Blues March

Jazz composition by Benny Golson From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"Blues March" is a composition by Benny Golson. It was first recorded for Blue Mitchell's Riverside album Big 6 on July 2 and 3, 1958,[1][2] and has become a jazz standard.[2]

Quick facts Song by Blue Mitchell, from the album Big 6 ...
"Blues March"
Song by Blue Mitchell
from the album Big 6
RecordedJuly 2 and 3, 1958
GenreJazz
LabelRiverside
ComposerBenny Golson
ProducerOrrin Keepnews
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Composition and recording

The composition is in 4
4
time.[3] It was influenced by New Orleans marching bands, and "starts in long meter form and transforms back into regular time."[4] Its straightforward harmony and separate sections make it ideal for improvisation.[4] In the view of Leonard Feather, "the theme, with its slight bugle-call orientation, has a period quality that ties the work together".[3]

Although some sources state that its first recorded version is the well known one by Art Blakey's band on his album Moanin'[4] (recorded on October 30, 1958[5]), the first version was on trumpeter Blue Mitchell's Big 6, which was recorded on July 2 and 3, 1958.[1][2] This album was also Mitchell's first as leader.[1]

Influence

"Blues March" is commonly played by military and other marching bands.[4]

References

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