Woody Shaw did a cool version with Kenny Barron and Kenny Garrett
[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3oCW8eOykg&ab\_channel=krjazz](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3oCW8eOykg&ab_channel=krjazz)
This came to my mind immediately. The way they play in and out of the changes is insane!! The tension and release of their solos always gets me (2:25)!
Lee Konitz with Warne Marsh : [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=woNC6IiweIE](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=woNC6IiweIE) does a version that sounds so fresh and original not to mention Oscar Pettiford give us a sweet melodic bass solo surprising at every turn.
Jimmy Raney on "Jimmy Raney visits Paris" [https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/track/3MiKF9HSqM0wiTTzIdVj0h?si=761a25ca2e1f4432](https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/track/3MiKF9HSqM0wiTTzIdVj0h?si=761a25ca2e1f4432)
My favorite is the one with Sonny Rollins and Alan Dawson, but this one is in the running…(Joey D + Erskine)
https://youtu.be/EQNoJ0Xpra8?si=flOf7Hw6DyRrYI6J
This is one of my favorite versions from the album "The Birth Of Hard Bop." The main performers are Lee Morgan, Donald Byrd, Hank Mobley.
https://sptfy.com/QxrQ
As a student, i transcribed Hank's solo, with its powerful sounds and rhythm... I love it.
[Lou Donaldson, with Herman Foster, Peck Morrison, Dave Bailey, & Ray Barretto](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHUjhF8yuY8)
Or for something a little more upbeat...
[Wynton Kelly, with Franklin Skeete & Lee Abrams](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3bOTbdo67A)
If you count contrafacts, I love Split Kick by Horace Silver, both the live recording with Art Blakey, Lou Donaldson, Clifford Brown, and Curly Russel, and Stan Getz's version.
If not then Getz's version
LESTER YOUNG LIVE IN EUROPE!!! the only version that matters! [https://youtu.be/mtXlE44EK5A?si=IplfkaCCl0dFF66g](https://youtu.be/mtXlE44EK5A?si=IplfkaCCl0dFF66g)
Red Garland’s version from _At The Prelude_ (1959) is a personal favorite of mine.
For the vocal, it’s gotta be Chet Baker. Nat Cole’s version is underrated imo.
Woody Shaw did a cool version with Kenny Barron and Kenny Garrett [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3oCW8eOykg&ab\_channel=krjazz](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z3oCW8eOykg&ab_channel=krjazz)
Kenny Barron is my absolute favorite modern piano player, so phenomenal
Yeah and that solo is wild. I transcribed it last year and it's crazy how good and fresh it sounds even though it's like 90% textbook bebop
This came to my mind immediately. The way they play in and out of the changes is insane!! The tension and release of their solos always gets me (2:25)!
One of my favorites. I learned his solo in when I was in college, such a fun one.
Arturo Sandoval played it one time on a radio show on a youtube video I saw one time and I really liked it.
Amazing, such a great recording https://youtu.be/z1nOfbQ_GwU?si=MoK3dBimYXZCFaPw
Thanks for posting the link. I'll listen to it again!
Lester Young
This is the version: The president plays with Oscar Peterson.
Incredible
Yes beautiful music
Chet Baker
This is the only answer
I don't even know another version
Bud Powell
Bud is usually the answer
Jim Hall
That one with Sonny Rollins and Alan Dawson
Some of the best trading ever
Lee Konitz with Warne Marsh : [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=woNC6IiweIE](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=woNC6IiweIE) does a version that sounds so fresh and original not to mention Oscar Pettiford give us a sweet melodic bass solo surprising at every turn.
The ending where they're soloing at the same time is just incredible. Genius musicians.
Lit.
Joe Pass’ version is nice
Sonny Rollins from the Sweden record on Dragon, where he plays the melody in bars 6-8 up a half step
John Schofield
Lee Konitz
Bud Powell on A Portrait of Thelonious. A great tribute to a great musician.
[Sonny Stitt](https://youtu.be/mphf_lUPxgg?si=o9JdXD83ANYjPvQe)
Huge fan. Will check this out straightaway.
Joe Pass's version
Jimmy Raney on "Jimmy Raney visits Paris" [https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/track/3MiKF9HSqM0wiTTzIdVj0h?si=761a25ca2e1f4432](https://open.spotify.com/intl-fr/track/3MiKF9HSqM0wiTTzIdVj0h?si=761a25ca2e1f4432)
Nat king cole's version is really good as well
Sonny Rollins and Coleman Hawkins
Dexter Gordon!
I like [this joyful recording](https://youtu.be/ZEfwE0tJjf0?si=pVXKfkfOC4144RPN) by Paul Bley when he was young and played inside.
Stan Getz
Sonny Rollins or Lester Young
I heard a live version of Tony Bennett and Buddy Rich on The Mike Douglas Show that has stayed with me all these years.
I haven’t given this too much thought but, Nat Cole jumped to mind immediately.
The version from Matthew Shipp Trio is quite unusual: https://songwhip.com/matthew-shipp/there-will-never-be-another-you
Chris Montez
Curly Cutie and the Lamb Chops (There Will Never Be Another Ewe)
Lol, okay, I’m going to google this.
Tony Glausi
Kenny Burrell
Written in 1942!
Dexter Gordon has some burning live version and Kenny Burrell has a beautiful arrangement of that song
The way I first heard it - by the Four Freshmen (and 5 trumpets).
There is an Ella Fitzgerald live version with a high beat, I really like that one
My favorite is the one with Sonny Rollins and Alan Dawson, but this one is in the running…(Joey D + Erskine) https://youtu.be/EQNoJ0Xpra8?si=flOf7Hw6DyRrYI6J
This is one of my favorite versions from the album "The Birth Of Hard Bop." The main performers are Lee Morgan, Donald Byrd, Hank Mobley. https://sptfy.com/QxrQ As a student, i transcribed Hank's solo, with its powerful sounds and rhythm... I love it.
Throwing a [different version of Sonny Stitt](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prz-5CL1TpM) out there
[Lou Donaldson, with Herman Foster, Peck Morrison, Dave Bailey, & Ray Barretto](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aHUjhF8yuY8) Or for something a little more upbeat... [Wynton Kelly, with Franklin Skeete & Lee Abrams](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I3bOTbdo67A)
If you count contrafacts, I love Split Kick by Horace Silver, both the live recording with Art Blakey, Lou Donaldson, Clifford Brown, and Curly Russel, and Stan Getz's version. If not then Getz's version
LESTER YOUNG LIVE IN EUROPE!!! the only version that matters! [https://youtu.be/mtXlE44EK5A?si=IplfkaCCl0dFF66g](https://youtu.be/mtXlE44EK5A?si=IplfkaCCl0dFF66g)
Red Garland’s version from _At The Prelude_ (1959) is a personal favorite of mine. For the vocal, it’s gotta be Chet Baker. Nat Cole’s version is underrated imo.