J.W. Pepper Catalogs

2015 Mid year Instrumental

J.W. Pepper Music Catalog

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Order Toll-Free! Call 1-800-345-6296 / FAX 1-800-260-1482 / Internet jwpepper.com / E-mail [email protected] Go to cart Blues & Swing I Left My Heart in San Francisco—arr. Quincy Jones. Quincy Jones wrote some incredible arrangements on very popular tunes for the Count Basie Orchestra. As recorded on This Time By Basie, Quincy's arrangement of I Left My Heart in San Francisco features great interplay between the ensemble playing the melody, and the piano with written solo fills. With a tempo around 108 bpm, and a relaxed swing feel, there's also short solo space for tenor saxophone, and the ranges are very moderate. This chart is playable by a lot of bands. It's a true classic! Highly recommended! 10368506 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55.00 4 I've Got You Under My Skin—Cole Porter/arr. Bill Cunliffe. Here's a medium swinger on this iconic Cole Porter standard with an easygoing feel at about 132 bpm. Featuring great ensemble passages as well as written or improvised solos for tenor sax, trumpet, and alto sax with an alto cadenza, it includes a sweet shout chorus, nice development, and a written trumpet range to B-flat. Oh, so nice! 10513917 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.00 H In the Mood—Joe Garland. This Glenn Miller classic is a must for every jazz band library! Carefully edited and available with a full score, this arrangement has everything you need to recreate the original including a trumpet solo, and a short call-and-response passage between the alto and tenor saxes. It's a guaranteed crowd-pleaser! 2090959 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50.00 l Jumpin' East of Java—Brian Setzer/arr. John Berry. From the Brian Setzer Orchestra's album "Vavroom," this high-energy swing chart gives the entire ensemble a workout. 10556774 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55.00 4 Moanin'—Bobby Timmons/arr. Dave Mills. This sultry blues tune by Bobby Timmons was made famous by Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers and makes a call and response swinger that should be part of every jazz library. It includes improvised solos for alto, tenor, trumpet or trombone. The ensemble section features some great ensemble writing based on famous solos from classic recordings. Here are classic jazz lines that lay just right for all instruments! Highly recommended! 10517423 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65.00 4 Moon River—Henry Mancini/arr. Billy Byers. As recorded by the Count Basie Orchestra on their album This Time by Basie, Billy Byers arranged a wonderful, easy-swinging masterpiece. Cleverly, he set this Mancini classic in 4/4 to accommodate the Basie band's iconic style. This is a terrific big band chart that belongs in every library right alongside I Can't Stop Loving You, Nice 'n Easy and I Left My Heart in San Francisco. There's space for a trumpet solo, and the ensemble writing is quite playable by most bands. This is oh, so nice and highly recommended! 10530081 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.00 4 Move (from Miles Davis' Birth of the Cool)— Denzil Best/arr. Mike Tomaro. Recorded by Miles Davis on his landmark album Birth of the Cool, this jazz standard was composed by Denzil Best using the same chord changes as Count Basie's Jumpin' at the Woodside. This exciting chart features an up-tempo swing style along with a fabulous soli for the saxes. This one is a great introduction to the music of a jazz icon! 10522914 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50.00 H Out of the Doghouse—Erik Morales. Arranger/ composer Erik Morales delivers! This out- standing shuffle chart sounds like a big old freight train coming down the tracks, and it just builds and builds! There's a wonderful section after the optional solos that features a powerful sax soli without the rhythm section, and there are great breaks for piano and drums throughout. There are also some independent bari sax lines and optional written solos for alto, tenor and guitar. The lead trumpet range is to written A above the staff and there's an optional ending with lead trumpet notes up to C. This is a hot chart! Our highest recommendation! Optional expanded instrumentation. 10068803 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.00 l Sack of Woe (Little Big Band)—Julian Adderley/arr. Mark Taylor. Mark Taylor has provided an outstanding little big band version of this famous Cannonball Adderley tune. Released in 1960, Sack of Woe features a soulful straight- eighth groove with a swing feel and works great in the little big band format. Instrumentation: six horns (ATB saxes, two trumpets, one trombone) plus four rhythm with optional additional parts for alto, tenor and trombone. An all-time favorite in the jazz repertoire. 10556794 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45.00 4 Sandu—Clifford Brown/arr. Chris Sharp. Clifford Brown's Sandu has long been a jam-session staple for anyone that wants to shred some E-flat blues. Chris Sharp delivers great ensemble writing that really swings in the chart's blow section. The familiar melody is featured with a trumpet and tenor sax duet at the top of the tune and returns with the duet at the end. Sandu also includes written or improvised solos for tenor sax and trumpet with a great "rhythm out" interlude between the solos. As if that isn't enough, there's an excellent sax section soli and a roaring shout chorus before the recap! Our highest recommendation! 10517429 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65.00 4 Saturday Morning Blues—Mike Tomaro. Mike Tomaro just takes his time in unfolding this out- standing study on the blues for big band! At around 60 bpm, it begins with a laidback solo piano introduction joined by a trumpet soloist leading to the first ensemble statement. It begins to get a little more down and dirty and gradually builds to the solo section. The solos are all about the blues with sultry backgrounds. Then the ensemble trades with the drummer and there's another solo section. Then the band starts to open up, and builds, and builds, and builds, all the while just laying back in that bluesy groove. They don't get any better than this! Very highly recommended! 10513201 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56.00 H Shiny Stockings—Frank Foster/arr. Greg Yasinitsky. Frank Foster's composition Shiny Stockings is one of the greatest jazz tunes ever for big band. Arranged by Greg Yasinitsky and scored at an accessible level, this chart has all the ingredients you expect plus a few short section solis and an ensemble shout chorus. This arrangement stays very close to the original, yet is more accessible for developing groups. Other features include a written solo for 2nd trumpet with the lead trumpet range to written A above the staff. This Basie classic belongs in every jazz library! Highly recommended! Optional expanded instrumentation. 10071900 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.00 H Sing, Sing, Sing—Louis Prima/trans. Mike Lewis. Here it is...perhaps the most recognizable swing tune of all time! This incredible transcription is as close as you're going to come to the original (which included clarinet and less than a full compliment of brass). This chart is scored for a standard 5 saxes, 4 trumpets, 4 trombones and rhythm, but aside from that, it is the original as played by Benny Goodman. Every lick is there, including all the Gene Krupa drum breaks! This chart is a must for every big band's library! 2411486 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60.00 4 Stompin' at the Savoy—arr. Greg Yasinitsky. After the initial statement, Greg Yasinitsky gives this Benny Goodman treasure an updated and contemporary flair while remaining true to the original. It's all there in this exciting chart... nice dynamic contrasts, a stop-time section, a sax section soli, ensemble interludes, a written or improvised trumpet 2 solo, and it's all played around 168 bpm. The lead trumpet range is to written B-flat above the staff and optional parts are included for expanded instrumentations. Solid with proven appeal! 10513990 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50.00 4 There Will Never Be Another You (Little Big Band)—Harry Warren/arr. Rick Stitzel. Set in a medium swing style, this chart for small band opens with a duet of trumpet and baritone sax on the iconic melody. The rest of the ensemble provides the accompaniment, then a tutti shout chorus follows the solo section. The solo spaces are for tenor and trumpet with suggested solos and chord/scale sheets included. Instrumentation: six horns (ATB saxes, two trumpets, one trombone) plus four rhythm with optional additional parts for alto, tenor and trombone. A marvelous setting of a familiar standard! 10490315 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45.00 4 Things Ain't What They Used to Be—Mercer Ellington/arr. Alan Baylock. Mercer Ellington's classic blues shuffle gets the Baylock treatment! The style is down home, the solos are for alto, trumpet, trombone, and tenor sax, and the lead trumpet range is to written G on top of the staff. Also included is a powerful Baylock-style shout chorus and optional parts for expanded instrumentations. It's a fun chart and it gets our highest recommendation! 10513911 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.00 4 Work Song—Nat Adderley/arr. Erik Morales. Wow! If Nat Adderley could hear this chart on his iconic jazz standard, he would be pleased! The first statement stays very close to the original, which is a good thing. The solos are for written or improvised alto and trumpet, and the solo backgrounds are simply wonderful. This swinger plays well at about 176 bmp, has excellent full-ensemble passages, a bari sax and rhythm section break before the last chorus, an exciting shout chorus, and great development. This chart has it all! Our highest recommendation! 10513905 Jazz Ensemble . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52.00 27

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