10 今週のお気に入り 32

ウィークエンドサンシャイン
http://www.nhk.or.jp/fm/sunshine/
放送日 :2010年 8月 7日(土)
放送時間 :午前7:15〜午前9:00(105分)
ピーター・バラカン
サンシャイン・ミュージック・フェスティヴァル(パート2)
THIS WEEK'S PLAYLIST
01. Trenchtown Rock / Bob Marley & The Wailers
ALBUM: Live!

02. 54-46, That's My Number / Toots & The Maytals
ALBUM: Live

03. The Thrill Is Gone / B.B. King
ALBUM: Live In Cook County Jail

04. Scarlet Begonias / Grateful Dead
ALBUM: Crimson, White & Indigo : Philadelphia, July 7, 1989

05. Statesboro Blues / The Allman Brothers Band
ALBUM: The Fillmore Concerts

06. High Cost Of Low Living / The Allman Brothers Band
ALBUM: One Way Out - Live at the Beacon Theatre

07. Don't Think Twice, It's Alright / The Allman Brothers Band with Susan Tedeschi
ALBUM: Alltel Pavilion at Walnut Creek Raleigh, NC 8/10/03

08. Afro Blue / The Derek Trucks Band
ALBUM: Roadsongs

09. Split Kick / The Art Blakey Quintet
ALBUM: A Night At Birdland

10. In A Silent Way / Joe Zawinul & The Zawinul Syndicate with Wayne Shorter
ALBUM: 75th


世界の快適音楽セレクション
http://cgi4.nhk.or.jp/hensei/program/index.cgi
放送日 :2010年 8月 7日(土)
放送時間 :午前9:00〜午前10:57(117分)
ゴンチチ
渡辺亨
− スローな音楽 −                   

「ホリデー・ウォーク」(ゴンチチ)(3分15秒)
ポニーキャニオン PCCA−01512>

「スローボート・トゥ・チャイナ」(ジャッキー・パリス)(3分12秒)
<COLLECTION CHOICE MUSIC CCM−2089>

「ホウリ」(山内桂)(2分30秒)
<SALMON FISHING ASSOCIATION SFA003>

「レクイエム 作品48から ああイエズスよ」フォーレ作曲(3分32秒)
(ソプラノ)リサ・ベックリー
管弦楽)オックスフォード・カメラータ
(指揮)ジェレミー・サマリー
<NAXOS 8.550765>

「スロー・ダンシング」(ファンキー・キングス)(3分46秒)
<ARTISTA REC. AL4078>

「ハリー・チューズデイ・チャイルド」(ボビー・ジェントリー)(3分54秒)
<MUSIC FROM EMI 094637733820>

「夕陽の中に」(長谷川きよし)(3分28秒)
<テイチクレコード TFC−805>

タヒチ・ア・サマー・ナイト・アット・シー」(レス・バクスター楽団)(2分32秒)
<CAPITOL REC. 724383702626>

「チャイダ・チュラ」(カズム・チャリスカン、アンドレアス・ホイザー)(4分08秒)
<ACOUSTIC MUSIC REC.BEST.NR.319.1127.242>

「ビリー・ジャック」(カーティス・メイフィールド)(6分07秒)
<J!MCO REC. JICK−89434>

「2つのディアローグとエピローグ〜アルヴォ・ペルトに捧ぐから婚礼のワルツ」ヴァレンテイン・シルヴェストロフ作曲(4分53秒)
(ピアノ)アレクセイ・リュビーモフ
管弦楽ミュンヘン室内管弦楽団
(指揮)クリストフ・ポッペン
<ECM NEW SERIES ECM1988>

「ソリチュード」(カーリン・クローグ、アーチー・シェップ)(3分30秒)
<MUZAK INC. MZCF−1019>

「ムード」(マイルス・デイヴィス)(8分49秒)
<COLUMBIA LEGACY CK46863>

「プレリュード・トゥー・マイカ」(ゴンチチ)(2分26秒)
<EPIC ESCL−2552>

「ステッピン・アウト」(ジョー・ジャクソン)(4分23秒)
<A&M REC. SP4906>

「グラヴィティ」(バッファロー・ドーター)(5分18秒)
<BUFFALO RANCH DDCB−12028>

「サンバ・クアドラド」(ホドリゴ・マラニョオン)(3分48秒)
<UNIVERSAL 60252733541>

「シランダ・ド・ムンド」(ペセ・カスティーリョ)(4分21秒)
<自主制作 PC001>


Desert Island Discs
Desert Island Discs was created by Roy Plomley in 1942, and the format is simple: a guest is invited by Kirsty Young to choose the eight records they would take with them to a desert island
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006qnmr
Lord David Cobbold
Sun 8 Aug 2010
11:15
BBC Radio 4
Kirsty Young's castaway is Lord David Cobbold, founder of the Knebworth rock festivals.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00t83lk
He was just 32 years old when he took over the ancestral pile Knebworth House and he succeeded in turning a crumbling corner of the establishment into one of the best rock concert venues in the world. Over the past forty years, everyone from Led Zeppelin to Paul McCartney to Robbie Williams has played there. The concerts have not only allowed him to keep the house in private hands, but have also given him a front-row seat to some of the most celebrated performances in rock history.

Producer: Leanne Buckle.

Music played
1. Pink Floyd ― Brain Damage
Composer: Waters
Dark Side of the Moon, EMI, CDEMD1064
2. Philadelphia Orchestra ― Overture: Rienzi
Composer: Wagner
Wagner, EMI, CDC5561652
3. Paul McCartneyHey Jude
Composer: Lennon/McCartney
Knebworth: the Album, Polydor, 8439212
4. Thomas Allen – (and the London Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Bernard Haitink) ― Now That The Wine Has Set Their Heads Whirling
Composer: Mozart
Mozart: Don Giovanni, EMI, CDS7470378
5. Édith Piaf ― Milord
Composer: Marguerite Monnot and Georges Moustaki
Edith Piaf, EMI, 7464972
6. Ella Fitzgerald & Louis ArmstrongI’ve Got My Love to Keep Me Warm
Composer: Irving Berlin
Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, Verve, 5218512
7. Frank Sinatra ― Some Enchanted Evening
Composer: Rodgers and Hammerstein II
Oscar Hammerstein- The Legacy, Pearl, GEM0132
8. Mary Hopkin ― Those Were The Days
Composer: Gene Raskin
Post Card, EMI, CDP7975782

Record: Pink Floyd - Brain Damage
Book: Zanoni by Edward Bulwer-Lytton
Luxury: A fishing rod


Private Passions
Guests from all walks of life discuss their musical loves and hates.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnv3
Tracy Chevalier
Sun 8 Aug 2010
12:00
BBC Radio 3
Michael Berkeley's guest is novelist Tracy Chevalier, author of Girl with a Pearl Earring.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00t6ttk
Michael Berkeley's guest is the best-selling novelist Tracy Chevalier, whose 'Girl with a Pearl Earring', inspired by Vermeer's enigmatic painting, has sold 4 million copies worldwide and was made into a film starring Colin Firth and Scarlett Johanssen. Her novels so far have been historically based, and include 'The Lady and the Unicorn', inspired by a famous set of medieval tapestries in the Cluny Museum in Paris. Her latest book, 'Remarkable Creatures', tells the story of two early 19th-century female fossil-hunters whose remarkable discoveries pre-dated Darwin and upset the establishment status quo.

Tracy Chevalier , who grew up in Washington DC and was educated at Oberlin College, Ohio, and then at the University of East Anglia, has lived in London for over 20 years. She played the clarinet as a child, and her music choices begin with two extracts from symphonies featuring a clarinet solo - Schubert's 'Unfinished' and Dvorak's 'From the New World' - as well as Brahms's Second Clarinet Sonata. Her choices also include two much-loved piano pieces, Schubert's Impromptu in G flat major played by Canadian pianist Paul Berkowitz and Schumann's 'Of Strange Lands and People', played by Alfred Brendel; as well as the Prologue to Leonard Bernstein's masterpiece 'West Side Story'; a piece of plainchant from a medieval part-book found in the Spanish monastery of Montserrat, which inspired Tracy Chevalier while she was writing 'The Lady and the Unicorn', and 'Once in a Lifetime' by Talking Heads.

Music played
1. Michael Berkeley ― The Wakeful Poet (Music from Chaucer)
Performers: Beaux-Arts Brass Quintet
BBQ BBQ 003, Tr 10
2. Franz Schubert ― Symphony no 8 in B minor (Unfinished), (excerpt from 1st movt, Allegro moderato)
Performers: Vienna PO/Sir Georg Solti
Franz Schubert, DECCA 430 439-2, Tr 1
3. Johannes Brahms ― Clarinet Sonata no 2 in E flat, Op 120 (2nd movement, Allegro appassionato)
Performers: Thea King, clarinet; Clifford Benson, piano
Brahms Clarinet Sonatas, HYPERION CDS 44340, Tr 9
4. Antonin Dvorak ― Symphony no 9 in E minor (From the New World), (4th movement, Allegro con fuoco)
Performers: London Symphony Orchestra/Sir Colin Davis
LSO 0001, Tr 4
5. Leonard Bernstein ― Prologue from West Side Story
Performers: Original Broadway Cast Recording/Max Goberman (Musical Director)
West Side Story, SONY SK 60724, Tr 1
6. Franz Schubert ― Impromptu in G flat major, D899
Performer: Paul Berkowitz, piano
Schubert, MERIDIAN CDE 84102, Tr 5
7. [anonymous] ― Polorum regina (from the Llibre Vermell de Montserrat, the Red Book of Montserrat)
Performers: The Osnabrückner Youth Choir/Johannes Rahe
Llibre Vermell, JARO 41712, Tr 5
8. Robert Schumann ― Of Strange Lands and People (from Kinderszenen, Op 15, no 1)
Performer: Alfred Brendel, piano
Alfred Brendel, PHILIPS 434 732-2, Tr 9
9. Talking Heads ― Once in a Lifetime
Remain in Light, SIRE K256867, Tr 4


Words and Music
A sequence of classical music mixed with well-loved and less familiar poems and prose.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x35f
This Is New York
Sun 7 Aug 2010
18:00
BBC Radio 3
A reading of poetry accompanied by the music of Dvorak, Adams, Bernstein and others.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b008z6y4
William Hope and Laurel Lefkow read poems and prose on the theme of New York with work by Walt Whitman, Langston Hughes, Federico Garcia Lorca, Emma Lazarus (the author of the poem inscribed on the Statue of Liberty), Allen Ginsberg and E.B. White with music by John Adams, Charles Ives, Steve Reich, Tom Waits, Dvorak, Rodgers and Hart and Bernstein.

Producer's Note

‘Deep city, tall city, worn city...city knowing and naive’ is how the poet Kenneth Fearing described New York. For this week’s Words and Music I’ve chosen poetry, prose and music reflecting New York in all its moods. The programme starts with one of Leonard Bernstein’s Symphonic Dances from his 1957 musical ‘West Side Story’ and Emma Lazarus’ ‘The New Colossus’, the sonnet inscribed on the base of the Statue of Liberty. The speed and excitement of the city is heard in the poem by Kenneth Fearing and the steam-driven opening movement of Steve Reich’s ‘Different Trains’ which includes the sound of brakes, whistles and the cries of the train’s guard. Walt Whitman’s poem ‘Crossing Brooklyn Ferry’ about the common experience of those in the past and future city leads into Gershwin’s ‘Rhapsody in Blue’.

Life in Harlem is heard in a section from Langston Hughes’ ‘Montage of a Dream Deferred’ and Duke Ellington’s ‘Echoes of Harlem’. Sara Teasdale’s poem ‘Broadway’ takes place in the quiet hour before the shows begin and alongside it you’ll hear , from the 1952 Broadway Cast of Rodger and Hart’s ‘Pal Joey’, ‘I Could Write a Book’. The city at night can be heard in Charles Ives’ ‘Central Park in the Dark’ and Allen Ginsberg’s ‘My Sad Self’.

Foreign writers and composers respond to New York too in Dvorak’s ‘Suite in A Major’ (written in the city in 1894) and Federico Garcia Lorca’s poem ‘Dawn’.

No programme about New York today would be complete if it didn’t reflect the events of September 11th 2001. And so the title of this programme is taken from a book by E.B. White, the New Yorker writer and author of ‘Charlotte’s Web’. During ‘Here is New York’ you’ll hear an extraordinary passage, written in 1949, describing how the new experience of planes flying over the city had led to New York being vulnerable for the first time and the intimation of mortality that brought. ‘Here is New York’ ends with a poem by C.K. Williams about the ‘fearful burden to be borne’ after the fall of the Twin Towers and the final section from John Adams’ tribute to the victims of 9/11, ‘On the Transmigration of Souls’. The elegy, which the composer described as a ‘memory space’, blends the choral singing of memorial inscriptions, street sounds and voices naming those who died - it was first heard in New York a year after the tragedy and at the Proms the following summer.

Producer: Fiona McLean

Music and featured items
Timings are shown from the start of the programme in hours and minutes.
00:00
Leonard Bernstein ― Prologue West Side Story
Performer: Leonard Bernstein (conductor), Los Angeles Philharmonic
Symphonic Dances, DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4270882
00:00
Emma Lazarus
The New Colossus read by Laurel Lefkow
00:02
Federico Garcia Lorca
Dawn read by William Hope
00:02
Ned Rorem ― Violin Concerto
Performer: Gidon Kremer (violin), New York Philharmonic
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4292312
00:07
Steve Reich ― Electric Counterpoint
Performer: Pat Metheny, guitar
NONESUCH 7559-79962-2
00:08
Kenneth Fearing
Manhattan read by William Hope
00:12
Tom Waits ― Somewhere (from West Side Story)
Asylum Years, ASYLUM 7559-60494-2
00:16
Langston Hughes
Good Morning read by Laurel Lefkow
00:17
Duke Ellington ― Echoes of Harlem
Drop me off at Harlem, CONIFER TQ151
00:20
Lou Reed ― Walk on the Wild Side
Transformer, RCA LABEL
00:24
Sara Teasdale
Broadway read by Laurel Lefkow
00:25
Richard Rodgers & Lorenz Hart ― I Could Write a Book
Performers: Dick Beavers and Helen Gallagher
Pal Joey – 1952 Broadway Cast, ANGEL ZDM7646962
00:28
William Carlos Williams
The Great Figure read by William Hope
00:28
Steve Reich ― Different Trains
Performer: Kronos Quartet
NONESUCH 7559791762
00:33
Walt Whitman
Crossing Brooklyn Ferry read by Laurel Lefkow
00:35
George GershwinRhapsody in Blue
Performer: Los Angeles Philharmonic
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4270882
00:51
Wislawa Szymborska
Photograph from September 11th read by William Hope
00:51
Charles Ives ― Central Park in the Dark
Performer: New York Philharmonic
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4292202
00:58
Audre Lord
A Trip on the Staten Island Ferry read by Laurel Lefkow
00:59
Thomas Newman ― Ellis Island
Angels in America, NONESUCH 7559-79837-2
01:01
Allen Ginsberg
My Sad Self read by William Hope
01:01
Morton Feldman ― For Frank O’Hara
Performer: Ensemble Recherche
MONTAIGNE MO 782018
01:11
E.B. White
Here is New York read by William Hope
01:12
Antonin Dvorak ― Suite in A Major ‘American’
Performer: Stefan Veselka, piano
NAXOS 8557478
01:16
C.K. Williams
from War read by William Hope
01:17
John Adams ― On the Transmigration of Souls
Performer: New York Philharmonic, Lorin Maazel (conductor)
NONESUCH 559 9810


Words and Music
A sequence of classical music mixed with well-loved and less familiar poems and prose.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006x35f
The Old Refrain
Sun 8 Aug 2010
22:45
BBC Radio 3
Poems and music about refrain and repetition. Readings by Samuel West and Nancy Carroll.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00t6vcp
This edition of Words and Music is all about refrain. Whether it appears in a poem such as Easter, 1916 by Yeats or in the idée fixe of Berlioz' Symphonie Fantastique; whether its anguished as in Villanelle by William Empson or wonderfully ingenious as in Dana Gioia's double triolet - The Country Wife.

Why are we fascinated by the idea of repetition? Rhythm is meaningless without it. It gives shape and subtlety to music and poetry and by its modulated insistence often unlocks the door to our most complex feelings and thoughts. We use past experience as a tool to understand what's happening to us in the present and what might happen to us in the future.

The actors Samuel West and Nancy Carroll read the poems and count on a supporting musical cast that includes Brahms, Tavener and Ravel.

Producer's Note
Can you step into the same river twice? The Greek philosopher, Heraclitus, didn’t think so. And yet we seem to be fascinated by the idea of repetition whether it’s philosophically possible or not! Rhythm is meaningless without it. It gives shape and subtlety to music and poetry and by its modulated insistence often unlocks the door to our most complex feelings and thoughts. We use past experience as a tool to understand what’s happening to us in the present and what might happen to us in the future.

This week’s Words and Music is all about this kind of refrain. Whether it appears in a poem such as Easter, 1916 by Yeats or in the idée fixe of Berlioz’ Symphonie Fantastique; whether its anguished as in William Empson’s Villanelle or wonderfully ingenious as in Dana Gioia’s double triolet – The Country Wife. The actors Samuel West and Nancy Carroll lead the revels and will make sure recurrence does not make for dullness though this is unlikely with a cast that also includes Brahms, Tavener, Ravel and Mozart.

Producer: Zahid Warley

Music and featured items
Timings are shown from the start of the programme in hours and minutes.
00:00
Fritz Kreisler ― The Old Refrain
Performer: Fritz Kreisler
RCA 09026616492, Tr 11
00:03
John Donne
Hymn to God the Father read by Samuel West
00:04
Jan Pieterszoon Sweelinck ― Hodie Christus natus est
Performer: Trinity College Chapel Choir, Richard Marlow
Hyperion CDA67103, Tr13
00:07
Hans Magnus Enzensberger
Notice of Loss read by Nancy Carroll
00:08
Tom Waits ― Way down in the Hole
Performer: Tom Waits
ISLAND IMCD50, Tr11
00:12
Dylan Thomas
Do not go gentle into that good night read by Samuel West
00:13
John Tavener ― The Protecting Veil
Performer: Steven Isserlis, London Symphony Orchestra
VIRGIN CLASSICS VC7914742, Tr7(end) and Tr8
00:17
W.B.Yeats
Easter, 1916 read by Samuel West
00:21
Bart Van Der Schelling ― Viva La Quince Brigada from Spain in My Heart
Performer: Quetzal
APPLESEED APRCD1074, Tr16
00:24
Adrian Mitchell
To whom it may concern read by Nancy Carroll
00:26
Blind Alfred Reed ― How can a poor man stand such times and live?
Performer: Blind Alfred Reed
RVN11, Tr4 CD2
00:29
Louis MacNeice
Bagpipe Music read by Samuel West
00:31
Grace Slick ― White Rabbit
Performer: Jefferson Airplane
SONY88697092902, Tr2
00:34
William Empson
Villanelle read by Nancy Carroll
00:35
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart ― Leporello’s catalogue from Don Giovanni
Performer: Giuseppe Taddei, Philharmonia Orchestra and Chorus, Giulini
EMI CDS7472608, Tr11 CD1
00:41
Thomas Hardy
How great my grief read by Samuel West
00:41
Bob Dylan ― Knockin’ on Heaven’s Door
Performer: Bob Dylan
COLUMBIA 5031332, Tr22 CD1
00:44
Dana Gioia
The Country wife read by Samuel West
00:44
Maurice Ravel ― Berceuse sur le nom de Gabriel Faure
Performer: Augustin Dumay, Maria Joao Pires
DEUTSCHE GRAMMOPHON 4458802, Tr8
00:50
Elizabeth Bishop
Sestina read by Nancy Carroll
00:49
Johannes Brahms ― Wiegenlied
Performer: Dietrich Fischer-Dieskau
EMI CDS7648202, CD2 Tr26
00:50
Czeslaw Milosz
A Song on the End of the World read by Nancy Carroll
00:53
Hector Berlioz ― Marche au supplice from Symphonie Fantastique
Performer: London Symphony Orchestera, Sir Colin Davis
PHILLIPS 4222532, Tr 5


Jazz Record Requests
Geoffrey Smith presents a selection of listeners' jazz requests.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b006tnn9
Sat 7 Aug 2010
17:00
BBC Radio 3
Geoffrey Smith presents a selection of listeners' jazz requests.
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b00t6tmd
Music played
1. Wynton Marsalis ― Oh, but on the Third Day (Happy Feet Blues) (JRR Signature Tune)
Composer: Wynton Marsalis Performers: Wynton Marsalis (tp), Marcus Roberts (p), Todd Williams (ts), Dr Michael White (cl), Danny Barker (bj), Teddy Riley (tp), Freddie Lonzo (tb), Reginald Veal (b), Herlin Riley (d) Recorded: 28 October 1988
The Majesty of the Blues, 1989 CD CBS 465129 2
2. Malcolm Lockyer ― The Song is Ended
Composer: Berlin Performers: Malcolm Lockyer (p) Jack Llewelyn (g) Joe Muddell (b) Derek Price (ds) Recorded: 23 December 1956 (3:07)
Piano Moods Volume Seven - Malcolm Lockyer Quartet, LP Pye NJE 1033, S1/1
3. Bob Hall ― Detroit Rocks
Composer: Montana Taylor Performers: Bob Hall (piano) Recorded: June 1990 – March 1991 (3:55)
At The Window, 1992 CD Lake LACD23(1), Track 1
4. New Orleans Rhythm Kings ― Tin Roof Blues
Composer: Mares, Brunies, Roppolo, Stitzel, Pollack Performers: New Orleans Rhythm Kings:George Brunies (tb) Paul Mares (cnt) Leon Roppolo (cl) Mel Stitzel (p) Ben Pollack (d) Recorded: 13 March 1923 (3:01)
New Orleans Rhythm Kings 1922 - 1923, 2000 CD Classics Classics1129(1), Track 16
5. Graeme Bell ― Backroom Joys
Composer: Monsbourgh Performers: Graeme Bell (p) Humphrey Lyttelton (tp) Adrian ‘Lazy Ade’ Monsbourgh (as) Don ‘Pixie’ Roberts (cl) Bud Baker (bj) Baron Silbereisen (b) Roger Bell (washboard) Recorded: 23 November 1951 (2:55)
A Programme by Graeme Bell and his Australian Jazz Band, LP Parlophone PMD 1009, S1/5
6. Duke EllingtonI’ve Got to Be a Rug Cutter
Composer: Duke Ellington Performers: Duke Ellington and his Famous Orchestra: Wallace Jones, Cootie Williams, Rex Stewart (tp) Joe ‘Tricky Sam’ Nanton, Lawrence Brown, Juan Tizol (tb) Barney Bigard (cl, ts) Johnny Hodges (as, ss) Otto Hardwick (as) Harry Carney (bs) Duke Ellington (p) Fred Guy (g) Hayes Alvis, Billy Taylor (b) Sonny Greer (d) Freddie Jenkins (tap dancing) Ivie Anderson, Rex Stewart, Harry Carney, Hayes Alvis (v) Recorded: 5 March 1937 (2:32)
Duke Ellington at the Cotton Club, LP Tax M 8001, S2/6
7. Count Basie ― Lil’ Darlin’
Composer: Hefti Performers: Count Basie (p) Joe Newman, Thad Jones, Wendell Cully, E Young (tp) Benny Powell, Nenry Coker, A Grey (tb) Marshall Royal, Frank Wess (as) Frank Foster, E Davis (ts) Charlie Fowlkes (bs) Freddie Green (g) Ed Jones (b) Sonny Paynes (d) Recorded: 21 and 22 October 1957(4:47)
Count Basie and his Orchestra: Four Classic Albums, Avid Jazz AMSC 945, Disc 2, Track 11
8. J.J.Johnson ― The Continental
Composer: Conrad Magidson Performers: Jay and Kai Trombone Octet: J.J. Johnson, Kai Winding, Bob Alexander, Eddie Bert, Urbie Green, Jimmy Cleveland (tb) Tom Mitchell, Bart Varsalona (b-tb) Hank Jones (p) Milt Hinton (b) Osie Johnson (d) Recorded: 2, 4, 6 April 1956 (2:58)
An Afternoon At Birdland, Lonehill Jazz LHJ10218(1), Track 18
9. Sarah Vaughan ― How Am I to Know?
Composer: Parker, King Performers: Sarah Vaughan with The Hollywood All Stars Recorded: Unknown (2:55)
The Fabulous Sarah Vaughan, LP Society SOC 981, S1/5
10. Kyle Eastwood ― Stanley Hill Drive
Composer: Doug Webb Performers: Kyle Eastwood (b) Mark Isham (tp) David Sanchez (ts) Peter Erskine (d) Warren Luening, Larry Hall, Wayne Bergeron, George Graham (tp) Andy Martin (tb) George Thatcher (btb) Don Waldrop (tuba) Dan Higgins, Joel Peskin, Steve Kujala, Gary Foster (woodwinds) Mike O’Donovan, John Steinmetz (bassoon) Rich Todd, David Duke, Philip Yao (French horn) Gayle Levant (harp) Recorded: 1998 (5:06)
From There to Here, 1998 CD Columbia CK68013(1), Track 1
11. Donald Byrd ― My Girls Shirl
Composer: Duke Pearson Performers: Donald Byrd (tp) Pepper Adams (bs) Duke Pearson (p) Laymon Jackson (b) Lex Humphries (d) Recorded: 11 November 1960 (10:20)
Live at the Half Note Cafe, Vol. 1, 1987 CD Blue Note CDP7465392(1), Track 2
12. The Modern Jazz Quartet ― Pyramid
Composer: Ray Brown Performers: Modern Jazz Quartet: Milt Jackson (vb) John Lewis (p) Percy Heath (b) Connie Kay (d) Recorded: 1959 (10:44)
Pyramid, CD Atlantic Masters. 81227 3679-2, Track 2