Introduction to a Versatile Musician
Benny Carter recorded for such a lengthy period in so many different settings that one could make a dozen, entirely different lists of his finest work.
That said, here’s a grouping that offers a brief introduction to the remarkable range of his talents.
* Six CDs on the Melodie Jazz Classic label (available from Amazon.com) provide a comprehensive overview of Carter’s early career. The individual discs are titled “1929-1933,†“1933-1936,†“1936,†“1937-1939,†“1939-1940†and “1940-1941,†and cover everything from his work with the Chocolate Dandies to his own big band.
* “Cosmopolite: The Oscar Peterson Sessions†(Verve, 1952-54). Carter swings with Peterson’s marvelous early quartets, which featured bassist Ray Brown and Barney Kessel or Herb Ellis on guitar.
* “Benny Carter New Jazz Sounds: The Urbane Sessions†(Verve, 1952). A double CD from the ‘50s, featuring Carter performing with strings and in sessions with Roy Eldridge and Dizzy Gillespie.
* “Further Definitions†(GRP/Impulse!, 1961). A CD that includes the original LP release as well as a follow-up album, “Additions to Further Definitions†from 1966. Carter’s arrangements for saxophone quartet--revisiting a similar session he did in 1937--are played by, among others, Coleman Hawkins, Phil Woods, Charlie Rouse and Carter.
* “Benny Carter Songbook†(volumes 1 and 2, Music Masters, 1995). Carter’s songs sung by, among others, Joe Williams, Diana Krall, Jon Hendricks, Peggy Lee, Shirley Horn and Carter.
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