In selecting a little over an hour's worth of excerpts from the eight-CD box set The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions on Verve for this highlights disc, the compilers have resisted the urge to stick with only a collection of
Young's more accomplished early works and included a few examples of his deteriorated, but still moving, later work. They have hedged their bets somewhat, however, by not sequencing things chronologically, so that the album closes with a 1949 recording of the pop song "Polka Dots and Moonbeams" rather than, say, "Waldorf Blues" from 1958. Early or late,
Young's playing is readily identifiable, if only for the chances it takes, whether on the up-tempo "It Don't Mean a Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)" or the strikingly excessive introductory blowing on the opening phrases of "Love Is Here to Stay."
Young's associates on the tracks constitute a who's who of his contemporaries, including
Ray Brown,
Nat "King" Cole,
Hary "Sweets" Edison,
Roy Eldridge,
Herb Ellis,
Hank Jones,
Jo Jones,
Connie Kay,
John Lewis,
Oscar Peterson,
Buddy Rich, and
Teddy Wilson. While it takes more than an hour to get a full sense of
Young's work on Verve (hence the box set), this is an intelligently constructed sampler. ~ William Ruhlmann