versatile than many thought.

Timmons was part of the Philadelphia jazz scene before moving to New York in the mid-1950s. He worked with Kenny Dorham, Chet Baker, Sonny Stitt, and the Maynard Ferguson Orchestra. Timmons’s abilities helped two important bands to catch on. While with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers (1958-1960) he contributed “Moanin’,” and when he was a member of the Cannonball Adderley Quintet (1959-1960), Timmons’s songs “This Here” and “Dat Dere” became quite popular.

Bobby Timmons, piano
Butch Warren, bass
Walter Perkins, drums

Recorded November 24, 1964 at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
Produced by Ozzie Cadena

Digitally remastered


Bobby Timmons (1935-1974)
became famous for his funky piano solos and for his ability to write catchy songs. He was actually a well-rounded pianist who was more versatile than many thought.

Timmons was part of the Philadelphia jazz scene before moving to New York in the mid-1950s. He worked with Kenny Dorham, Chet Baker, Sonny Stitt, and the Maynard Ferguson Orchestra. Timmons’s abilities helped two important bands to catch on. While with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers (1958-1960) he contributed “Moanin’,” and when he was a member of the Cannonball Adderley Quintet (1959-1960), Timmons’s songs “This Here” and “Dat Dere” became quite popular.

Timmons, who began leading his own trios in 1961 but never quite achieved the commercial success of his former bosses, recorded for Riverside, Prestige, and Milestone during 1960-1968. This Here Is Bobby Timmons is a brilliant set in which he takes “Lush Life” unaccompanied and interprets trio versions of his three hits, a newer song in “Joy Ride,” and four standards with bassist Sam Jones and drummer Jimmy Cobb. Soul Time teams the pianist with Jones and drummer Art Blakey; best of his new songs are “So Tired.” Easy Does It is a trio outing with Jones and drummer Cobb that includes fine versions of “Old Devil Moon” and “Groovin’ High.” Other trio sessions include In Person, Sweet and Soulful Sounds, Born to Be Blue, From the Bottom, and, quite logically, The Prestige Trio Sessions.

1966’s Workin’ Out shows that Timmons had continued to advance beyond his original image as jazz’s funkiest pianist. In a pair of quartets with either vibraphonist Johnny Lytle or tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, he plays more adventurous material than expected (including Shorter’s “Tom Thumb”) and shows that he could be creative in post-bop. During Quartets and Orchestra, which often teams him with guitarist Joe Beck in a quartet in addition to a larger group with voices arranged by Tom McIntosh, Timmons was clearly looking ahead.

Unfortunately Bobby Timmons lived to be only 38, but his musical legacy is quite rich.

Booklet for Holiday Soul

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