alex I listened to the tunes from the "Reds Good Groove" album.
Another great session by Red and co. Of the 4 sidemen just Philly Joe Jones played with Red a bunch of times yet the group was locked in. That album is on my list to buy.
Here is another of Reds recordings with Coltrane and Byrd:
https://www.amazon.com/Soul-Junction-Red-Garland-Quintet/dp/B000000YR0/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_1?keywords=red...
Again, I don't have the album by Red but I have it in its entirety on the Coltrane "Side Steps" box set
a couple from Soul Junction:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=31dwHVGKx3w
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYFnCJ80axc
It has been said (by Miles Davis among others) that Red Garland was a boxer who fought at welterweight and once fought Sugar Ray Robinson. I have researched this and cannot find a professional boxer named Red Garland on Boxrec (the number one source for career profiles of every pro boxer since boxing began). I am thinking that Red was an amateur who never turned pro. Or he could have fought as a pro under a different name which was popular during that time (Sugar Ray Robinson's real name was Walker Smith Jr.). I am just as passionate about boxing and its history as I am with jazz. I am leaning towards Garland never turning pro.
I’ve been waiting for the A. Cohen review.....
Another great session by Red and co. Of the 4 sidemen just Philly Joe Jones played with Red a bunch of times yet the group was locked in. That album is on my list to buy.
Here is another of Reds recordings with Coltrane and Byrd:
https://www.amazon.com/Soul-Junction-Red-Garland-Quintet/dp/B000000YR0/ref=sr_1_fkmr1_1?keywords=red...
Again, I don't have the album by Red but I have it in its entirety on the Coltrane "Side Steps" box set
a couple from Soul Junction:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=31dwHVGKx3w
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYFnCJ80axc
It has been said (by Miles Davis among others) that Red Garland was a boxer who fought at welterweight and once fought Sugar Ray Robinson. I have researched this and cannot find a professional boxer named Red Garland on Boxrec (the number one source for career profiles of every pro boxer since boxing began). I am thinking that Red was an amateur who never turned pro. Or he could have fought as a pro under a different name which was popular during that time (Sugar Ray Robinson's real name was Walker Smith Jr.). I am just as passionate about boxing and its history as I am with jazz. I am leaning towards Garland never turning pro.
I’ve been waiting for the A. Cohen review.....