Oscar Peterson Trio + One, Clark Terry (2026 Remaster) Oscar Peterson Trio & Clark Terry
Album info
Album-Release:
1964
HRA-Release:
13.03.2026
Album including Album cover
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- 1 Brotherhood Of Man (Remastered) 03:35
- 2 Jim (Remastered) 02:59
- 3 Blues For Smedley (Remastered) 07:02
- 4 Roundalay (Remastered) 03:59
- 5 Mumbles (Remastered) 02:01
- 6 Mack The Knife (Remastered) 05:16
- 7 They Didn't Believe Me (Remastered) 04:25
- 8 Squeaky's Blues (Remastered) 03:27
- 9 I Want A Little Girl (Remastered) 05:15
- 10 Incoherent Blues (Remastered) 02:45
Info for Oscar Peterson Trio + One, Clark Terry (2026 Remaster)
Recorded on August 17 and 18, 1964, in New York and released on Verve that same year, Plus One joins the Oscar Peterson Trio with the singular voice of trumpeter and flugelhornist Clark Terry. At this point, Peterson’s trio with Ray Brown (bass) and Ed Thigpen (drums) had already established itself as one of the most impeccably unified ensembles in jazz. Terry’s addition — warm-toned, slyly inventive, and rhythmically buoyant — offers a fresh contrast to the trio’s polished interplay while fitting seamlessly within its refined framework.
The session highlights Terry’s full musical personality: his crisp trumpet articulation, his plush flugelhorn sound, and most memorably, his signature “mumbles” scat style, heard most memorably on the aptly titled “Mumbles.” On pieces such as “Brotherhood of Man,” the ensemble plays with tight structural clarity, Terry’s horn sailing above Peterson’s crisp right-hand runs and Brown’s anchoring lines. The ballad “Jim” reveals the group’s sensitivity to space, tone, and texture, with Terry’s lyrical phrasing foregrounded against Peterson’s understated accompaniment.
Plus One captures a moment when Peterson was increasingly expanding his studio collaborations while still maintaining the trio’s core identity. The album remains a concise and elegant example of mid-1960s Verve: meticulously recorded, cohesively arranged, and shaped by the unmistakable rapport of four major jazz voices working with ease and mutual respect.
Oscar Peterson, piano
Ray Brown, double bass
Ed Thigpen, drums
Guest:
Clark Terry, trumpet, flugelhorn
Recorded February 26, 1964
Produced by Norman Granz
Digitally remastered
No biography found.
This album contains no booklet.
