Guitarist Herb Ellis still considers this to be one of his personal
favorite recordings. Ellis was reunited with his old boss Oscar Peterson
and, with the assistance of Peterson's trio of the period (with bassist
Sam Jones and drummer Bobby Durham), the two lead voices often romp on
the jam session-flavored set. Most of the chord changes are fairly basic
(including three blues and "Seven Come Eleven"), and Peterson was
clearly inspired by Ellis' presence (and vice versa). Scott Yanow
Credits :
1 Naptown Blues 5:20
Written-By – Wes Montgomery
2 Exactly Like You 4:48
Written-By – Beda, McHugh - Fields
3 Day By Day 4:40
Written-By – Stordahl, Weston
4 Hamp's Blues 3:46
Written-By – Hampton Hawes
5 Blues For H.G. 6:10
Written-By – Oscar Peterson
6 A Lovely Way To Spend An Evening 8:25
Written-By – Adamson, McHugh
7 Seven Come Eleven 5:10
Written-By – Goodman, Christian
Credits :
Bass – Sam Jones
Drums – Bob Durham
Guitar – Herb Ellis
Piano – Oscar Peterson
10.7.24
THE OSCAR PETERSON TRIO WITH HERB ELLIS — Hello Herbie (1969-2005) RM | Serie Most Perfect Sound Edition | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
23.6.24
CHARLIE BYRD | BARNEY KESSEL | HERB ELLIS — Great Guitars (1975) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Charlie Byrd was teamed up with Barney Kessel and Herb Ellis (along with bassist Joe Byrd and drummer John Rae) for this rather exciting concert. While Ellis and Kessel have three unaccompanied duets, the inclusion of Byrd (thought of as a Brazilian specialist rather than a bopper) is the wild card that makes this set a major success. While Byrd is excellent on his features "Charlie's Blues" and "O Barquinho," it is the three stomps featuring all the guitarists ("Undecided," "Topsy" and "Benny's Bugle") that are most memorable. Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1 Undecided 6:19
Sydney Robin / Charlie Shavers
2 O Barquinho 4:41
Ronaldo Bôscoli / Roberto Menescal
3 Slow Burn 5:33
Barney Kessel
4 Charlie's Blues 8:17
Charlie Byrd
5 Topsy 5:44
Edgar Battle / Eddie Durham
6 Latin Groove 4:26
Barney Kessel
7 Down Home Blues 3:57
Herb Ellis / Barney Kessel
8 H And B Guitar Boogie 4:08
Herb Ellis / Barney Kessel
9 Benny's Bugle 5:37
Benny Goodman
Credits :
Bass – Joe Byrd
Drums – John Rae
Guitar – Barney Kessel, Charlie Byrd, Herb Ellis
7.4.24
HERB ELLIS TRIO — Sweet and Lovely (1984) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Tracklist :
1 Bags Groove 4:49
Composed By – M.Jackson
2 Angel Eyes 4:32
Composed By – M.Dennis
3 Sweet And Lovely 5:19
Composed By – G.Arnheim, J.Lemare
4 Willow Weep For Me 5:48
Composed By – A.Ronell
5 What Is This Thing Called Love 4:34
Composed By – C. Porter
6 The Shadow Of Your Smile 5:34
Composed By – J.Mandel, P.F.Webster
7 Fred 3:16
Composed By – N.Hefti, C. Sammy
8 I Only Have Eyes For You 3:26
Composed By – A.Dubin, H.Warren
9 Gunk And Funk 5:17
Composed By – H.Ellis
Credits :
Herb Ellis - Guitar
Monty Budwig - Bass
Shelly Manne - Drums
25.3.24
DOROTHY DANDRIDGE — Smooth Operator (1999) APE (image+.cue), lossless
Real Name: Dorothy Jean Dandridge.
Profile: American actress and popular singer.
Born : November 09, 1922 in Cleveland, Ohio.
Died : September 08, 1965 in West Hollywood, California. (Embolism or Overdose)
Was the first African American to be nominated for an Academy Award for Best Actress
Actress/singer Dorothy Dandridge was Hollywood's first African-American
superstar, becoming the first black performer ever nominated for a Best
Actress Oscar. Born November 9, 1923 in Cleveland, she was the daughter
of actress Ruby Dandridge, and with sister Vivian teamed in the
song-and-dance duo the Wonder Children. The family relocated to Los
Angeles during the mid-'30s, and in 1937 Dandridge briefly made her film
debut in the Marx Brothers classic A Day at the Races.
Carmen Jones [Original Soundtrack] Concurrently she continued her
singing career, and with Vivian performed as the Dandridge Sisters,
sharing stages with the likes of Jimmie Lunceford and Cab Calloway as
well as recording with Louis Armstrong. During the early '40s Dorothy
appeared in a series of musical film shorts, and as the decade
progressed she became a sensation on the nightclub circuit. Dandridge's
mainstream breakthrough was her title role in Otto Preminger's 1954
screen musical Carmen Jones, a performance which earned her an Academy
Award nomination and made her a star; nevertheless, she did not reappear
onscreen until 1957's Island in the Sun, and despite winning a Golden
Globe for her work in 1959's Porgy and Bess she was offered virtually no
future film roles, returning to nightclubs by the early '60s.
Smooth Operator Plagued by years of personal hardships as well as
professional hurdles, Dandridge was found dead of an overdose of
anti-depressants on September 8, 1965. Three decades later her career
enjoyed a kind of renaissance with an acclaimed 1997 biography by film
historian Donald Bogle in addition to Introducing Dorothy Dandridge, a
1999 HBO telefilm starring Halle Berry. Smooth Operator, a
long-unreleased recording date from 1958 featuring the Oscar Peterson
trio, was finally issued in 1999 as well. web
Smooth Operator explores a little-known aspect of the beautiful,
troubled African-American actress Dorothy Dandridge: her vocal
abilities. Most of this album comes from a 1958 recording session
featuring Dandridge's lovely interpretations of "When Your Lover Has
Gone," "Body & Soul" and the title track. That her backing band is
an augmented version of the Oscar Peterson Trio makes her album even
more special, and a must for jazz fans and film buffs. Heather Phares
Tracklist :
1 It's Easy To Remember 2:24
Written-By – Richard Rogers-Lorenz Hart
2 What Is There To Say? 3:11
Written-By – E.Y. Harburg, Vernon Duke
3 That Old Feeling 3:05
Written-By – Lew Brown, Sammy Fain
4 The Touch Of Your Lips 2:58
Written-By – Ray Noble
5 When Your Lover Has Gone 2:59
Written-By – E. A. Swan
6 The Nearness Of You 3:17
Written-By – Hoagy Carmichael, Ned Washington
7 (In This World) I'm Glad There Is You 4:02
Written-By – Jimmy Dorsey, Paul Madeira
8 I've Grown Accustomed To Your Face 1:48
Written-By – Alan J. Lerner-Frederick Loewe
9 Body And Soul 3:38
Written-By – Edward Heyman, Frank Eyton, Johnny Green, Robert Sour
10 How Long Has This Been Going On? 3:30
Written-By – George and Ira Gershwin
11 I've Got A Crush On You 2:28
Written-By – George and Ira Gershwin
12 I Didn't Know What Time It Was 2:37
Written-By – Richard Rogers-Lorenz Hart
13 Somebody 2:48
Written-By – Harry Warren , Jack Brooks
14 Stay With It 2:35
Written-By – Dotty Wayne, Ray Rasch
15 It's A Beautiful Evening 2:38
Written-By – Dotty Wayne, Ray Rasch
16 Smooth Operator 3:06
Written-By – Clyde Otis, Murray Stein
Credits
Bass – Ray Brown (tracks: 1-12)
Bongos – Alvin Stoller (tracks: 4, 12)
Celesta – Oscar Peterson (tracks: 4, 8, 11)
Drums – Alvin Stoller (tracks: 1-3, 5-7, 9-11)
Guitar – Herb Ellis (tracks: 1-12)
Orchestra – Unknown Artist (tracks: 13-16)
Piano – Oscar Peterson (tracks: 1-3, 5-7, 9-10)
Vocals – Dorothy Dandridge
16.3.24
HERB ELLIS | RAY BROWN SEXTET — Hot Tracks (1976) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Guitarist Herb Ellis was the leader of six of the first dozen Concord releases. This lesser-known set has some fine playing from Ellis, trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, tenor saxophonist Plas Johnson, bassist Ray Brown, drummer Jake Hanna and keyboardist Mike Melvoin although Melvoin's electric piano sounds a bit dated today. As usual the music is uncomplicated, straightahead, swinging and tasteful. Six of the songs are originals by group members which are performed along with Johnny Hodges' "Squatty Roo" and the ballad "But Beautiful." Scott Yanow
Tracklist :
1. Onion Roll (Ellis) - 4:26
2. Spherikhal (Brown) - 4:55
3. But Beautiful (Burke-Van Heusen) - 5:25
4. Blues for Minnie (Brown) - 4:41
5. Bones (Johnson) - 5:54
6. So's Your Mother (Melvoin) - 5:20
7. Squatty Roo (Hodges) - 3:10
8. Sweetback (Edison) - 4:27
Credits :
Herb Ellis - Guitar
Ray Brown - Bass
Harry "Sweets" Edison - Trumpet
Jake Hanna - Drums
Plas Johnson - Saxophone
Mike Melvoin - Keyboards
10.1.24
RAY BROWN — The Best Of The Concord Years (2002) 2xCD | FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Ray Brown was in at the beginning of the Concord Jazz record label in the early '70s, and starting with Brown's Bag in 1975, he recorded a dozen albums as a leader for Concord before departing for Telarc Records in the early '90s. This two-disc compilation, with a running time of almost two hours and 20 minutes, presents 24 selections drawn from 19 Concord Jazz albums recorded between 1973 and 1993, including live performances at the Concord Jazz Festivals, recordings by Brown's trio and the L.A. 4, and a Brown duet with Jimmy Rowles, among other configurations. As a bass player, Brown only rarely solos, so one usually notices the horn players (Harry "Sweets" Edison, Red Holloway, Plas Johnson, Richie Kamuca, Blue Mitchell, Ralph Moore, and Bud Shank), the pianists (Monty Alexander, George Duke, Gene Harris, Art Hillery, and Rowles), or other frontline musicians (guitarists Laurindo Almeida, Herb Ellis, and Joe Pass, violinist John Frigo) before the rhythm section. But even when Brown isn't stepping out, he is maintaining the group's swing, along with drummers John Guerin, Jeff Hamilton, Jake Hanna, Gerryck King, Shelly Manne, Mickey Roker, and Jimmie Smith, and he also wrote a number of the tunes. Brown had done relatively few sessions as a leader in the 30 years of his career prior to his association with Concord, so, while the label owes him a lot, he also was enabled to flourish with the company in a way he had not before, and that is reflected in this well-chosen compilation. William Ruhlmann
Tracklist & Credits :
RAY BROWN — Bass Hit! (1958-1998) RM | Serie Verve Elite Edition | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Ray Brown's earliest date as a leader features him prominently in the solo spotlight with arrangements by Marty Paich. They collaborated on a swinging original blues, "Blues for Sylvia," and the snappy "Blues for Lorraine." The rest of the release concentrates on familiar standards, with the addition to the reissue of several complete and incomplete takes of "After You've Gone," which didn't appear on the original release. The supporting cast includes the cream of the crop of musicians living on the West Coast at the time: Jimmy Rowles, Harry "Sweets" Edison, and Jimmy Giuffre among them. Out-of-print for a long time, this record was reissued in 1999, though as a limited-edition title in the Verve Elite series, so it will not remain available for long. Ken Dryden
Tracklist & Credits :
31.12.23
RAY BROWN TRIO — Some of My Best Friends Are ... Guitarists (2002) APE (image+.cue), lossless
The fifth in Ray Brown's series of recordings pairing his working trio with several different musicians from the same family of instruments (although one volume was exclusively singers) features a half-dozen guitarists, ranging from fellow Oscar Peterson alumni Herb Ellis (who worked with Brown in the pianist's most famous trio) and Ulf Wakenius to veteran Kenny Burrell, as well as seasoned players like John Pizzarelli and Bruce Forman and the rising star Russell Malone. Each song sounds as if the group could be a working quartet, due to the great interaction between the trio and each guest. Pizzarelli shines in a bluesy, strutting take of Duke Ellington's "Just Squeeze Me" (erroneously labeled as Fats Waller's "Squeeze Me") which has a nice series of exchanges between the guitarist and the leader. Ellis brings back memories of the Oscar Peterson Trio with a heated performance of "I Want to Be Happy" during which pianist Geoff Keezer is up to the task of carrying on where Ellis left off. Wakenius is the guest on a particularly moody take of "My Funny Valentine." Burrell, Forman, and Malone also fare nicely on each of their pair of tracks, so it's very easy to recommend this very enjoyable disc. Ken Dryden Tracklist & Credits :
24.11.23
LESTER YOUNG — The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions on Verve (2006) RM | 8xCD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
All too often, jazz critics have promoted the myth that Lester Young's playing went way downhill after World War II -- that the seminal tenor man was so emotionally wounded by the racism he suffered in the military in 1944-1945 that he could no longer play as well as he had in the '30s and early '40s. To be sure, Young went through hell in the military, and his painful experiences took their toll in the form of alcohol abuse, severe depression, and various health problems. But despite Young's mental decline, he was still a fantastic soloist. This eight-CD set, which gathers most of the studio recordings that he made for Norman Granz's Clef, Norgran, and Verve labels from 1946-1959, underscores the fact that much of his postwar output was superb. At its worst, this collection is at least decent, but the Pres truly excels on sessions with Nat "King" Cole and Buddy Rich in 1946, Oscar Peterson and Barney Kessel in 1952, Roy Eldridge and Teddy Wilson in 1956, and Harry "Sweets" Edison in 1957. Disc 8 contains two recorded interviews with the saxman -- one conducted by Chris Albertson in 1958 for WCAU radio in Philadelphia, the other by French jazz enthusiast Francois Postif in Paris on February 6, 1959 (only five or six weeks before Young's death on March 15 of that year). The contrast between the fascinating interviews is striking; in Philly, Young is polite and soft-spoken, whereas in Paris, the effects of the alcohol are hard to miss. Sounding intoxicated and using profanity liberally, Young candidly tells Postif about everything from his experiences with racism to his associations with Billie Holiday and Count Basie. But as much as the set has going for it, The Complete Lester Young Studio Sessions on Verve isn't for novices, casual listeners, or those who are budget-minded (Verve's suggested retail price in the U.S. was $144). Collectors are the ones who will find this CD to be a musical feast. Alex Henderson Tracklist & Credits :
16.11.23
STAN GETZ | DIZZY GILLESPIE | SONNY STITT — For Musicians Only (1957-1989) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Often in the early days of the modern jazz movement, players would come up with the most dazzling tempos, complex chord changes, intricate melodies, and tricky rhythmic breaks imaginable, as much to challenge themselves as to keep the squares from trying to get on the bandstand and jam. For Musicians Only is just that, and then some. Gillespie, the great virtuoso trumpeter, is joined on the front line by Stan Getz and Sonny Stitt for a blowing session of phenomenal proportions. Gillespie's demanding tune "Bebop," and Denzil Best's "Wee (Allen's Alley)" (based on "I Got Rhythm") are given brisk, wailing treatments. Both tunes highlight Stitt's scampering alto, Getz's dancing, mentholated tenor (very much in his Lester Young mode), and Gillespie's coiled, tempestuous trumpet. The tough, swinging rhythm section really distinguishes itself on the standards "Dark Eyes" and "Lover Come Back to Me" (particularly bassist Ray Brown). They always manage to keep a hint of the basic tune in the foreground, no matter how free the soloists get. Gillespie is inspired throughout, and For Musicians Only contains some of his spunkiest, most pugnacious solos. AllMusic Tracklist + Credits :
DIZZY GILLESPIE | STAN GETZ — Diz And Getz (1955-1994) RM | Verve Master Edition | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Gillespie was at the peak of his powers throughout the 1950s and still the pacesetter among trumpeters. This double LP matches him with Stan Getz, the Oscar Peterson Trio, and drummer Max Roach for its first half. Getz, although identified with the "cool" school, thrived on competition and is both relaxed and combative on the uptempo explorations of "It Don't Mean a Thing" and "Impromptu." The remainder of this two-fer substitutes pianist John Lewis and drummer Stan Levey for Peterson and Roach and, most importantly, adds altoist Sonny Stitt to the frontline. The results are three uptempo stomps and just one medium-tempo performance. This is one of their better (and more explosive) studio jam sessions. Scott Yanow Tracklist + Credits :
14.11.23
ROY ELDRIDGE | DIZZY GILLESPIE — Roy And Diz (1954-1994) RM | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
This set features two sizzling horns mingling in a decidedly frenetic dance contest. These songs hop and bounce with enduring vitality. A definite coolness exists within the searing solos of the two trumpet kings as they empty their lungs, executing mind-spinning, scale-like passages and high notes, and there's a palpable sense of competition as they take turns performing their acrobatic brass-work. They can both propel notes from their horns like nobody's business, yet their tonal and stylistic differences create two distinct elements within the music.
Bassist Ray Brown's tempos provide a cool structure for the flurries of notes the trumpets cast forth. Some of the most poetic moments from these 1954 recordings are when their collaboration intertwines them within the passages, but their supercharged blowing naturally finds a subtler ground and tact when they come together in a musical braid work that's no less affecting than their solos. AllMusic Tracklist + Credits :
30.9.23
DIZZY GILLESPIE – 1953 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1380 (2005) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
The first three tracks on this ninth installment in the Classics Dizzy Gillespie chronology were recorded for the Vogue label in Paris on February 22, 1953. Note the presence of pianist Wade Legge. A stunning exercise in reflective meditation entitled "This Is the Way" is followed by a nutty study on "'S Wonderful" that begins like Dixieland corn and suddenly shifts into a 65-mph bop mode. The session finishes off with a patented Joe Carroll doubletalk scat-bop vocal. Gillespie and his quintet spent the rest of February 22, 1953, recording for Blue Star, the competitor to Vogue. After two very solid numbers, the band cut six more tracks backed by what Diz called his "Operatic String Orchestra." For those who aren't allergic to this kind of theatrical instrumentation, this is an opportunity to compare Gillespie's stringed adventure with Bird's famous Charlie Parker with Strings sessions. The effect here is something like a saucy '50s film soundtrack, often exciting and never tedious. Two sides cut in New York for the Showcase label in June of 1953 feature alto and baritone saxophonist Sahib Shihab, and still more of that fine piano from Wade Legge. This outstanding compilation closes with six titles recorded in Los Angeles on December 9, 1953, for Norman Granz's Norgran label. The music, like the lineup, with tenor saxophonist Stan Getz, pianist Oscar Peterson, guitarist Herb Ellis, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer Max Roach, is breathtaking. arwulf arwulf Tracklist + Credits :
DIZZY GILLESPIE – 1953-1954 | The Classics Chronological Series – 1424 (2006) FLAC (image+.cue), lossless
Volume ten in the Classics Dizzy Gillespie chronology documents this trumpeter's recording activities from December 9, 1953 to June 8, 1954. As one of producer Norman Granz's many star players, Diz was able to organize both hard bop and Cuban-styled bop bands comprised of able improvisers. The opening track, "Impromptu," is a nearly-eight-minute jam taken at 75mph by the "Dizzy Gillespie-Stan Getz Sextet" with lightning-fingered pianist Oscar Peterson, guitarist Herb Ellis (heard here in an unusually rambunctious mood); bassist Ray Brown, and drummer Max Roach. The 20-piece big band assembled on May 24, 1954 recorded a piquant 16-and-a-half-minute "Manteca" suite in five movements using arrangements by Chico O'Farrill. The personnel listing is extraordinary, with J.J. Johnson, Ernie Royal and Quincy Jones in the brass section with Diz; Hilton Jefferson, Hank Mobley, Lucky Thompson and Danny Bank in the reed department, as well as two bassists and four expert Latin American percussionists augmenting the kit drumming of Charlie Persip. On the following day, four members of this mammoth ensemble returned to form a quintet; in addition to pianist Wade Legge and bassist Lou Hackney, Hank Mobley was the designated saxophonist for this assignment, a relaxed blowing session with two vocals by the leader. Gillespie put together an octet for the next date, which took place on June 3, 1954, using flautist Gilbert Valdez and a lively Latino rhythm section including conga master Candido Camero. Four titles cut on June 8, 1954 by the Dizzy Gillespie Sextet featured trombonist Jimmy Cleveland in addition to the five men who comprised the Quintet from two weeks earlier. (Although a note in the enclosed discography claims that Cleveland is omitted on "Rumbola," he is clearly audible throughout). This last session, and indeed this entire segment of Gillespie's career, resulted in substantial music of great passion and depth. "Blue Mood" is particularly satisfying because Gillespie, like Charlie Parker, was an adept bluesman. arwulf arwulf Tracklist :
13.9.23
BEN WEBSTER – 1953-1954 | The Chronogical Classics – 1458 (2008) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Almost 25 years into his recording career, tenor saxophonist Ben Webster made a series of studio recordings under the supervision of producer Norman Granz. These marvelous performances were reissued in chronological sequence by the Classics label in 2008. Each volume of Ben Webster on Classics is richly packed with satisfying ballads, blues, and swing. This installment borders between superb and divine. Three titles recorded for Mercury on January 22, 1953, find Webster soloing in front of an orchestra conducted by Johnny Richards, a student of Arnold Schoenberg who served as an arranger for Stan Kenton. Recorded at sessions that took place in April and December 1953, tracks four through 12 were originally released on the Norgran album King of the Tenors. The collective personnel from these dates is typical of the Granz "embarrassment of riches" approach, for here were trumpeter Harry "Sweets" Edison, alto saxophonist Benny Carter, pianist Oscar Peterson, guitarists Barney Kessel and Herb Ellis, bassist Ray Brown, and drummer J.C. Heard. Tracks 13-16 were recorded on March 30, 1954, with the assistance of pianist Teddy Wilson, bassist Ray Brown, and drummers Alvin Stoller and Jo Jones. This material, along with the rest of the titles on the collection, formed the Verve album Music for Loving. On tracks 17-21, Ben Webster interprets sensuous ballads backed by the Ralph Burns Orchestra. In addition to a string section, the ensemble included clarinetist Tony Scott, bassist George Duvivier, drummer Louis Bellson, and composer/pianist/arranger Billy Strayhorn. arwulf arwulf Tracklist :
5.9.23
GENE KRUPA – 1952-1953 | The Chronogical Classics – 1390 (2005) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Volume 16 in the Classics Gene Krupa chronology documents his recording
activity between March 1952 and September 1953. Although Krupa had
struggled for years to keep his big band together, he had to throw in
the towel in 1951. By the spring of the following year, he was leading
his first small-group recording date for producer Norman Granz. Having
spent years at the helm of a big band that expended a lot of energy
accompanying jazz and pop vocalists, Krupa seems to have relished the
intimacy and immediacy of these exciting instrumental blowing sessions
with pianist Teddy Napoleon and tenor saxophonist Charlie Ventura. The
opening track, "St. Louis Blues" runs for seven-and-a-half steamy
minutes, and Ventura uses his baritone for a deliciously deep-toned
interpretation of Hoagy Carmichael's "Star Dust." The big horn was also
in evidence on a friendly laid-back rendition of "My Blue Heaven" and
reflections of a "Moon on the Ruined Castle" recorded in Tokyo for the
Victor label one month later when the trio was visiting Japan as part of
an all-star entourage financed and presided over by Norman Granz. As
Victor was not his company, Granz allowed the taping to occur but
prevented the recordings from being released. Back in New York two weeks
later, Granz and Krupa began making records using slightly larger
ensembles. The six- and seven-piece bands that are heard on the last six
titles of this compilation had powerful front liners in Ben Webster,
Charlie Shavers, Bill Harris and Willie Smith; the rhythm sections were
stoked with Teddy Wilson, Israel Crosby, Ray Brown, Steve Jordan and
Herb Ellis. This outstanding compilation chronicles a sunny and
artistically rewarding chapter in the life of Gene Krupa. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist + Credits :
GENE KRUPA – 1953-1954 | The Chronogical Classics – 1433 (2007) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Released in 2007 as number 1433 in the Classics Chronological catalog, the 17th installment in the complete works of drummer and bandleader Gene Krupa consists of intimate trio and sextet recordings produced by Norman Granz and issued on his Clef and Verve labels. Tracks one through six amount to all but the first two titles from The Exciting Gene Krupa, an album recorded on September 10, 1953, with trumpeter Charlie Shavers, trombonist Bill Harris, tenor saxophonist Ben Webster, pianist Teddy Wilson, guitarist Herb Ellis, and bassist Ray Brown. Shavers, who composed four of the six tunes heard here, was almost certainly inspired to use the title "Midget" by Lester Young, who is known to have jokingly employed the word in reference to Shavers and fellow trumpeter Roy Eldridge (both men were short, rambunctious, and loved to tease Lester Young). Recorded on February 1, 1954, tracks seven through 14 comprised the trio album Sing, Sing, Sing. Here Krupa interacted with pianist Teddy Napoleon and versatile multi-instrumentalist Eddie Shu, who plays trumpet, clarinet, alto, and tenor saxes as well as a mouth organ on "Harmonica Shu Boogie." (Although Shu was also a trained ventriloquist, that skill does not seem to have been employed on this occasion.) This highly satisfying compilation closes with the first three titles from the sextet album The Driving Gene Krupa, recorded on February 2, 1954, with Charlie Shavers, Bill Harris, tenor saxophonist Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Teddy Wilson, and bassist Ray Brown. Like its immediate predecessor in the series, this core sample of Krupa's post-big-band career contains some of the very best mainstream jazz sessions that he ever got a chance to participate in. Highly recommended as accessible jazz suitable for almost any occasion. arwulf arwulf
Tracklist + Credits :
BUDDY RICH – 1950-1955 | The Chronogical Classics – 1419 (2006) FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
As the Classics Chronological Series works its way into the early and mid-'50s, the magnitude of producer Norman Granz's achievement becomes increasingly apparent. Some of the greatest jazz musicians of all time -- Oscar Peterson, Charlie Parker, Dizzy Gillespie, Billie Holiday, Johnny Hodges, Lester Young -- were signed by Granz at a time when many Afro-American jazz musicians were struggling to get steady work, and jazz in general was beginning to take a back seat to pop vocals, R&B and rock & roll. Drummer and bandleader Buddy Rich had only just begun to lead a big band when the post-WWII restructuring of the entertainment industry edged him out (see Volume one in Rich's complete chronological recordings, 1946-1948 [Classics 1099]). He was able to continue making records by working with smaller groups, oftentimes at recording sessions supervised by Norman Granz. As the mastermind behind Jazz at the Philharmonic, Granz was adept at documenting live jam sessions. Fortunately the recording equipment was plugged in and running when Buddy Rich, Ray Brown and Hank Jones cooked up a frantic seven-minute version of "Air Mail Special" in front of a rowdy audience at Carnegie Hall on September 16, 1950. This explosive jam, which consists mainly of an extended crowd-pleasing drum solo, serves as a fiery prologue to the first of the Buddy Rich/Norman Granz studio sessions, all of which resulted in collectively swung jazz of the highest order. Granz had a knack for bringing together uncommonly gifted musicians, and Rich was very lucky to find himself recording with pianist Oscar Peterson and guitarist Herb Ellis; with trumpeters Harry "Sweets" Edison, Thad Jones and Joe Newman; and with saxophonists Benny Carter, Georgie Auld, Willie Smith, Ben Webster and Frank Wess. Buddy Rich is also heard exercising his tonsils. Sometimes compared with Frank Sinatra (his rival for the attentions of vocalist Edythe Wright during the Dorsey days), Rich was capable of crooning with convincing suavity, as could Woody Herman. Aside from his quasi-hip vocal on the novelty titled "Bongo, Bass and Guitar," this compilation contains four tracks with Rich standing away from the drums (Louie Bellson was brought in to man the kit) and concentrating upon the art of emitting songs through the mouth, accompanied by a small jazz combo sweetly augmented with strings under the direction of Howard Gibeling. Much more in line with Buddy Rich's regular modus operandi, this segment of his chronology concludes with two extended instrumental jams, each exceeding ten minutes in duration, recorded in New York on May 16, 1955. Arrogant, selfish, cruel and egotistical to the point of megalomania, Buddy Rich was an able percussionist capable of generating a lot of excitement with his drums and cymbals; he could drive an ensemble with plenty of steam, but most of his showy extended solos, which rely a lot on convulsive bouts of press rolling and restless parade ground paradiddling, lack the substance, depth and organic coherence of expanded improvisations created by Art Blakey, Max Roach and Elvin Jones. To call Buddy Rich the world's greatest drummer is just blarney. The person who made that claim most often was Buddy Rich himself. arwulf arwulf
26.10.22
JOHNNY HODGES - The Complete Verve Johnny Hodges Small Group Sessions - 1956-1961 (2000) 6xCD BOX-SET | FLAC (tracks+.cue), lossless
Johnny Hodges was Duke Ellington's most important soloist, so when the alto saxophonist returned to his former employer in the fall of 1955 after leading his own band for just over four and a half years, he had Ellington's approval to record under his own name for Verve on a steady basis. This limited-edition box set collects all of Hodges' small-group sessions recorded for Verve between 1956 and 1961 (excepting some selections whose masters were lost), often with a number of sidemen on loan from Ellington. The leader's chops are best exhibited in the ballads and blues features, though his originals merit attention, too. Hodges hardly hogs the spotlight; he obviously takes his share of solos but generously features his guests and associates from the Ellington band. A nonet with Clark Terry, Ray Nance, Quentin Jackson, Jimmy Hamilton, Harry Carney, Billy Strayhorn, Jimmy Woode, and Sam Woodyard is easily the best all-around session within this compilation, with many fine tracks. The humorous "Just Squeeze Me," with Nance's hip vocals complemented by Terry's talkative horn in the background, as well as a surprising extended workout of "Take the 'A' Train," with Terry taking over the famous solo spotlight that Nance first recorded in 1941 (heard on flügelhorn) and followed by Nance on his swinging violin, are among its highlights. Some of the other veterans appearing in this collection include Roy Eldridge, Vic Dickenson, Ben Webster, and Herb Ellis. The atmosphere of each session is friendly and swinging, with the feeling that each take came together quickly, whether or not that was actually the case. While Johnny Hodges' recordings as a leader from this period never rivaled Duke Ellington's in either sales or critical acclaim, they proved to be consistently enjoyable and able to stand the test of time. The set includes 30 previously unissued tracks. The detailed liner notes and discography, along with the numerous photos, also help to make The Complete Verve Johnny Hodges Small Group Sessions 1956-1961 an essential purchase for swing fans, though it is a limited edition of just 7,500, so it is guaranteed to soar in value. It is available exclusively from www.mosaicrecords.com.
Ken Dryden
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