Complete Lighthouse Sessions

~ Release by Art Pepper & Shorty Rogers (see all versions of this release, 1 available)

Annotation

HIGH RESOLUTION
24bit Edition

Annotation last modified on 2018-02-17 17:49 UTC.

Tracklist

CD 1
#TitleRatingLength
1Popo
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
recording of:
Popo (on 1951-12-27)
composer:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet)
4:19
2What's New?
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
instrumental recording of:
What’s New? (on 1951-12-27)
lyricist:
Johnny Burke (American lyricist, 1908-1964)
composer:
Bob Haggart
publisher:
Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!)
2:17
3Lullaby in Rhythm
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
instrumental recording of:
Lullaby in Rhythm (on 1951-12-27)
lyricist:
Walter Hirsch (in 1938)
composer:
Clarence Profit (in 1938), Benny Goodman (clarinetist and bandleader) (in 1938) and Edgar Sampson (in 1938)
5:22
4All the Things You Are
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
instrumental recording of:
All the Things You Are (from “Very Warm for May”) (on 1951-12-27)
lyricist:
Oscar Hammerstein II (of Rodgers & Hammerstein) (in 1939)
composer:
Jerome Kern (in 1939)
publisher:
Polygram Int. Publishing (renamed Universal PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. circa 1998) (ended), T.B. Harms Inc. (ended) and Universal PolyGram International Publishing, Inc. (existed only since ca. 1998)
part of:
Broadway Rhythm (film)
2:58
5Robbins Nest
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
instrumental recording of:
Robbins’ Nest (on 1951-12-27)
lyricist:
Bob Russell (US songwriter/lyricist Sidney Keith “Bob” Russell)
composer:
Illinois Jacquet and Sir Charles Thompson (jazz)
4:49
6Scrapple From the Apple
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
recording of:
Scrapple From the Apple (on 1951-12-27)
composer:
Charlie Parker (a.k.a. “Bird”, jazz alto saxophonist)
part of:
The Real Book (compilation of jazz standards, Volume I)
6:19
7Body and Soul
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
instrumental recording of:
Body and Soul (on 1951-12-27)
lyricist:
Frank Eyton (in 1930), Edward Heyman (in 1930) and Robert Sour (in 1930)
composer:
Johnny Green (composer and conductor, often credited as John Green) (in 1930)
publisher:
Bug Music, Inc., Chappell & Co Ltd., Druropetal Music, Quartet Music Inc., Range Road Music Inc., Warner Bros., Inc. (not for release label use!), WB Music Corp. (1929–2019) (until 2019-05-28) and WC Music Corp. (from 2019-05-28 to present)
sub-publisher:
ヤマハミュージックエンタテインメントホールディングス (holding company – do not use as release label) and ワーナー・チャペル音楽出版 Synch事業部
3:20
8Jive at Five
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
recording of:
Jive at Five (on 1951-12-27)
composer:
Count Basie (pianist) and Harry “Sweets” Edison
5:27
9Tin Tin Deo
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
recording of:
Tin Tin Deo (on 1951-12-27)
composer:
Walter “Gil” Fuller (jazz composer & arranger) and Chano Pozo
publisher:
Consolidated Music (a division of Music Sales Corp.), EMI Robbins Catalog Inc. (ASCAP) and Music Sales Corp. (American copyright holder in both popular and classical music)
4:06
10Cherokee
recorded in:
Los Angeles, California, United States (on 1951-12-27)
alto saxophone:
Art Pepper (on 1951-12-27)
double bass [bass]:
Howard Rumsey (American jazz double-bassist) (on 1951-12-27)
drums (drum set):
Shelly Manne (US jazz drummer) (on 1951-12-27)
piano:
Frank Patchen (on 1951-12-27)
trumpet:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet) (on 1951-12-27)
instrumental recording of:
Cherokee (on 1951-12-27)
lyricist and composer:
Ray Noble
publisher:
Peter Maurice Music Co., Redwood Music Ltd. (Carlin) and Shapiro, Bernstein & Co., Inc.
6:36

Credits

Release

photography:William Claxton (US photographer)