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Lester Young jazz poster - Live in Washington, DC - 1956

Lester Young jazz poster - Live in Washington, DC - 1956

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SecondTakeJazzArt presents...
a high-quality unframed poster featuring original artwork commemorating some fan-favorite live performances from jazz history:

Lester Young Quartet
"Live in Washington, D.C., 1956"

the December 3–8, 1956 gig at Olivia Davis's Patio Lounge in Washington, D.C.

featuring Lester Young  — aka "Pres" or "Prez" — (tenor sax) with Bill Potts (piano), Norman Williams (bass), and Jim Lucht (drums) — with additional sets by Tommy Chase (piano)

Since his earliest work in the 1930s with Count Basie and Billie Holiday, Lester Young has been indisputably one of the most influential jazz musicians ever, and he remains a potent source of inspiration for most players to this day!

His trademark tenor saxophone approach stood apart from the more established "big-toned" sound of Coleman Hawkins, Herschel Evans, Chu Berry, and others. Lester preferred a lighter, thinner sound with less vibrato and an improvisational concept that married long, flowing melodic lines with novel note choices that implied extended harmonies. Since the Swing Era, countless trailblazers have cited Lester Young as one of their primary influences (pioneers like Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, Gil Evans, Quincy Jones, Charles Mingus, Stan Getz, Sonny Rollins, and others), and they have routinely credited Lester's innovations as fundamental to the emergence of bebop, cool jazz, modal jazz, bossa nova, third stream, and other jazz movements.

And Lester's December 1956 engagement in Washington, D.C. — forming a quartet with the house trio at Olivia Davis's Patio Lounge — would prove a late-career triumph. The off-the-cuff recordings pianist Bill Potts made of the gig are a revelation, capturing numerous albums' worth of masterful performances by 47-year-old Lester, with tasty accompaniment by Potts and his trio.

Perhaps inspired by his success at the Patio Lounge, Lester continued to experience something of a comeback over the next two years. In 1957, he famously appeared on television as part of "The Sound of Jazz" revue program (playing what many consider a masterpiece solo, a single brilliant chorus of the blues on Billie Holiday's "Fine and Mellow"), and he triumphantly reunited with Count Basie and his orchestra at the Newport Jazz Festival in 1957 (featured gloriously of "Lester Leaps In" and "Polkadots and Moonbeams"). And in 1958, he recorded some sweet albums with trumpeters Harry "Sweets" Edison and Roy Eldridge. And then, in March 1959, Lester's ailing health caught up with him, and he passed away at the age of just 49. The jazz world mourned the loss of yet another one of its giants, and the long, relaxed tracks captured that week in '56 at the Patio Lounge now stand out as some of Lester Young's very best live recordings and offer an enduring testament to his talent.

A quick bit of trivia: after roughly a two-year run as a top D.C. jazz spot — featuring star power from the likes of Dizzy Gillespie, Billie Holiday Clifford Brown, Max Roach, Miles Davis, Stan Getz, Erroll Garner, Art Tatum, Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, and others — the short-lived Patio Lounge shuttered promptly after Lester's engagement! Talk about going out on a high note!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lester_Young


IMPORTANT INFO

 

1) Our posters are new. First and foremost, all our posters are MODERN CREATIONS — they are NOT vintage pieces or antiques! Our posters are printed on-demand from our own ORIGINAL art files that we've created ourselves within the last few years. (Read on for more details.)

2) Bring your own frames. We offer our posters UNFRAMED ONLY! Many of our preview images demonstrate how our posters look framed in various real-world environments; however, these images are for ILLUSTRATIVE PURPOSES ONLY — we do NOT include frames when you order our posters! Offering our posters UNFRAMED ONLY helps us keep our production and shipping prices lower, allows us to offer FREE U.S. shipping on our posters, and lets our customers choose their own frame styles and materials to best match their taste, décor, and budget. (Thousands of inexpensive, easy-to-use framing options are available: with most, you just undo the clips on the back, slide in the poster, and redo the clips.)

3) Keep your cool. If you do wish to frame or mount our posters, do NOT use dry mount or heat press processes on them — doing so may DAMAGE them! Our posters are special digital prints that are prepared using vivid inks and finishes that can make them HEAT-SENSITIVE. (Instead, we recommend applying archival double-sided adhesive film; light misting with a pressure-sensitive archival spray adhesive such as Scotch/3M Spray Mount or Super 77; judicious application of archival double-sided tape; or mounting to peel-and-stick foam core/mounting board.) It's worth noting, however, that most folks who frame our posters skip adhesives altogether — they typically buy the right-size "ready to hang" frame for their poster and simply insert it freely into the frame. No muss, no fuss. Works like a charm!

4) Screens aren't paper. Please note that digital images are typically MORE VIBRANT than printed posters. Also, due to printing variations and editorial decisions, you can expect that the colors, details, etc. in the actual posters you receive may vary somewhat from their representations here. (Some preview images we show have been WATERMARKED for security purposes. Don't worry — these marks do NOT appear on the finished product.)

5) Perfectly imperfect. In general, our posters look what we like to call "PERFECTLY IMPERFECT." The events they publicize occurred in the distant past, and therefore the original source materials from which they derive often include not-so-minor COSMETIC FLAWS — folds, creases, scratches, spots, marks, smears, ghosting, discolorations, printing glitches, etc. In addition, some of the primary vintage advertising pieces contain TYPESETTING ERRORS — mistakes, typos, misspellings, etc. We elect to leave almost all of these issues INTACT. This serves to reflect the rushed nature of publicizing live jazz (with its often hurried programming and last-minute personnel changes), and when names are misspelled, these goofs reveal how some of the now-famous participants were still relatively early in their careers and not yet widely known. We always aim to strike a balance when preparing these "antique" materials for modern printing — holding onto their nostalgic, vintage-looking charm as much as possible — "warts and all" — while fixing issues primarily when they significantly hinder legibility. (Please be sure to ZOOM IN on our preview images to examine each poster closely. If possible, we recommend viewing on a desktop vs. mobile.)

6) A best-in-class experience. Our thousands of satisfied customers agree: posters from SecondTakeJazzArt are an outstanding value! To print our superior-quality posters, we use state-of-the-art digital presses, special vivid inks and finishes, and premium paper stock (typically matte satin 80# cover stock [220 GSM] or 45# bond [170 GSM]). And we pride ourselves on providing truly exceptional customer service. (For your reference, our customer feedback is overwhelmingly positive, and our return rate usually hovers around 0.5% — just 5 units returned out of every 1,000 ordered — and most of those are exchanges!)

 And where do these posters come from?

Our mission at SecondTakeJazzArt is to produce high-quality visuals that commemorate celebrated live performances by jazz legends from the distant past. We particularly focus on renowned club or concert appearances that have been preserved by fan-favorite recordings — legendary shows for which little to no advertising ephemera survives (or was ever created.

SecondTakeJazzArt strives to fill in these gaps with carefully researched, highly detailed facsimiles of said missing ephemera. Our poster designs combine the verifiable performance information with vintage source materials (imagery, branding, type, etc.) and original elements (derived from or inspired by contemporaneous advertisements of the same/similar events in posters, handbills, newspapers, magazines, festival programs, album covers, etc.).

In general, the posters we've created for SecondTakeJazzArt fall into three categories:
1) some are our own wholly new original designs; (aka, "recreations" — new posters that we've designed ourselves to commemorate specific gigs or concerts);
2) others are our own original enhanced designs (aka, "refittings" — new versions of vintage poster designs that we've significantly edited, adjusted, reconfigured, customized, etc. ourselves to commemorate specific gigs or concerts); and
3) some are our own original upgraded designs (aka, "reprints" — new straight reproductions of vintage posters that we've painstakingly retouched ourselves).

SecondTakeJazzArt produces decorative tributes that aim to delight the viewer, not forgeries or fakes that aim to deceive them. Our goals are to either faithfully recreate and/or authentically mimic something close to what might have been or reproduce in higher fidelity what's largely been lost.

We sincerely hope you do enjoy our posters, and find them to be worthy constituents of your home or office décor.

All posters designed and printed in the U.S.A.

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