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  1. BLP 5062. Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers is an album by Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers compiling two 1955 10" LPs— Horace Silver Quintet, Vol. 3 (BLP 5058) and Horace Silver Quintet, Vol. 4 (BLP 5062)—recorded on November 13, 1954 and February 6, 1955 respectively and released on Blue Note in October 1956—Silver’s debut 12".

  2. The Jazz Messengers were a jazz combo that existed for over thirty-five years beginning in the early 1950s as a collective, [1][2][3] and ending when long-time leader and founding drummer Art Blakey died in 1990. [4] Blakey led or co-led the group from the outset. [2] ". Art Blakey" and "Jazz Messengers" became synonymous over the years, though ...

  3. Silver's final recordings with the Jazz Messengers were in May 1956. [37] Later that year, he left Blakey after one and a half years, [ 34 ] [ 38 ] in part because of the heroin use prevalent in the band, [ 2 ] which Silver did not want to be involved in. [ 39 ] Soon after leaving, Silver formed his own long-term quintet, after receiving offers of work from club owners who had heard his albums ...

    • I Had Plenty of material. I Was Always Recording
    • Jazz Messenger
    • Hardbop Grandpop

    When he was 18, Silver got a job playing piano in Hartford, Connecticut, at a nightclub, and it was there, in 1950, that he and his band were recruited by saxophone star Stan Getz, with whom the young pianist made his recording debut later that same year. With his reputation burgeoning, the in-demand Silver was summoned to his first Blue Note Recor...

    For his next Blue Note offering, Silver expanded his group from a trio to a quintet, adding two horn players (Kenny Dorham and Hank Mobley) to augment the rhythm section of bassist Doug Watkins and drummer Art Blakey. It was a move that would establish a template for hard bop groups. Blue Note recorded two sessions with the same line-up and release...

    In 1980, after 28 albums for the company, Horace Silver left Blue Note and then recorded five LPs for his own Silveto label between 1981 and 1988. The 90s witnessed a short stint at CBS, followed by a switch to Impulse! in 1996, which resulted in The Hardbop Grandpop, unanimously hailed as Silver’s best work for decades. Two years later, Silver, th...

    • Charles Waring
  4. www.udiscovermusic.com › stories › jazz-messengersJazz Messengers - uDiscover

    Oct 2, 2015 · By late 1953 Silver and Blakey were calling themselves Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers and it was a relationship that lasted for 4 years, during which they recorded, Birdland (A Night at ...

  5. Aug 29, 2024 · Some of his key albums from this period included Horace Silver Trio (1953), Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers (1955), Six Pieces of Silver (1956) and Blowin' The Blues Away (1959), which includes his famous, "Sister Sadie." He also combined jazz with a sassy take on pop through the 1961 hit, "Filthy McNasty."

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  7. Jun 18, 2014 · Bio. Horace Silver was the heart of the hard bop era, helping to form the influential Jazz Messengers and composing many blues and gospel-flavored songs that have become part of the jazz canon, including "Lonely Woman," "Song For My Father," "Señor Blues," "The Preacher," "Nica's Dream," and "Peace." His piano playing was heavily rhythmic ...