PAUL WINTER — Count Me In

Jazz music community with review and forums

PAUL WINTER - Count Me In cover
3.50 | 1 rating | 1 review
Buy this album from MMA partners

Boxset / Compilation · 2012

Filed under Hard Bop
By PAUL WINTER

Tracklist

DISC I
1. A Bun Dance 3:37
2. Papa Zimbi 4:26
3. Casa Camara 4:58
4. Them Nasty Hurtin’ Blues 3:25
5. Voce e Eu (Only You and I) 2:51
6. Insensatez (Foolish One) 3:40
7. Mystery Blues 3:55
8. Chega de Saudade (No More Blues) 3:03
9. Routeousness 4:50
10. Count Me In 2:26
11. Bells and Horns 4:45
12. Saudade de Bahia (Longing for Bahia) 4:26
13. Casa Camara 5:07
14. Pony Express 3:20
15. Maria Ninguem (Maria Nobody) 2:57
16. Toccata (from “Suite Gillespiana”) 4:45
17. Count Me In 3:01

DISC II
1. Cupbearers 3:32
2. Ally 6:48
3. The Sheriff 4:44
4. With Malice Toward None 5:22
5. All Members 6:50
6. Marilia 4:27
7. Suite Port au Prince
A. Invocation to Dambala
B. Prayer
C. Papa Zimbi 9:48
8. New York 19 5:15
9. Quem Quizer Encantrar O Am or
(He who wants to find love has to cry) 3:47
10. The Thumper 5:28
11. Count Me In 2:44
12. Repeat 3:21
13. Lass from the Low Countrie 3:44
14. Down by the Greenwood Side 5:35
15. We Shall Overcome 3:21

Line-up/Musicians

Disc I - (tracks 1-17):
Paul Winter / alto sax
Dick Whitsell / trumpet
Les Rout / baritone sax
Warren Bernhardt / piano
Richard Evans / bass
Harold Jones / drums

Disc II - (tracks 18-32):
Paul Winter / alto & soprano sax
Dick Whitsell / trumpet
Jay Cameron / baritone sax
Warren Bernhardt / piano
Chuck Israels / bass*
Ben Riley / drums*

*Cecil McBee / bass and
Freddie Waits / drums on tracks 12, 14 & 15

Jeremy Steig / flute and
Gene Bertoncini / guitar on track 13

About this release

Living Music

50th Anniversary Anthology with 12 never-released tracks, including their historic concert at the Kennedy White House

Thanks to snobb for the addition and js for the updates

Buy PAUL WINTER - COUNT ME IN music

More places to buy jazz & PAUL WINTER music

PAUL WINTER COUNT ME IN reviews

Specialists/collaborators reviews

js
I’ve always known Paul Winter as one of the first jazz artists to cross over into “new age” territory, as well as one of the first to use straight rhythms and simple harmonies in a jazz context, a tendency that consequently caught on with a lot more artists over the years. He always seemed like a nice guy, so I won’t get hysterical and say he ‘ruined jazz’, but he has always been highly suspect, ha. That’s why it was a surprise to hear this compilation of his earlier material, turns out Paul used to play real jazz, and it was really good jazz too. “Count Me In” is a compilation of 32 tracks recorded in the early 60s that shows Winter working with a very imaginative sextet that blends complex ensemble arrangements with short solos for a modern quasi-big band approach somewhat similar to some things Miles Davis and Art Farmer had been doing. The style is hard bop with a west coast cool approach, a style that was very popular with early 60s college kids who also dug Dave Brubek and Chet Baker. This was an excellent time period for jazz, sandwiched between the excesses of the past bop era and the greater excesses of the coming fusion era, early 60s jazz was smart, compact and eternally hip.

The first ten tracks on this compilation are the best. They feature Winter’s original sextet; six young college kids who won the 1961 Intercollegiate Jazz Festival, which won them a recording contract with Columbia and a US state department backed tour of Latin America. Their youthful enthusiasm and fresh new ideas really come through. Many of these guys would leave pro music after this sextet broke up, including the very talented baritone player Les Rout. Tracks 11 through 17 feature this same sextet playing the first ever jazz concert at the White House. These tracks are nice as history, but the recordings don’t sound great, and the band sounds uptight, nervous and a even a little off sometimes. The final tracks, 18 - 32, feature the last version of Winter’s sextet, which by now had picked up more familiar names such as Ben Riley and Chuck Israels. The music is still good, but I miss the more ‘modernist’ sound of the younger naïve group, plus these recordings are live and are of less than best quality. Mostly I would recommend this CD for the first ten tracks, excellent hipster jazz for young college kids in the years right before post hippie-lemming mentality would trample all over this more subtle culture.

Members reviews

No PAUL WINTER COUNT ME IN reviews posted by members yet.

Ratings only

No PAUL WINTER ratings only posted yet.

Write/edit review

You must be logged in to write or edit review

JMA TOP 5 Jazz ALBUMS

Rating by members, ranked by custom algorithm
Albums with 30 ratings and more
A Love Supreme Post Bop
JOHN COLTRANE
Buy this album from our partners
Kind of Blue Cool Jazz
MILES DAVIS
Buy this album from our partners
The Black Saint and the Sinner Lady Progressive Big Band
CHARLES MINGUS
Buy this album from our partners
Blue Train Hard Bop
JOHN COLTRANE
Buy this album from our partners
My Favorite Things Hard Bop
JOHN COLTRANE
Buy this album from our partners

New Jazz Artists

New Jazz Releases

6 Eclectic Fusion
KROKOFANT
Buy this album from MMA partners
More new releases

New Jazz Online Videos

Alicante
RENAUD GARCIA-FONS
js· 1 day ago
She's Forty with Me
WILTON CRAWLEY
js· 1 day ago
Tall Tillie's Too Tight
WILTON CRAWLEY
js· 1 day ago
More videos

New JMA Jazz Forum Topics

More in the forums

New Site interactions

More...

Latest Jazz News

members-submitted

More in the forums

Social Media

Follow us