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  1. Henry (Hank) Mobley (Eastman, Georgia, 7 de julio de 1930 - Filadelfia, 30 de mayo de 1986) fue un saxofonista y compositor estadounidense de jazz, representante del hard bop. Su estilo ha sido caracterizado como un término medio entre el agresivo y denso de John Coltrane o Sonny Rollins, y el suave y cool de Stan Getz o Lester Young.

  2. 1 de may. de 1997 · "The Black Disciple" features both Burrell and Hancock stretching out with stellar performances, and Mobley's tenor solo offers a fine example of his full tone and fluid technique.

  3. No Room for Squares is an album by jazz tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley recorded on March 7 & October 2, 1963 and released on the Blue Note label.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Hank_MobleyHank Mobley - Wikipedia

    Roach introduced Mobley to the New York jazz scene in 1951, and over the next two years the latter began composing and recording tunes of his own. He played with multiple R&B bands during this period, and played for two weeks in 1953 with the Duke Ellington Orchestra when saxophonist Jimmy Hamilton was recovering from dental work. [2]

  5. 5 de mar. de 2016 · Hank Mobley’s relaxed, smokin’ solo is a gem. The angelic choir of Cristo Redentor exudes high drama and brings about the soothing feeling of a dirge. The opener Elijah is upbeat and includes a Hit The Road Jack-type bass cadenza, but Byrd is in a restraintive, pensive mood.

  6. Hank Mobley does his usual classy, smooth thang on the tenor sax, vibin’ nicely with Byrd’s trumpet, and you’ve got the legendary Herbie Hancock on piano, who is arguably the driving force here.

  7. 3 de jul. de 2015 · This is a seven-piece bop combo featuring five very different, very strong soloists: trumpeter and leader Donald Byrd, Hank Mobley on tenor sax, Kenny Burrell on guitar, Herbie Hancock on piano and Donald Best on vibes. Backing them is drummer Lex Humphries and bassist Burch Warren.