“Mr. Duran,” a seeming resident of an early fifties time warp, presents “The Lonnie Jordan WARtet” on WAR (probably a TV station in San Gabriel, LA County, CA). Piano – Lonnie Jordan; Drums – Sal Rodriguez; Bass – Francisco “Pancho” Tomaselli; Sax – David Urquidi. Posted by MRDURANdotcom
Tag: jazz
Arlene McDaniel—“Well, You Needn’t”
Arlene McDaniel, solo piano. Hillsdale College. Sept. 12, 2015
VSOP II—“Well You Needn’t”
VSOP II, aka Wynton and Branford Marsalis, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and Tony Williams, on trumpet, sax, piano, bass, and drums, respectively, aka 3/5 of the early/mid-sixties Miles Davis Quintet, circa 1983. Posted by leatherlips
Freddie Hubbard & Johnny Griffin—“Well, You Needn’t”
Fuzzy picture, great jazz. According to online comments, Billy Higgins is the drummer, and Harry Pickens is on piano. No information for the bassman. Blue Note Jazz Festival, 1986. Posted by cminor7add9th.
Tommy Flanagan & Barry Harris—“Well, You Needn’t”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KFGuFfrpTVc Mid eighties. Kinda short, but, you know, illuminating. Posted by hoffmanjazz
Red Mitchell and Bill Mays—“Well, You Needn’t”
Yeah, which one is “Red”, right? From 1982. Posted by “piano mays”
Inês Vaz—“Well, You Needn’t”
Inês Vaz crushes Coltrane’s solo on Monk’s “Well, You Needn’t”.
Bril Brothers—“Well, You Needn’t”
Russia isn’t all Putin. Dmitry (soprano) and Alexander (tenor) Bril take Monk for a ride, accompanied by Vladimir Nesterenko (keyboards), Alexander Kulikov (drums), and Vladimir Koltzov-Krutov (bass). Posted by Taberculat
Cyrille Aimée—“Well, You Needn’t”
Adrien Moignard and Michael Valeanu – guitars; Sam Anning – bass; Rajiv Jayaweera – drums. Smalls Jazz Club, June 11th of 2013. Posted by Cyrille
Thelonious Monk & Charlie Parker—“Well, You Needn’t”
This is not a video, but it is essential, a live recording of Charlie Parker playing “Well, You Needn’t” with Monk as accompanist. This is one of the “famous” Dean Benedetti recordings. Benedetti was a passionate fan of Parker and surreptitiously recorded many of Bird’s nightclub performances. To save tape (or “wire”—the earliest taping machines…