South of the Border (Charlie Parker album) explained

South of the Border
Type:studio
Artist:Charlie Parker
Cover:File:South of the Border Charlie Parker.jpg
Released:1952 (LP)
1995 (CD)
Genre:Latin jazz
Label:Mercury, Verve
Prev Title:Bird and Diz
Prev Year:1952
Next Title:Jazz at Massey Hall
Next Year:1953

South of the Border is a studio album by jazz saxophonist Charlie Parker, first released in 1952 for Mercury Records as a 10" LP. An expanded release was made on CD by Verve Records in 1995, and all tracks were included on Verve's box set .

Critical reception

The Penguin Guide to Jazz noted, "Time, surely, to put paid to snobbery about these lovely records," and rated the original album 3 of 4 stars and the Definitive Records re-release 2.5 of 4 stars.[1] Richard Ginell of Allmusic commented, "Bird's improvisational style changed hardly at all in a Latin setting. He continued to run off his patented lightning bop licks over the congas and bongos and they just happened to interlock with the grooves quite snugly, although he did adapt his phrasing of the tunes themselves to suit their rhythmic lines."

Track listing

  1. "Mango Mangue" (Marion Sunshine, Gilberto Valdes) – 2:54
  2. "Okiedoke" (René Hernández, Machito) – 3:02
  3. "No Noise" (John Bartee) – 5:52
  4. "My Little Suede Shoes" (Parker) – 3:04
  5. "Un Poquito de Tu Amor" (Xavier Cugat, Arthur Freed) – 2:41
  6. "Why Do I Love You?" (Oscar Hammerstein II, Jerome Kern) – 3:06
  7. "Tico-Tico" (Jose Abreu, Zequinha de Abreu, Ervin Drake, Aloysio Oliveira) – 2:44
  8. "Fiesta" (Fernando Brown, Joan Manuel Serrat, traditional) – 2:49
  9. "La Cucaracha" (traditional) – 2:43
  10. "Mama Inez" (Louis Wolfe Gilbert, Eliseo Grenet) – 2:50
  11. "Estrellita" (Vito Picone, Arthur Venosa) – 2:43
  12. "La Paloma" (traditional) – 2:39
  13. "Begin the Beguine" (Cole Porter) – 3:12
  14. "Afro-Cuban Jazz Suite" (Arturo O'Farrill, Chico O'Farrill) – 17:14

Personnel

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cook, Richard . . 2006 . Penguin . 8th . 1018–19.