Kai
Winding
b. 18
May 1922, Aarhus, Denmark
died 6 May 1983, New
York City
Rico
remembers the recordings of Kai Winding with J.J.
Johnson as one of his main influences while developing his skills as
a trombone player
(Kai Winding,
late 1950s, Source: His Official WebSite)
1934:
Winding moved
to the United States with his family.
1940:
He began working
professionally with Shorty Allen's band. He played with Alvino Rey before
joining the Coast Guard during World War II.
Late
1940s/Early 1950s:
After the
war, he worked with Benny Goodman briefly before joining Stan Kenton's
band and becoming a featured soloist. He left Kenton to work with small
groups, including Miles Davis' ensemble on the influential Birth of
the Cool session.
1954-1956:
Winding is
best remembered for two-trombone combo he led with J.J. Johnson. Although
the pair went their separate ways, they reunited often--at times anonymously--on
numerous recordings by other artists and even released a reunion album
for Impulse in 1964. Known as "K and JJ," their smooth blended sounds were
as much imitated in the 1950s as Billy May's "slurping saxes."
1956-1961:
Looking for
more of a good thing, Winding then formed a four-trombone sextet which
recorded on Impulse. Winding then became the musical director for Hugh
Hefner's chain of Playboy Clubs and was enticed by producer Creed Taylor
to the Verve label.
1960s:
For the rest
of the 1960s, Winding cranked out a steady flow of middle-of-the road popular
jazz that latched onto every popular trend--bossa nova, countrypolitan,
Beatles. Winding's cover of "More", featuring the spooky sounds
of the ondioline, was a Top 10 single in 1963. Claus Ogerman provided most
of the arrangements for Winding's Verve albums, which include some of the
groovin'-est cuts of now sounds you could ever want to frug to.
1970s:
Winding moved
with Taylor to A&M briefly, then returned to more serious jazz work
on a variety of labels in the 1970s. In the late 1970s, he joined forces
with Curtis Fuller in the group "Giant Bones," which attempted to update
the classic "K + JJ" sound.
Quelle:
Space
Age Pop Music
Selected
Discography
-
(with J.J. Johnson)
The
Finest of Kai & J.J. (LP: Bethlehem BCP 6001)
-
The Swingin'
States (LP: Columbia CL-1264)
-
Dance to the
City Beat (LP: Columbia CL-1329)
-
The Great Kai
Winding Sound (LP: Harmony HL-7341)
-
The Incredible
Kai Winding Trombones (LP: Impulse A-3)
-
Brass Fever
(LP: Impulse)
-
Kai Ole
(LP: Verve V6-8427)
-
Suspense Themes
in Jazz (LP: Verve V6-8493()
-
The Solo Kai
Winding (LP: Verve V6-8525)
-
More
(LP: Verve V6-8551)
(also released
as Soul Surfing)
-
Mondo Cane
#2 (LP: Verve V6-8573)
-
Modern Country
(LP: Verve V6-8602)
-
Rainy Day
(LP: Verve V6-8620)
-
The In Instrumentals
(LP: Verve V6-V8639)
-
More Brass
(LP: Verve V6-8657)
-
Dirty Dog
(LP: Verve V6-8661)
-
Penny Lane
and More (LP: Verve V6-8691)
Bibliography
WebSite:
-
The Incredible
Kai Winding - His Official Website, by B.J. Mayor
URL: http://www.bjbear71.com/Winding/Kai.html
Die Seite
sind riesengroß und braucht selbst bei schnellem Zugang ewig. Dafür
bekommt man unmengen großformatiger LP-Cover-Abbildungen.
Das Design
ist noch simpler als meines, aber es gibt eben dennoch fast alles an verfügbarer
Information, insbesondere hinsichtlich der Diskographie von Kai Winding.
Rico's
Music | Index | A
WOMAD Soul
Last updated:
Mai 2002
Compiled by
Reinhard
Braun