*WATCH THE VIDEO HERE:
Blues In The Moscow White
Nights Downloaded 391 times
http://archive.org/details/JonHammondBLUESINTHEMOSCOWWHITENIGHTSJONHAMMOND_1
Picture taken from our hotel room on 10th floor of
Hotel Rossiya - Red Square in the Moscow White Nights
Most of the day I stayed in the room practicing my instrument and looking out at Red Square. Jennifer and I wanted to get to the club early so that we could get a sound check and settle in. Faina
picked us up and we stuffed my organ and all our equipment in her compact car and off we went to Le Club in the Taganka Theatre Building. When we arrived the big friendly doormen picked up my heavy
cases like they were toothpicks and brought them up the stairs for me! Vladimir the sound engineer for the club was very smooth and professional, and a very nice guy. We got a good sound on the organ
and then came Eduard Zizak the great drummer! I had already met Eduard in New York the week before when he was there performing with Igor's quartet at Birdland. Eduard is an incredible drummer and
also a very nice guy. We made a little soundcheck and right away I could tell that he had listened to my music and we would lock up with some very tight grooves...no problem! But where was Igor? I
was hoping for a little mini-rehearsel with Igor but when I saw the public coming in to have dinner I knew it was too late for that! Igor arrived with his entourage and it was great to see him...he
told me not to worry and apologised for not coming earlier. Igor is in big demand with a very busy schedule, so I am very lucky and honored that he could take the time to perform with me together
even as his new cd album "Prophecy" was just released on the Universal Label. We had time only for a 5 minute soundcheck and I showed Igor my book. This was going to be a very spontaneous
performance, no doubt about it! We decided to record it, and Vladimir did a fantastic job on the recording on their new digital recording console that they had just brought back from New York. From
the first notes I knew that this would be one of those magic nights I would never forget. The response from the audience was wonderful. I could only say in Russsian, "Ya LuBlu Vas"...which means, I
love you all. And when I said the words to the people I got a great feeling back from them. First set was just fine and then on the break I was introduced to many press people and some fantastic
local musicians. I was very honored that they all came to greet me. And then Igor proudly introduced me to 2 of the legendary jazz musicians of Moscow-accordionist Vladimir Danilin and guitarist
Alexei Kuznezov. They said they had their instruments in the car and so yes we decided right away to make a live session together. It was incredible from the first song on the 2nd set, playing
together with these fantastic Moscow musicians! It felt like we had been playing together for 20 years. These musicians are some of the greatest I have ever heard and played together with. The
audience was loving every bit of it, just as much as I! I was so happy that Vladimir was getting it all on tape and Jennifer was also running the video machine and taking pictures also. By the end of
the night I was very satisfied with how everything went. Igor personally drove Jennifer and I back to the hotel in his nice car with fantastic sound system. Great night! Story:
http://community-4.webtv.net/GoldenPenMan/BLUESINTHEMOSCOW/ Youtube
http://youtu.be/-34rP08PwrY 12,013 Organist JON HAMMOND in concert with saxophonist IGOR BUTMAN, ALEXEI KUZNETZOV (gtr.), VLADIMIR DANILIN (accordion) & ED ZIZAK
(drums) togehter for the first time in MOSCOW RUSSIA at LE CLUB in THEATRE TAGANKA *JENNIFER-Camera, *Special Thanks: FAINA COBHAM *Official Site:
http://www.HammondCast.com Frankfurt Germany -- 2012 Annual Musikmesse Warm Up Party hosted by Jon Hammond Band in Jazzkeller Frankfurt -
Youtube
http://youtu.be/AD8I5axpmy8 "LATE RENT" Jon Hammond Show Theme Song as seen on MNN TV New York City Cable TV with Tony Lakatos tenor sax, Joe Berger guitar,
Giovanni Gulino drums, Jon Hammond at the Hammond Sk1 organ, special guest Lee Oskar harmonica. This performance marks 26 years consecutive attending Musikmesse Frankfurt and it was also on the
birthday of Jon Hammond March 20th, 2012 with a big chocolate on chocolate cake baked by Saray Pastanesi Baeckerei & Konditorei bakery on Mainzer Landstrasse 131. 60327 Frankfurt am Main
http://www.jonhammondband.com/ SFO Airport Maintenance -- This is the Ground Support Crew for America's Pride The Blue Angels folks, they just finished pulling
this United Boeing 737 with a thick rope, you can see it in bottom left corner of photo - Jon Hammond
Youtube
http://youtu.be/2C3KtLtMVm8 Blue Angels 2012 Fleet Week Air Show at SFO with Music from Jon Hammond Band
http://hammondcast.wordpress.com/2013/01/09/jons-journal-january-9-2013-americas-pride-blue-angels-us-army-blues/
Jon’s Journal January 9 2013 America’s Pride – Blue Angels – US Army Blues *WATCH THE VIDEO HERE: Blue Angels SFO Fleet Week Family Day Music Get Back in the Groove Downloaded 88 times
http://archive.org/details/BlueAngels2012FleetWeekAirShowAtSfoWithMusicFromJonHammondBand Youtube
http://youtu.be/2C3KtLtMVm8 Remembering the late great Max Roach on his birthday today...I can't say really Happy Birthday Max Roach because he is dead
unfortunately, but I can say to his very talented daughter Maxine Roach (cellist, member Local 802), Happy Birthday Wishes to your Family Maxine! I took this photo of Max Roach in 1981 when I
returned from Paris France - he is playing here at Keystone Korner Jazz Club in San Francisco
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1981_in_jazz Max
Roach Photograph by Jon Hammond
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Max_Roach_American_Jazz_Drummer_with_Odeon_Pope_saxophone_in_Keystone_Korner_photo_by_Jon_Hammond_1981.jpg
File:Max Roach American Jazz Drummer with Odeon Pope saxophone in Keystone Korner photo by Jon Hammond 1981 {{Information |Description={{en|1=Max Roach American Jazz Drummer with saxohonist Odeon
Pope at Keystone Korner San Francisco Tuesday February 22nd 1981 photo by Jon Hammond. Max Roach died August 17 2007 in Manhattan. Photo by Organist Jon Hammond Max Roach Wiki
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Max_Roach Maxwell Lemuel "Max" Roach (January 10, 1924 – August 16, 2007) was an American jazz percussionist, drummer, and
composer. A pioneer of bebop, Roach went on to work in many other styles of music, and is generally considered alongside the most important drummers in history.[1][2] He worked with many famous jazz
musicians, including Coleman Hawkins, Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk, Charles Mingus, Billy Eckstine, Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, Clifford Brown, Eric
Dolphy and Booker Little. Roach also led his own groups, and made numerous musical statements relating to the civil rights movement of African Americans. Early life and career Roach was born in the
Township of Newland, Pasquotank County, North Carolina, which borders the southern edge of the Great Dismal Swamp, to Alphonse and Cressie Roach. Many confuse this with Newland Town in Avery County.
Although Roach's birth certificate lists his date of birth as January 10, 1924,[3] Roach has been quoted by Phil Schaap as having stated that his family believed he was born on January 8, 1925.
Roach's family moved to the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York when he was 4 years old. He grew up in a musical home, his mother being a gospel singer. He started to play bugle in
parade orchestras at a young age. At the age of 10, he was already playing drums in some gospel bands. As an eighteen year-old fresh out of Boys High School in Brooklyn, (1942) he was called to fill
in for Sonny Greer, and play with the Duke Ellington Orchestra performing at the Paramount Theater. In 1942, Roach started to go out in the jazz clubs of the 52nd Street and at 78th Street &
Broadway for Georgie Jay's Taproom (playing with schoolmate Cecil Payne).[4] Roach's most significant innovations came in the 1940s, when he and jazz drummer Kenny Clarke devised a new concept of
musical time. By playing the beat-by-beat pulse of standard 4/4 time on the "ride" cymbal instead of on the thudding bass drum, Roach and Clarke developed a flexible, flowing rhythmic pattern that
allowed soloists to play freely. The new approach also left space for the drummer to insert dramatic accents on the snare drum, "crash" cymbal and other components of the trap set. By matching his
rhythmic attack with a tune's melody, Roach brought a newfound subtlety of expression to his instrument. He often shifted the dynamic emphasis from one part of his drum kit to another within a single
phrase, creating a sense of tonal color and rhythmic surprise.[1] The idea was to shatter musical conventions and take full advantage of the drummer's unique position. "In no other society", Roach
once observed, "do they have one person play with all four limbs."[5] While that approach is common today, when Clarke and Roach introduced the new style in the 1940s it was a revolutionary musical
advance. "When Max Roach's first records with Charlie Parker were released by Savoy in 1945," jazz historian Burt Korall wrote in the Oxford Companion to Jazz, "drummers experienced awe and
puzzlement and even fear." One of those awed drummers, Stan Levey, summed up Roach's importance: "I came to realize that, because of him, drumming no longer was just time, it was music."[1] He was
one of the first drummers (along with Kenny Clarke) to play in the bebop style, and performed in bands led by Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, Coleman Hawkins, Bud Powell, and Miles
Davis. Roach played on many of Parker's most important records, including the Savoy November 1945 session, a turning point in recorded jazz. Max Roach, Three Deuces, NYC, ca. October 1947.
Photography by William P. Gottlieb. [edit]1950s Roach studied classical percussion at the Manhattan School of Music from 1950–53, working toward a Bachelor of Music degree (the School was to award
him an Honorary Doctorate in 1990). In 1952, Roach co-founded Debut Records with bassist Charles Mingus. This label released a record of a May 15, 1953 concert, billed as 'the greatest concert ever',
which came to be known as Jazz at Massey Hall, featuring Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Bud Powell, Mingus and Roach. Also released on this label was the groundbreaking bass-and-drum free
improvisation, Percussion Discussion.[6] In 1954, he formed a quintet featuring trumpeter Clifford Brown, tenor saxophonist Harold Land, pianist Richie Powell (brother of Bud Powell), and bassist
George Morrow, though Land left the following year and Sonny Rollins soon replaced him. The group was a prime example of the hard bop style also played by Art Blakey and Horace Silver. Tragically,
this group was to be short-lived; Brown and Powell were killed in a car accident on the Pennsylvania Turnpike in June 1956. The first album Roach recorded after their deaths was Max Roach + 4. After
Brown and Powell's deaths, Roach continued leading a similarly configured group, with Kenny Dorham (and later the short-lived Booker Little) on trumpet, George Coleman on tenor and pianist Ray
Bryant. Roach expanded the standard form of hard-bop using 3/4 waltz rhythms and modality in 1957 with his album Jazz in 3/4 time. During this period, Roach recorded a series of other albums for the
EmArcy label featuring the brothers Stanley and Tommy Turrentine.[7] In 1955, he was the drummer for vocalist Dinah Washington at several live appearances and recordings. Appearing at the Newport
Jazz Festival with her in 1958 which was filmed and the 1954 live studio audience recording of Dinah Jams, considered to be one of the best and most overlooked vocal jazz albums of its genre.[8]
[edit]1960s-1970s In 1960 he composed the We Insist! his Freedom Now Suite with lyrics by Oscar Brown Jr., after being invited to contribute to commemorations of the hundredth anniversary of Abraham
Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. In 1962, he recorded the album Money Jungle, a collaboration with Mingus and Duke Ellington. This is generally regarded as one of the very finest trio albums ever
made.[9] In 1966, with his album Drums Unlimited (which includes several tracks that are entirely drums solos) he demonstrated that drums can be a solo instrument able to play theme, variations,
rhythmically cohesive phrases. He described his approach to music as "the creation of organized sound."[10] During the 1970s, Roach formed a musical organization—"M'Boom"—a percussion orchestra. Each
member of this unit composed for it and performed on many percussion instruments. Personnel included Fred King, Joe Chambers, Warren Smith, Freddie Waits, Roy Brooks, Omar Clay, Ray Mantilla,
Francisco Mora, and Eli Fountain.[10] [edit]1980s-1990s Keystone Korner, San Francisco, 1979 In the early 1980s, he began presenting entire concerts solo, proving that this multi-percussion
instrument could fulfill the demands of solo performance and be entirely satisfying to an audience. He created memorable compositions in these solo concerts; a solo record was released by Baystate, a
Japanese label. One of these solo concerts is available on video, which also includes a filming of a recording date for "Chattahoochee Red," featuring his working quartet, Odean Pope, Cecil
Bridgewater and Calvin Hill. He embarked on a series of duet recordings. Departing from the style of presentation he was best known for, most of the music on these recordings is free improvisation,
created with the avant-garde musicians Cecil Taylor, Anthony Braxton, Archie Shepp, and Abdullah Ibrahim. He created duets with other performers: a recorded duet with the oration by Martin Luther
King, "I Have a Dream"; a duet with video artist Kit Fitzgerald, who improvised video imagery while Roach spontaneously created the music; a classic duet with his lifelong friend and associate Dizzy
Gillespie; a duet concert recording with Mal Waldron. He wrote music for theater, such as plays written by Sam Shepard, presented at La Mama E.T.C. in New York City. He found new contexts for
presentation, creating unique musical ensembles. One of these groups was "The Double Quartet." It featured his regular performing quartet, with personnel as above, except Tyrone Brown replacing Hill;
this quartet joined with "The Uptown String Quartet," led by his daughter Maxine Roach, featuring Diane Monroe, Lesa Terry and Eileen Folson. Another ensemble was the "So What Brass Quintet," a group
comprising five brass instrumentalists and Roach, no chordal instrument, no bass player. Much of the performance consisted of drums and horn duets. The ensemble consisted of two trumpets, trombone,
French horn and tuba. Musicians included Cecil Bridgewater, Frank Gordon, Eddie Henderson, Rod McGaha, Steve Turre, Delfeayo Marsalis, Robert Stewart, Tony Underwood, Marshall Sealy, Mark Taylor and
Dennis Jeter. Roach presented his music with orchestras and gospel choruses. He performed a concerto with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. He wrote for and performed with the Walter White gospel choir
and the John Motley Singers. Roach performed with dancers: the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the Dianne McIntyre Dance Company, the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company. Roach surprised his
fans by performing in a hip hop concert, featuring the artist-rapper Fab Five Freddy and the New York Break Dancers. He expressed the insight that there was a strong kinship between the outpouring of
expression of these young black artists and the art he had pursued all his life.[11] Not content to expand on the musical territory he had already become known for, Roach spent the decades of the
1980s and 1990s continually finding new forms of musical expression and presentation. Though he ventured into new territory during a lifetime of innovation, he kept his contact with his musical point
of origin. He performed with the Beijing Trio, with pianist Jon Jang and erhu player Jeibing Chen. His last recording, Friendship, was with trumpet master Clark Terry, the two long-standing friends
in duet and quartet. His last performance was at the 50th anniversary celebration of the original Massey Hall concert, in Toronto, where he performed solo on the hi-hat.[12] In 1994, Roach also
appeared on Rush drummer Neil Peart's Burning For Buddy performing "The Drum Also Waltzes", Part 1 and 2 on Volume 1 of the Volume 2 series during the 1994 All-Star recording sessions.[13]
[edit]Death The grave of Max Roach Max Roach died in the early morning on August 16, 2007 in Manhattan.[14] He was survived by five children: sons Daryl and Raoul, and daughters Maxine, Ayo and Dara.
Over 1,900 people attended his funeral at Riverside Church in Manhattan, New York City on August 24, 2007. Max Roach was interred at the Woodlawn Cemetery, Bronx, NY. In a funeral tribute to Roach,
then-Lieutenant Governor of New York David Paterson compared the musician's courage to that of Paul Robeson, Harriet Tubman and Malcolm X, saying that "No one ever wrote a bad thing about Max Roach's
music or his aura until 1960, when he and Charlie Mingus protested the practices of the Newport Jazz Festival."[15] [edit]Personal life Two children, son Daryl Keith and daughter Maxine, were born
from his first marriage with Mildred Roach. In 1956 he met singer Barbara Jai (Johnson) and fathered another son, Raoul Jordu. He continued to play as a freelance while studying composition at the
Manhattan School of Music. He graduated in 1952. During the period 1962–1970, Roach was married to the singer Abbey Lincoln, who had performed on several of Roach's albums. Twin daughters, Ayodele
Nieyela and Dara Rashida, were later born to Roach and his third wife, Janus Adams Roach. He has four grandchildren: Kyle Maxwell Roach, Kadar Elijah Roach, Maxe Samiko Hinds, and Skye Sophia
Sheffield. Long involved in jazz education, in 1972 he joined the faculty of the University of Massachusetts Amherst in Amherst. In the early 2000s, Roach became less active from the onset of
hydrocephalus-related complications. From the 1970s through the mid-1990s Roach taught at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.[16] [edit]Honors He was given a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant
in 1988, cited as a Commander of the Order of Arts and Letters in France (1989),[17] twice awarded the French Grand Prix du Disque, elected to the International Percussive Art Society's Hall of Fame
and the Downbeat Magazine Hall of Fame, awarded Harvard Jazz Master, celebrated by Aaron Davis Hall, given eight honorary doctorate degrees, including degrees awarded by Medgar Evers College, CUNY,
the University of Bologna, Italy and Columbia University.[18] While spending the later years of his life at the Mill Basin Sunrise assisted living home, in Brooklyn, Max was honored with a
proclamation honoring his musical achievements by Brooklyn borough president Marty Markowitz.[19] In 1986 the London borough of Lambeth named a park in Brixton after him.[20][21] - Roach was able to
officially open it when he visited the UK that year. Roach was inducted into the North Carolina Music Hall of Fame in 2009. As leader 1953 : Max Roach Quartet (Fantasy) 1953 : Max Roach and his
Sextet (Debut) 1953 : Max Roach Quartet featuring Hank Mobley (Debut) 1956 : Max Roach + 4 (EmArcy) 1957 : Jazz in ¾ Time (EmArcy) 1957 : The Max Roach 4 Plays Charlie Parker (EmArcy) 1958 : MAX
(Argo) 1958 : Max Roach + 4 on the Chicago Scene (Mercury) 1958 : Max Roach/Art Blakey (with Art Blakey) 1958 : Max Roach + 4 at Newport (EmArcy) 1958 : Max Roach with the Boston Percussion Ensemble
(EmArcy) 1958 : Deeds, Not Words (Riverside) - also released as Conversation 1958 : Award-Winning Drummer (Time) - also released as Max Roach 1958 : Max Roach/Bud Shank - Sessions (with Bud Shank)
1958 : The Defiant Ones - with Booker Little 1959 : The Many Sides of Max (Mercury) 1959 : Rich Versus Roach (Mercury) - with Buddy Rich 1959 : Quiet as It's Kept (Mercury) 1959 : Moon Faced and
Starry Eyed (Mercury) - with Abbey Lincoln 1960 : Long as You're Living (Enja) - released 1984 1960 : Parisian Sketches (Mercury) 1960 : We Insist! (Candid) 1961 : Percussion Bitter Sweet (Impulse!)
- with Mal Waldron 1962 : It's Time (Impulse!) - with Mal Waldron 1962 : Speak, Brother, Speak! (Fantasy) 1964 : The Max Roach Trio featuring the Legendary Hasaan (Atlantic) - with Hasaan Ibn Ali
1966 : Drums Unlimited (Atlantic) 1968 : Members, Don't Git Weary (Atlantic) 1971 : Lift Every Voice and Sing (Atlantic) - with the J.C. White Singers 1976 : Force: Sweet Mao-Suid Afrika '76 (duo
with Archie Shepp) 1976 : Nommo (Victor) 1977 : Max Roach Quartet Live in Tokyo (Denon) 1977 : The Loudstar (Horo) 1977 : Max Roach Quartet Live In Amsterdam - It's Time (Baystate) 1977 : Solos
(Baystate) 1977 : Streams of Consciousness - duo with Dollar Brand 1978 : Confirmation (Fluid Records) 1978 : Birth and Rebirth - duo with Anthony Braxton (Black Saint) 1979 : The Long March - duo
with Archie Shepp (Hathut) 1979 : Historic Concerts - duo with Cecil Taylor (Black Saint) 1979 : One in Two - Two in One - duo with Anthony Braxton (Hathut) 1979 : Pictures in a Frame (Soul Note)
1980 : Chattahoochee Red (Columbia) 1982 : Swish - duo with Connie Crothers (New Artists) 1982 : In the Light (Soul Note) 1983 : Live at Vielharmonie (Soul Note) 1984 : Scott Free (Soul Note) 1984 :
It's Christmas Again (Soul Note) 1984 : Survivors (Soul Note) 1985 : Easy Winners (Soul Note) 1986 : Bright Moments (Soul Note) 1989 : Max + Dizzy: Paris 1989 - duo with Dizzy Gillespie (A&M)
1989 : Homage to Charlie Parker (A&M) 1991 : To the Max! (Enja) 1995 : Max Roach With The New Orchestra Of Boston And The So What Brass Quintet (Blue Note) 1999 : Beijing Trio (Asian Improv) 2002
: Friendship - (with Clark Terry) (Columbia) With Clifford Brown 1954: Best Coast Jazz (Emarcy) 1954: Clifford Brown All Stars (Emarcy, [released 1956]) 1954: Jam Session (EmArcy, 1954) - with
Maynard Ferguson and Clark Terry 1954 : Brown and Roach Incorporated (EmArcy) 1954 : Daahoud (Mainstream) - released 1973 1955 : Clifford Brown with Strings (EmArcy) 1954-55 : Clifford Brown and Max
Roach (EmArcy) 1955 : Study in Brown (EmArcy) 1954 : More Study in Brown 1956 : Clifford Brown and Max Roach at Basin Street (EmArcy) 1979 : Live at the Bee Hive (Columbia Records) With M'Boom 1973 :
Re: Percussion (Strata-East Records) 1979 : M'Boom (Columbia) 1984 : Collage (Soul Note) 1992 : Live at S.O.B.'s New York (Blue Moon Records) [edit]As sideman With Don Byas Savoy Jam Party (1946)
With Sonny Clark Sonny Clark Trio (Blue Note, 1957) With Jimmy Cleveland Introducing Jimmy Cleveland and His All Stars (EmArcy, 1955) With Al Cohn Cohn's Tones (1953) With Miles Davis Birth of the
Cool (Capitol, 1949) Conception (Prestige, 1951) With John Dennis New Piano Expressions (1955) With Kenny Dorham Jazz Contrasts (Riverside, 1957) With Billy Eckstine The Metronome All Stars (1953)
With Duke Ellington Paris Blues (United Artists, 1961) Money Jungle (United Artists, 1962) - with Charles Mingus With Maynard Ferguson Jam Session featuring Maynard Ferguson (EmArcy, 1954) With Dizzy
Gillespie Diz and Getz (Verve, 1953) - with Stan Getz The Bop Session (Sonet, 1975) - with Sonny Stitt, John Lewis, Hank Jones and Percy Heath With Stan Getz Opus BeBop (1946) With Benny Golson The
Modern Touch (Riverside, 1957) With Johnny Griffin Introducing Johnny Griffin (Blue Note, 1956) With Slide Hampton Drum Suite (1962) With Coleman Hawkins Rainbow Mist (1944) Coleman Hawkins and His
All Stars (1944) The Hawk Flies (1946) With Joe Holiday Mambo Jazz (1953) With J.J. Johnson Mad Be Bop (1946) First Place (1957) With Thad Jones The Magnificent Thad Jones (Blue Note, 1956) With
Abbey Lincoln That's Him! (Riverside, 1957) Straight Ahead (Riverside, 1961) With Booker Little Out Front (Candid, 1961) With Howard McGhee The McGhee-Navarro Sextet (1950) With Gil Melle New Faces,
New Sounds (Blue Note, 1952) With Charles Mingus The Charles Mingus Quintet & Max Roach (Debut, 1955) With Thelonious Monk The Complete Genius (Blue Note, 1952) Brilliant Corners (Riverside,
1956) With Herbie Nichols Herbie Nichols Trio (Blue Note, 1955) With Charlie Parker Town Hall, New York, June 22, 1945 (1945) - with Dizzy Gillespie The Complete Savoy Studio Recordings (1945-48)
Lullaby in Rhythm (1947) Charlie Parker on Dial (Dial, 1947) The Band that Never Was (1948) Bird on 52nd Street (1948) Bird at the Roost (1948) Charlie Parker – Complete Sessions on Verve (Verve,
1949-53) Charlie Parker in France (1949) Live at Rockland Palace (1952) Yardbird: DC-53 (1953) With Bud Powell The Bud Powell Trip (1947) The Amazing Bud Powell (Blue Note, 1951) With Sonny Rollins
Work Time (Prestige, 1955) Sonny Rollins Plus 4 (Prestige, 1956) Tour de Force (Prestige, 1956) Rollins Plays for Bird (Prestige, 1956) Saxophone Colossus (Prestige, 1956) Freedom Suite (Riverside,
1958) Stuttgart 1963 Concert (1963) With Hazel Scott Relaxed Piano Moods (1955) With Sonny Stitt Sonny Stitt/Bud Powell/J. J. Johnson (Prestige, 1949-50 [1956]) - with J. J. Johnson and Bud Powell
With Stanley Turrentine Stan 'The Man' Turrentine (1960) With Tommy Turrentine Tommy Turrentine (1960) With George Wallington The George Wallington Trip and Septet (1951) With Dinah Washington Dinah
Jams (EmArcy, 1954) With Randy Weston Uhuru Afrika (Roulette, 1960) With Joe Wilder The Music of George Gershwin: I Sing of Thee (1956) With Various Artists The Stars of Modern Jazz at Carnegie
Hall'(1949) Newport in New York ‘72 (1972) - Roach on 2 tracks only — with Odean Pope, Odean Pope and Max Roach at North Beach San Francisco Jon's Journal, January 10 2013, Moscow White Nights,
Frankfurt, Musikmesse, Jazz, Blues, NAMM Show, Organ, Accordion, Musicians Union, Local 802, Ambassador