| released = April 1957<ref>[https://books.google.it/books?id=HCAEAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA37&dq=All+Day+Long+7081&hl=it&sa=X&ved=0CDAQ6AEwAWoVChMIjOK134XKxwIVxLYUCh3znAYs#v=onepage&q=All%20Day%20Long%207081&f=false ''Billboard'' Apr 29, 1957]</ref>
| released = April 1957<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=HCAEAAAAMBAJ&dq=All+Day+Long+7081&pg=PA37 ''Billboard'' Apr 29, 1957]</ref>
| prev_title = [[All Night Long (Kenny Burrell album)|All Night Long]]
| prev_title = [[All Night Long (Kenny Burrell album)|All Night Long]]
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| next_year = 1957
| next_year = 1957
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'''''All Day Long''''' is a jazz album by guitarist [[Kenny Burrell]], although it is nominally credited to the "Prestige All Stars". It was released in 1957 under Prestige label as PRLP 7081. It's characterized by fast pieces and also was one of the first albums in which Burrell was presented as a leader. All the pieces were composed by the members of the band. The cover shows [http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Verrezano.JPG Verrazano-Narrows Bridge] in the daytime and by night.
[[Ira Gitler]] in the original liner notes points out that "A.T" is dedicated to Art Taylor (hence the initials); "Say Listen" "derives its name from the attention calling phrase that [Byrd] often verbally employs.
|rev1 = [[AllMusic]]
|rev1score = {{Rating|3|5}}<ref name="Allmusic">[https://www.allmusic.com/album/all-day-long-mw0000690476 AllMusic Review], accessed July 7, 2019</ref>
|rev2 = ''[[The Penguin Guide to Jazz]]''
|rev2score = {{Rating|3|5}}<ref>Cook, Richard; Brian Morton (2004)[1992]. "Kenny Burrell". ''The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD''. The Penguin Guide to Jazz (7th. ed.). Penguin Books Ltd, England. pp. 237–238. {{ISBN|0-141-01416-4}}.</ref>
}}
'''''All Day Long''''' is a jazz album by the Prestige All Stars, later credited to trumpeter [[Donald Byrd]] and guitarist [[Kenny Burrell]], released in 1957 on the [[Prestige Records|Prestige]] label.<ref name="foo">{{Citation |title=The Prestige All Stars - All Day Long |url=https://www.discogs.com/master/279780-The-Prestige-All-Stars-All-Day-Long |language=en |access-date=2022-03-24}}</ref> All tracks were composed by the members of the band.
Side A of the [[LP record|LP]] only included the blues "All Day Long" described by [[Dan Morgenstern]]<ref>Morgenstern, Dan (1963). All Day Long (album liner notes). Kenny Burrell. New York: Prestige Records Inc. Prestige 7277.</ref> as "A simple but effective structure" that "controls the performance and keeps it solidly together: each soloist enters with a break, plays 12 [[Bar (music)|bars]], and then breaks again before extemporizing at great length".
[[Ira Gitler]] in the original liner notes<ref>Gitler, Ira (1957). All Day Long (CD booklet). Kenny Burrell. New York: Prestige. p. 4. OJC2O 456-2.</ref> points out that the theme "A.T." is dedicated by [[Frank Foster (jazz musician)|Frank Foster]] to [[Art Taylor]] (hence the initials); "Say Listen" "derives its name from the attention calling phrase that ([[Donald Byrd|Byrd]]) often verbally employed".
==Album design==
The cover of the original album in 1957 and of the [[Compact disc|CD]] reissue in 1990 show two photographs of the [[George Washington Bridge]] in New York connecting Manhattan to New Jersey, taken in the daytime and by night.
Track 5 was not part of original [[Phonograph record|vinyl]] and was initially issued on the LP compilation ''The Best of Kenny Burrell''<ref name="Discogs">[https://www.discogs.com/Kenny-Burrell-The-Best-Of-Kenny-Burrell/release/3835261 Discogs: Kenny Burrell - The Best of Kenny Burrell], accessed July 7, 2019</ref> (Prestige 1966). This is an additional track included in the CD version of 1990, [[Remaster|digitally remastered]] by the [[Audio engineer|engineer]] Phil De Lancie at [[Fantasy Studios]] in Berkeley (California).
All Day Long is a jazz album by the Prestige All Stars, later credited to trumpeter Donald Byrd and guitarist Kenny Burrell, released in 1957 on the Prestige label.[4] All tracks were composed by the members of the band.
Side A of the LP only included the blues "All Day Long" described by Dan Morgenstern[5] as "A simple but effective structure" that "controls the performance and keeps it solidly together: each soloist enters with a break, plays 12 bars, and then breaks again before extemporizing at great length".
Ira Gitler in the original liner notes[6] points out that the theme "A.T." is dedicated by Frank Foster to Art Taylor (hence the initials); "Say Listen" "derives its name from the attention calling phrase that (Byrd) often verbally employed".
The cover of the original album in 1957 and of the CD reissue in 1990 show two photographs of the George Washington Bridge in New York connecting Manhattan to New Jersey, taken in the daytime and by night.
(*)Note:
Track 5 was not part of original vinyl and was initially issued on the LP compilation The Best of Kenny Burrell[7] (Prestige 1966). This is an additional track included in the CD version of 1990, digitally remastered by the engineer Phil De Lancie at Fantasy Studios in Berkeley (California).
^Cook, Richard; Brian Morton (2004)[1992]. "Kenny Burrell". The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD. The Penguin Guide to Jazz (7th. ed.). Penguin Books Ltd, England. pp. 237–238. ISBN0-141-01416-4.