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"One Big Holiday" is a song by American rock band My Morning Jacket and is featured on their 2003 album It Still Moves. It is also featured on the band's 2006 live concert CD and DVD Okonokos . It is their most well-known song, behind " I'm Amazed ".
Ouroboros is the sixth studio album by Ray LaMontagne, released on March 4, 2016.It features My Morning Jacket's frontman Jim James, who also produced the record. [1] Lead single "Hey, No Pressure" debuted online on January 20, 2016. [2]
Bobby Tucker (born Robert Nathaniel Tucker; January 8, 1923 – April 12, 2007) [1] was a pianist and arranger during the jazz era from the 1940s into the 1960s. He is most famous for being Billie Holiday's accompanist from 1946 to 1949 and Billy Eckstine's from 1950 to 1993.
One Big Holiday is a short documentary film about the band My Morning Jacket, and their relationship with their hometown of Louisville, Kentucky.Shot over a period of one week in October 2010, it chronicles the preparations of the band as they readied for a homecoming concert in the newly constructed downtown arena.
Timmons moved to New York in 1954. [1] He played with Kenny Dorham in 1956, [6] making his recording debut with the trumpeter in a live set in May of that year. He went on to play and record with Chet Baker in 1956–57 (bassist Scott LaFaro was part of this band for a time [7]), Sonny Stitt in 1957, and Maynard Ferguson in 1957–58.
Among those vocals, Billie Holiday and Teddy Wilson made fourteen sides together in 1935 alone. [9] From 1939 to 1942, he recorded for Columbia Records. He also left his residency with Goodman's band and formed his own fifteen-piece big band in 1939, but it only lasted around a year due to the lack of individuality in his band. [10]
A largely uneventful, if nonetheless relaxingly swinging set, Lightsey deftly walks through the chords with consummate skill. An underrated performer, the pianist is a skillful interpreter of American song, a performer who understands the meanings of tunes and infuses them with his own interpretations.
John Lewis wrote all of the compositions. [2]: 9 The first, "Bel", was written for this recording and is an "affirmative blues with altered chord changes and a slightly [Thelonious] Monkish line".