Genre: Jazz
The Complete 45 Sessions
Ike Quebec
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Bossa Nova Soul Samba (Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
Encounter!
Pepper Adams
Gene Ammons Story: The 78 Era
Gene Ammons
Amsterdam After Dark
George Coleman
Cat
Johnny Griffin
Straight No Filter
Hank Mobley
Boston 1950
Serge Chaloff
Music for Loving
Ben Webster
Complete Quartets with Sonny Clark
Grant Green
Complete Roost Recordings
Stan Getz
Classic Quartet: Complete Impulse! Studio Recordings
John Coltrane
In Holland: Dutch Treat!
Coleman Hawkins
Let the Good Times Roll: Anthology 1938-1953
Louis Jordan
Let Me Tell You 'Bout It [Bonus Tracks]
Leo Parker
Proper Introduction to Wynton Kelly: First Session
Wynton Kelly
Artist Selects
Lou Donaldson
Prestige Profiles, Vol. 10
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis
The Very Best Of Earl Bostic
Earl Bostic
Idle Moments
Blues; That's Me!
Illinois Jacquet
Blue and Sentimental
Finger Poppin' with the Horace Silver Quintet
Horace Silver Quintet
Back at the Chicken Shack
Jimmy Smith
Mark's Keyboard Repair
Money Mark
Grant Green & Sonny Clark
Talkin' Verve
Shirley Scott
Afrodesia [LRC Ltd]
Lonnie Smith
Legacy
Joey DeFrancesco/Jimmy Smith
Domino
Rahsaan Roland Kirk
Best of the Caravans
The Caravans
Forever Diana: Musical Memoirs
Diana Ross
Live: Era '87-'93
Guns N' Roses
Emotion Is Dead
The Juliana Theory
Complete Geffen Recordings
Joni Mitchell
Gold
Connie Francis
Deluxe Edition - August & Everything After
Counting Crows
Influenced by Coleman Hawkins and Ben Webster but definitely his own person, Ike Quebec was one of the finest swing-oriented tenor saxman of the 1940s and '50s. Though he was never an innovator, Quebec had a big, breathy sound that was distinctive and easily recognizable, and he was quite consistent when it came to came to down-home blues, sexy ballads, and up-tempo aggression. Originally a pianist, Quebec switched to tenor in the early '40s and showed that he had made the right decision on excellent 78s for Blue Note and Savoy (including his hit "Blue Harlem"). As a sideman, he worked with Benny Carter Read More