Additional Information about In the Still of the Night by Billy Eckstine (CD, Jan-2000, Prism)

 
Album Features
UPC: 5014293640725
Artist: Billy Eckstine
Format: CD
Release Year: 2000
Record Label: Prism
Genre: Bebop, Jazz Instrument, Pop


Track Listing
1. I'm in the Mood For Love
2. Time on My Hands
3. All the Things You Are
4. What's New
5. All of Me
6. Serenade in Blue
7. Cottage For Sale
8. Prisoner of Love
9. I Stay in the Mood For You
10. I'm Falling For You
11. Love Is the Thing
12. You're My Everything
13. Sophisticated Lady
14. In the Still of the Night
15. I Love the Loveliness of You
16. Where Are You
17. It Ain't Like That
18. You Call It Madness
19. Solitude
20. In a Sentimental Mood
21. My Silent Love
22. Prelude to a Kiss
23. Without a Song
24. Penny For Your Thoughts
25. Blue

Details
Distributor: MSI Music Distribution
Recording Mode: Stereo
SPAR Code: n/a

Album Notes
British budget reissue label Prism Leisure takes advantage of the 50-year European copyright limit to assemble its own versions of vintage recordings drawn from transfers of old records. This collection, released in 1998 and therefore able to use recordings made up to 1947, collects some of Billy Eckstine's earliest recordings from the mid-1940s for DeLuxe and especially National Records. This was a period when Eckstine was leading an innovative big band, though his recordings do not, for the most part, reflect its innovations. Still, some of his star sidemen do turn up. For example, on the R&B hit recording of "I Stay in the Mood for You," trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie makes a strong impression as part of what was known on record as the DeLuxe All Star Band. Miles Davis is featured on the National Records version of Duke Ellington's "Sophisticated Lady" that was recorded in 1946 and became a pop chart entry in 1948. Still, jazz content is not what these tracks are really about. They are pop standards on which Eckstine exercises his bass-baritone effectively, with his band getting to make instrumental statements in the margins around him here and there. The tracks have clearly been transferred from old 78's, as surface noise is sometimes audible, and the overall sound quality is only mediocre to good. Of course, there are no annotations to allow the listener to figure out the sources of the tracks. But the price is quite low, and there are more than 70 minutes of music on the disc. ~ William Ruhlmann