Jazz Samba

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Jazz Samba
Jazz Samba cover
Studio album by Stan Getz/Charlie Byrd
Released 20 April 1962
Recorded 13 February 1962
Genre Jazz
Bossa nova
Length 35:37
Label MGM/Verve
Producer Creed Taylor
Professional reviews
Stan Getz/Charlie Byrd chronology
Stan Getz and Bob Brookmeyer
(1961)
Jazz Samba
(1962)
Getz/Gilberto
(1964)

Jazz Samba is a bossa nova LP by Stan Getz and Charlie Byrd, released on the Verve label on February 13, 1962.

Jazz Samba was the first major bossa-nova album on the American jazz scene, and is often called the best-selling jazz album of all time.[citation needed] It was the real start of the bossa-nova excitement in America, which peaked in the mid-1960s. Though Stan Getz was the featured star of the album, it was very strongly inspired and designed by the guitarist Charlie Byrd. They were joined by two bassists (Keter Betts and Charlie's brother Gene (Joe) Byrd), and two drummers (Buddy Deppenschmidt and Bill Reichenbach) for the recording at All Souls Church, Unitarian in Washington, DC on 13 February 1962, and it was released on 20 April 1962 as Verve LP V6-8432. Although it is often described as music by Brazilian composer Antonio Carlos Jobim, only two of the seven tracks on the album are Jobim compositions ("Desafinado" and "One Note Samba (Samba de Uma Nota Só)"), the rest being by other Brazilian composers and by Charlie Byrd. Getz won the Grammy for Best Jazz Performance of 1963 for the track "Desafinado", and went on to make many other bossa-nova recordings, most notably with João Gilberto and Astrud Gilberto, and most famously The Girl From Ipanema.

[edit] Track listing

  1. "Desafinado" – 5:52
  2. "Samba Dees Days" – 3:35
  3. "O Pato (The Duck)" – 2:34
  4. "Samba Triste" – 4:44
  5. "One Note Samba (Samba de Uma Nota Só)" – 6:12
  6. "É Luxo Só" – 3:43
  7. "Baia" – 6:49
  8. "Desafinado" (Bonus Track on CD reissue) – 2:00

[edit] Chart positions

Year Chart Position
1963 Billboard Pop Albums (Billboard 200) (stereo) 1
Preceded by
Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music
by Ray Charles
Billboard 200 number-one album (stereo)
March 9 - March 15, 1963
Succeeded by
Days of Wine and Roses by Andy Williams
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