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Joe Lovano Leaps In With Little Willie [From The Archives]

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© -  Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


“ … His solos display the spontaneity of an ear player, but behind them is the urbane sophistication of a conservatory-trained musician with twenty years experience interpreting difficult charts in big bands ranging from Woody Herman to Carla Bley. Fully conversant with the harmonic vocabu­lary of Coltrane, Shorter and beyond, he is able to navigate complex structures with an uncannily relaxed rhythmic facility and big furry sound at the most intense outer partials. …” – Ted Panken, WKCR, NYC

There is nothing quite like Jazz that’s made in-performance.

You can get an idea of what’s involved in the process of Jazz creation and how monumentally complex it is to pull off well with a reading of the following observations by Ted Gioia [the paragraphing has been modified for added emphasis]:

"If improvisation is the essential element in Jazz, it may also be the most problematic. Perhaps the only way of appreciating its peculiarity is by imagining what 20th century art would be like if other art forms placed an equal emphasis on improvisation.

Imagine T.S. Eliot giving nightly poetry readings at which, rather than reciting set pieces, he was expected to create impromptu poems - different ones each night, sometimes recited at a fast clip; imagine giving Hitchcock or Fellini a handheld camera and asking them to film something - anything - at that very moment, without the benefits of script, crew, editing, or scoring; imagine Matisse or Dali giving nightly exhibitions of their skills - exhibitions at which paying audiences would watch them fill up canvas after canvas with paint, often with only two or three minutes devoted to each 'masterpiece.'

These examples strike us as odd, perhaps even ridiculous, yet conditions such as these are precisely those under which the Jazz musician operates night after night, year after year."

Is it any wonder, then, that Ted has entitled the book from which this excerpt is taken - The Imperfect Art: Reflections of Jazz and Modern Culture.


It’s even more remarkable to consider these factors while listening to tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano’s double CD Quartets: Live at The Village Vanguard.

Recorded over about a one-year interval from 1994-1995 and involving two, different groups, the consistently high level of improvisation that Joe and his cohorts establish on these in-performance recordings is astounding.

See what you think with a viewing of the following video tribute to Joe.

The audio track is Little Willie Leaps by Miles Davis and features Joe on tenor with Mulgrew Miller on piano, Christian McBride on bass and Lewis Nash on drums. It was recorded at the Village Vanguard in NYC on Sunday, January 22, 1995.



Lucky Thompson: Complete Parisian Small Group Sessions, 1956 - 1959 - Featuring Martial Solal

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


“Lucky Thompson has left behind a tremendously varied recorded legacy. His last recordings were made in 1972 and he ceased public performance two years later. Rumors about his demise have circulated  for years, as they have about his whereabouts. Thompson moved from city to city, and one point lived in the Canadian wilderness, growing his own food. He has been in Seattle. Washington since the early 90's. and has shown up at local jazz clubs to hear fellow tenormen Johnny Griffin and Stanley Turrentine. The British writer Mike Hennessey recently wrote an article originally published in the Italian Musica, and published this quote from Thompson: "You know. I lost my interest in music. I had to run from place to place at the mercy of people who manipulated me but I never rejected music; it constitutes a great part of my soul." Luckily for us, we can still experience the sensation of hearing new music from Thompson with the issuing of this beautiful music for the first time in the States. It comes from a fascinating period in the evolution of a great American artist.”
— Loren Schoenberg, insert notes to Lucky Thompson: Lucky in Paris, HighNote HCD-7045]


“The interplay between Lucky Thompson and Martial Solal raises the level of … [these] recordings to the sublime.”
— Loren Schoenberg


What I have been referring to as the Fresh Sound “Jazz in Paris” series of recent CD releases continues to delight and amaze me not only for the quality of the music on these discs, but also because they have introduced me to many, excellent French modern Jazz musicians whose existence I was not aware of previously.


Although its focus is on the music of an American living in Paris, Lucky Thompson: Complete Parisian Small Group Sessions, 1956 - 1959 - Featuring Martial Solal Volumes 1 and 2 is another magnificent offering in this category as issued by Jordi Pujol on his Fresh Sound label [FSR -CD 933/1-933/2]. Each volume is a double CD which finds tenor saxophonist Eli “Lucky” Thompson in the company of many of the best musician on the French Jazz scene of the mid-to-late 1950s, with the work of the outstanding pianist Martial Solal featured on many of these tracks.


Lucky Thompson [1924-2005] had never been accorded the praise he deserved in the United States, despite the fact that in the 40s many prominent critics and musicians considered him the finest tenor-saxophone player to appear in Jazz since the emergence of Coleman Hawkins and Lester Young. He never found work easily in his own country, maybe because he expressed his views too forcibly about the various rackets going on behind the glittering facade of the musical profession. It got so bad that by the 1950s Lucky was practically ignored by most record labels, which deliberately passed over his name time and time again rather than employ him.


This was the situation in 1956. when he decided to move to Paris — like Don Byas and several others before him—hoping for better things in Europe where his name meant something to Jazz critics and collectors. In the months after his arrival in Paris, Lucky appeared on more record sessions than he had in the previous several years in the States. These Parisian recordings [1956-1959] went a long way towards proving Lucky Thompson's stature in Jazz; they show that his neglect was uncalled for, and that he was a superb fountain of finely-embroidered Jazz improvisation.


More about these “must have” four discs is contained in the following insert notes to the boxed set as written by Jordi Pujol. For order information via the Fresh Sound website, please go here.


“Eli Thompson was born in June 1924 in Columbia, South Carolina. His family, like many other African-American families, felt that opportunities in the South were limited and so they moved North, first to Ohio and then to Detroit. Once, during Eli Thompson's boyhood in Detroit, his father bought sweaters for him and his brother. On the fronts of the sweaters was sewn the name "Lucky." The neighborhood kids quickly turned the emblem into a nickname for Eli. A week later, the sweater was ripped in a football game. That's the way Lucky's "luck" ran through all his live.


Lucky loved music "ever since I can remember," but he didn't get an instrument until he was 15. "Before then I'd fool around with anything I could get hold of. I'd had eyes for a saxophone since I was 8, but my folks weren't very foresighted, and they thought I didn't know what I wanted. So, in effect, I learned how to play sax before I ever got one. I say 'I learned' but actually, I'm still learning," he said in 1957. Lucky studied tenor saxophone with Bobby Byrne's father and clarinet with Francis Hellstein of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra, and a little later harmony and theory with John Phelps. His first work came late in 1942 and early 1943 when he toured with the Alabama State Collegians, a group led by the Trenier Twins (CIiff and Claude), which included jazzmen like trumpeters Joe Morris and Willie Cook, and altoist Sonny Stitt. After returning to Detroit, he played in the band of drummer Benny Carew, alongside Wardell Gray and Hank Jones. Then, in the summer of 1943, he moved to New York, where after working out his union card he worked with Lionel Hampton. Still, the unfriendly attitude he encountered deeply disillusioned him. After playing briefly in the Ray Parker band, he was employed by Big Sid Catlett to play in his quartet at the Cobra club.


Lucky Thompson acquired a reputation among musicians, and so Hot Lips Page hired him for what would be Lucky's first recordings, with the trumpeter's sextet, in March 8, 1944. Following a brief stint with Lucky Millinder's band, in the summer of that same year Lucky went on tour with Billy Eckstine's orchestra which included the cream of musicians: Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Howard McGhee, Leo Parker, Art Blakey and Sarah Vaughan. Because its musical conception was too advanced for the time, this Eckstine ensemble did not meet the expected success and had to be dissolved. Lucky Thompson then went to play with Slam Stewart, and recorded again with Hot Lips Page and with Erroll Garner before joining Count Basie's band in November. By then, Lucky was already the best tenor saxophonist of his generation, and playing with Basie placed him at the forefront of jazz. He toured with him until the last band's successful engagement at the Hollywood Plantation in October 1945.


Lucky then decided to settle in Los Angeles, becoming one of the most prolific jazz recording soloists in the city in one of the busiest periods of his long career. In December, when the Dizzy Gillespie Sextet was engaged to play at Billy's Berg, Lucky was hired to play in the group alongside Charlie Parker, Milt Jackson, Al Haig, Ray Brown and Stan Levey. Despite playing with the fathers of bebop, he never found himself devoted to any particular style, and even back then, Lucky was already playing his own way.


In style, Lucky was one of the most singular tenor players in jazz. He grew up at a time when modern jazz was in its embryo stages; consequently he was able to listen to and absorb the best elements of two schools of tenor playing, the swing school of Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster and Don Byas and the new modern jazz school evolving with Lester Young. From Hawkins he look the melodic style of phrasing, and the way of making his improvisations always direct and emotionally expressive. From Lester he took the pure, smooth tone, giving his improvisations a lightness, a delicacy of delivery. Lucky was an immaculate technician, a quality that helped his ideas always come through in a facile manner— they are never expressed in a ponderous way. He had a lot to say and ample means for saying it. Most of all, he was possessed of a tremendous swing. Of the younger generation of tenor-saxophone players, only the work of Wardell Gray equaled Lucky's for constant swing and richness of invention.


Early in February 1945, he was one of the first black musicians who joined Boyd Raeburn's progressive orchestra. During the following two years Lucky appeared sitting in on literally dozens of sessions of the most diverse artists: Charles Mingus, Slim Gaillard, Wilbert Baranco, Charlie Parker, Earle Spencer, Jimmy Mundy, George Handy, Lena Home, Phil Moore, Louis Armstrong, Ike Carpenter, Benny Carter and many others. One of his finest recorded solos from this period was How High the Moon with Dodo Marmarosa for the Atomic label.


He moved back East at the end of 1947 to try the local clubs again, and went into the Three Deuces where George Shearing was playing as a
single. "When I came back," Lucky mentioned in an interview, "the club owners were hiring the leaders and picking all the men as well. I didn't go for that, but the majority of the musicians were catering to the owner's wishes. Anyway I worked with Shearing for a while and then both of us played with Oscar Pettiford and J. C. Heard."


Lucky began to run up against opposition. Always outspoken concerning the many injustices which he felt were ruining the jazz scene, the tenorman found that he was gradually being left out of all recording sessions and club engagements.


In February 1948 he went to Europe to perform at the jazz festival in Nice along with Louis Armstrong, Earl Hines, Barney Bigard, Jack Teagarden, Arvell Shaw, Sid Catlett, and a Mezz Mezzrow unit with Baby Dodds. Lucky went alone because of a suddenly restricted budget, and he played with a Swiss and a Belgian band. "They were limited in the things they could play, but if I could get that kind of enthusiasm from American musicians, it would be a great thing," he said.


Upon returning to the U.S.A., Thompson was engaged without great success in small cabarets; he played what he could and where he could. In 1949, the situation worsened and Lucky Thompson refused more and more to follow the modes of the moment. "I thought having played in Europe would be an asset for me when I got back, but it wasn't. I jobbed around until the summer of 1948 when I got so tired of fighting, I went home to Detroit to rest. I came back to New York after a while and worked wherever I could at whatever I could."


Early in 1949, Lucky was asked to join an all-star band led by Oscar Pettiford at a club then called the Clique, which later became the site of Birdland. Included were Fats Navarro, Miles Davis, Dexter Gordon, Kai Winding, Milt Jackson, Kenny Clarke, and Bud Powell. "There was such a clash of temperaments," Thompson recalled. "We could have really developed an organization, but the idea of doing that seemed to be a joke to many of them. After a couple of weeks, I gave up the idea of writing for that band.


"Through 1949, I knocked around here and there. As for records, a man would sometimes give me his card when he heard me at a gig but when I went to his office, he'd say: 'I liked what you were doing, but this is what I want you to do.' It seemed an insult, however, to make honking records, just as it is for a musician to do a strip-tease on the stage.


"I went back to Detroit again and worked in the Chrysler plant for about four months in 1949. A verbal contract got me to return to New York for a date at the Royal Roost. The contract wasn't lived up to, and when I fought for my rights in the union, the union advised me to take a settlement.


"I lost all around, and as a result of my bucking the club owner, the word got around I was difficult, and from 1949 to 1954, I was never given a gig in a major jazz club in New York City. It wasn't until 1954 when Miles Davis had to have a tenor for a Birdland date that I played in one of those clubs. He called me, and I went on with him to Basin Street. But that was the first time in five years."


The next couple of years he freelanced, but he had to battle for every job.
"Some of the bands I played in were the saddest I'd ever heard.
Occasionally we'd have to back some of those lousy bird groups. You know what I mean, the Larks or the Blue-jays or whatever they're called. You couldn't call them singers or artists or musicians.


"Meanwhile, I decided to try to continue my writing. I had started writing seriously on the coast in '46 and once while working a couple of theaters out there with Sarah Vaughan and George Treadwell, they heard a couple of my songs and liked them. In fact, Sarah recorded my tune While You Are Gone for Columbia in 1949.


"I was supposed to have written the arrangement for that record date, but the disc was on the street before I knew anything about it. I put the song in with one of the publishers that Columbia suggested I deal with, but nothing happened after that record so I decided to open my own publishing firm."


Lucky worked hard at building his firm, Great Music, from 1949-51, but again there were obstacles. "It seemed useless for me to try to perform on my horn; they had me locked up in so many ways, so I tried this. I put everything I had into the publishing business and tried always to pick the right artist for each song. But I had never realized until then that most artists have so little to do with their own affairs.


"I became discouraged with publishing, too, after a while. But I still have the firm in my home in East Elmhurst, N. Y., and some of my songs have been recorded in recent years."


Though the writer of a number of fine ballads, he found that recording companies deliberately discouraged artists from using his songs, or tried to avoid giving him the composer credits for a number. So he kept on freelancing, recording only very occasionally through the auspices of some sympathetic session supervisor such as John Hammond; a man idolised by many musicians, but hardly known at the time outside the realm of his professional colleagues.


From 1951 to 1952, Lucky worked briefly with Count Basie and Lucky Millinder again, among other gigs, and then he went into the Savoy ballroom with a small band in 1952 for two weeks opposite Basie. Lucky poured all his money into this combo, buying new uniforms and stands and working up a new book.


"The musicians had a will to learn and excelled their own abilities," Thompson mentioned. "We were back at the Savoy four or five times in the next two years and used it as a kind of base of operations. Although the band was creating a lot of interest during that time, and the Basie band was a great publicity agency for us, only one agent made any offers."


The Savoy ballroom and Lucky split in 1953 after a dispute. That year Lucky did eight sides for Decca of which six were released but with practically no promotion. Lucky continued to gig around and continued to represent himself, rather than being booked by an agent. "I've never found an agent," he said, "who offered to represent me in the fashion I wanted.


"The success I achieved at the Savoy had no bearing elsewhere. Magazines, newspapers, radio and television are particularly interested in records. Our records were never used. I've been recording for big companies, but you could always ask for records at a drop-off from New York, you would not have found any. It does not matter if you are a good musician or if you have made good records if the Syndicate has not decided to push you, you will remain in the harbor."


He recorded a number of discs with studio formations led by Jack Teagarden, Oscar Pettiford and Jimmy Hamilton, but Lucky found it difficult to get a stable job. He continued to express his views candidly about the various rackets going on behind the glittering facade of the musical profession, so much so that in the early 1950's Lucky was practically ignored by most record labels, which deliberately passed over his name time and again rather than employ him.


This was the situation when in early 1956 he decided to move to Paris, hoping for better things in Europe, as it had happened for Dicky Wells, Bill Coleman, Don Byas and several others before him. So on February 17th, 1956 he arrived in Paris, with the hope of finding a more favorable audience for his playing.


Then newly arrived from the United States, Lucky Thompson was sought by Charles Delaunay, Robert Aubert and Kurt Mohr for an interesting interview with him for the French magazine Jazz Hot about his opinion on the problems that hammered jazz in the United States.


"In America you can see that those who control the musical world come to impose on the musicians the way of playing and the repertoire they have to interpret, as they manage to impose on the public what it is to love or not," stated Lucky. "In the United States, you can choose between two commercial proposals: the musical striptease of 'Rhythm and Blues' or the excesses of the cool school. Some of them are really to be pitied, especially those who think that you cannot play 'cool' music without resorting to the influence of stimulants or even drugs while the best stimulant a musician finds, on the contrary, in his love of music, in the esteem of his partners and in the appreciation of the public.


"But do you think it makes sense for some of these cool musicians to perform on stage, in front of an audience, without showing the slightest sign of emotion, playing as if for themselves, as if they do not care for listeners, not even deigning to smile when this audience applauds them. I consider that a musician does not have the right to make fun of the public. Especially since, very often, it is only an attitude that these musicians seek to give themselves."


Antoine Robert pointed out: "You have just branded a whole class of musicians under the term 'cool' school. 1 would like to know if this condemnation applies to all modern musicians and if musicians like Art Blakey, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan or Jimmy Raney are involved in this category."


"Obviously not," replied Lucky, "and I regret not having specified it right away, because obviously this can lead to misunderstanding. The term 'cool' of course applies to many of these imitators, who have taken from their masters only their external signs, without generally understanding their music or their message."


And asked about racial segregation in his country, Lucky replied, "racism has always more or less existed among musicians. But not so determinedly, it seems to me, nowadays. This comes from the fact that the Pharisees of jazz always try to deny colored people the paternity of jazz. On the other hand, the musicians of color realize that, since the beginning of jazz, their music has been exploited in such a way that they only get the minimum profit and even try to take them out the privilege of having been its creators.


"Since this music has become an international language adopted throughout the world, one sees that segregation is going on even in the music itself. Thus the Rhythm and Blues, which until now has been practiced for and by the blacks, has recently extended its field of action, and in order to confer more dignity on this kind of music, it has been thought necessary to call it henceforth the Rock 'n' Roll."


His plans were to stay in France until the end of March, before joining Dizzy Gillespie's orchestra for a tour of the Middle East and India. From his arrival in Paris, he was called to be featured and leader of several recording sessions for various labels, and was the star of a great number of concerts in Paris, in the provinces and abroad, in particular with drummer and bandleader Gerard "Dave" Pochonet, who was considered one of the best French jazz drummers. Pochonet had played as a sideman and as a leader of his own group for many visiting Americans: Bill Coleman, Hazel Scott, Dizzy Gillespie, Mary Lou Williams, Jonah Jones, Don Byas, Buck Clayton, Emmett Berry, etc. He had been also associated with some of the best European musicians such as Django Reinhardt, Bobby Jaspar, Andre Persiany and Henri Renaud.


His first date took place on the late to early hours of February 21 to 22nd, 1956 for the Ducretet-Thomson label. With him here we find trumpeter Emmett Berry, the forceful stylist who played for many years with Count Basie and with Johnny Hodges' small group, and who came to Europe shortly before Lucky in a little group led by pianist Sammy Price. Emmett had a fire and swing sufficient to complement Lucky's own power very well. Supporting these two Americans was a rhythm trio led by pianist Henri Renaud — considered by many as the best modern jazz composer, and certainly the best accompanist in France. Dave Pochonet on drums and the Belgian bassist Benoit Quersin completed the unit.


Thompson contributed several compositions to the session, including Thin Ice, based on altered I Got Rhythm changes, which is played without the piano, with Quersin playing a fine accompaniment to the frontline improvisation; a minor-key blues titled A Minor Delight with Berry using a cup mute; a fast blues Takin' Care o' Business, and One Cool Night, so called because of the temperature in Paris on the night of the session. The star of the date was Lucky, offering an unfailing source of imaginative and rhythmic strength, and limning a full-blown solo on the ballad Medley [Sophisticated Lady, These Foolish Things]. Emmett Berry also contributed with Blues for Frank, a twelve-bar tune, dedicated to his fellow trumpeter Frankie Newton, on which Emmett is the only horn, showcasing his improvising skills and warm feeling, but because Thompson is not heard, and due to the time constraints on CD-1, we decided to include this track as a bonus at the end of CD-4.


Lucky decided to cancel his tour with Gillespie and stay in France.
In the following two months, he appeared on more record sessions in Paris than he had in the previous several years in the States. There are too many highlights for detailed comment. The tasty standards and casual originals provide a variety of tempos and moods, and Lucky shows that his neglect had been uncalled for, and that he was a superb fountain of finely-embroidered jazz improvisation, in a style more inspired by the Hawkins-Byas school than that of Lester Young. Comfortable on all tempos, these sides strongly indicate how underappreciated this master of the tenor and pioneer of the soprano sax was.


Lucky was accompanied in these 1956 sessions by some of the best French jazz musicians, as Henri Renaud, Jean-Pierre Sasson, Guy Lafitte, Pierre Michelot, Michel Hausser, Michel de Villers, William Boucaya, Christian Garros, Fernand and Charles Verstraete, and in particular pianist Martial Solal, who revealed all his capacity for individualized invention. Much of the success of these sessions derives from the seemingly instinctive rapport that Solal established with Thompson, his uncanny ability to complement Lucky's often complex shiftings and turnings.


According to Lucky, Solal "is one of the most outstanding pianists I have ever heard."


When British baritone saxophonist Harry Klein, a replacement in the Stan Kenton band for Jack Nimitz, had to return to London as a result of the illness of his mother, Lucky switched to baritone and joined Kenton for the four Parisian concerts at the Alhambra, on April 30 and May 1st, 1956, and remained with the band for the rest of its European tour. He returned to New York on May 11, but right before leaving he still recorded an album with the Dave Pochonet eight-piece orchestra for the Swing label. Lucky left Paris, but with the idea of returning the following year.


In New York, Lucky continued to play with Kenton, now on tenor, recording with the band the excellent album "Cuban Fire". In his comeback home he was acclaimed by the critics for having triumphed in France, and the recording offers came in for him both as leader and as a sideman with groups directed by Oscar Pettiford, Lionel Hampton, Quincy Jones, Louis Armstrong, Milt Jackson, Ralph Sharon, and singers like Johnny Hartman, Dinah Washington.


On June 1957, Lucky flew back to France, and recorded once again extensively in Paris, as a featured soloist with such different groups as the quartet of American pianist and singer Sammy Price, which included, Sasson, Michelot and Pochonet; with orchestras conducted by Martial
Solal, Kenny Clarke, and Eddie Barclay, who played some good Quincy Jones arrangements and at the time was also living and working as an arranger in Paris.


On the September 26th recording we can hear Lucky in a quartet session led by the great American drummer Kenny Clarke, who along with Solal and bassist Pierre Michelot, formed the best possible rhythm section available in Paris at the moment. The three men provided an irresistibly swinging support for Lucky, who adopted a feather-light tone, playing well shaped, flowing statements on three bop tunes, Now's the Time, The Squirrel, and Four, and a swing classic, Stompin' at the Savoy. But the focus here is in Solal, who displays some of his best piano on this set, with solos of consistent, pulsating interest, while Clarke is a natural swinging gas, and Michelot keeps a solid, steady beat.


In December 1958, Lucky arrived once again in Paris, to play at the Blue Note, and soon entered in the studio again with a group directed by Dave Pochonet, with Michael Hausser on vibes and the always excellent Martial Solal. On the two session dates recorded for the label Symphonium, we find another of the gems of this collection, We'll Be Together Again, one of those ballads that makes you believe everything Lucky is saying.


No less impressive is Lucky's solo on Soul Food, on which he blows with easy wailing and depth of emotion, only accompanied by the fierce conga drums of Gana M'Bow. Both men met again on Brother Bob, but this time Lucky is featured on soprano, in a demonstration of his valuable contribution to the evolution of this instrument in jazz.


In France, Lucky's work gave him some of the credit which he had failed to receive for his playing in America. He created music of great beauty but failed to come to terms with a system he perceived as avaricious, exploitative, and run by people he characterized as "vultures." Unwilling to make the moral and esthetic compromises he saw the music business as demanding from him, he chose to become a private person, much to the regret of his many admirers — colleagues and listeners alike.


These Parisian 1956-1959 recordings should go a long way towards proving Lucky Thompson's stature in jazz, and not only as a instrumentalist but also as a prolific and inventive composer. His ballad One Last Goodbye is a great example of both facets. A major jazzman who had so little of the rewards his work deserved. His name meant something exemplary in jazz to critics and collectors.”
—Jordi Pujol


I realize that most of this music has been made available before in other formats, but nothing rivals this Fresh Sound boxed set in terms of having it all in one place and be able to follow it chronologically because it provides a comprehensive overview of Lucky’s playing and his music and, in so doing, it offers a platform for understanding Thompson’s genius.



Louie Bellson: Blazing, Bombastic and Beautiful [From the Archives with Revisions]

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© -  Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


In all the years I’ve been around Jazz musicians, I have never met a kinder more nobler soul that Louie Bellson.
- the editorial staff at JazzProfiles

Although his illustrious career is detailed in any number of places including his own website, Louie Bellson’s name is not the subject of a dedicated chapter in any of the major anthologies on Jazz drumming.


Come to think of it, for that matter, neither is Joe Morello, although Joe does get his own chapter in Georges Paczynski’s Une Histoire de la Batterie de Jazz, Tome 2, while Louie has to share one with another former Ellington drummer, Sam Woodyard, in which the focus is on Skin Deep [which Louie composed.] Duke used it as a wowie, zowie drum solo intended as crowd pleaser.


Along with Gene Krupa and Buddy Rich, Louie is often mentioned as part of what Duke referred to as “The Big Three,” but I suspect that this is more to do with Ellington’s habit of hyping things up than with any real recognition of Louie’s skills as a drummer.


Over the years, I got to know Louie a bit and I’ve never been around anyone who visibly enjoyed playing drums more than Louie Bellson.


When he sat down behind the monster, double bass drum kit that he preferred [and perfected], he just exuded energy and enthusiasm.


Louie was a well-schooled drummer with lots of technical skills and an uncanny knack of seeming to ride over a set of drums, almost as though he was barely touching them. He speed was blazingly fast, but unlike Buddy Rich, he rarely generated any power to go along with his lighting-fast stick control. He touched the drums instead of striking them.


When he did produce the sound of power in his solos, it generally came from coordinating the double bass drums with single stroke rolls on the snare drum and tom toms. Once he got those big bass drums going [he used two, 30” diameter bass drums], it sounded like artillery rounds were being fired off as a commemorative salute.


Louie generated his speed from the finger control method of playing drums in which the rebound from the stick is employed along with very relaxed wrists to perpetuate movement on and around the drum heads. The stick is tapped back down instead of being banged or slapped into the drum.


Louie was not a big guy; if anything he was slight and a bit demure, but boy, get him behind a set of drums and he “lit up like a Christmas tree.”


“Who cares about winning polls. I’ve got my own big band and we’re having fun.”


“Who do I like in today’s Jazz drummers? I like ‘em all. I always learn something from every drummer.”


“What type of stick do I use? I use a variety of ‘em: different lengths; different beads; different weights. Keeps your hands more sensitive and responsive.”


All these responses and many more like them came from Louie’s answers to questions at drum clinics. He was usually mobbed afterwards with everyone coming up to give him a hug and to thank him.


“Sure, sure,” he would say: “Hey, does anyone want to try the double bass drums? Don’t be afraid [everyone was because hardly anyone had that kind of coordination]. It’s easy. Just sit down and just do it.”


When one of us would try playing the two bass drum kit, he’d always say - “Beautiful, beautiful” - no matter how badly we messed them up.


Louie Bellson had blazingly fast hands, used his feet to “detonate” bass drums bombs” while all the while wearing a beautiful smile on his face.


He was revered by drummers and just about every musician he ever worked with because he was an excellent drummer but never lorded his talents and abilities over anyone. Jazz cats come in all “shapes and size.” Some have incredible technical skills while others just get by on their instruments with a strong will and deep feelings. Louie didn’t care as long as you loved the music and were honestly yourself while trying to play it.


In all the years I’ve been around Jazz musicians, I have never met a kinder more nobler soul that Louie Bellson.


Len Lyons and Don Perlo put together this brief synopsis about Louie and his career in their Jazz Portraits: The Lives and Music of the Jazz Masters:


Louis Bellson - also “Louie” - Louis Paul Balassoni [1924 - 2009]


[Ed. note. - Luigi Paulino Alfredo Francesco Antonio Balassoni]


‘Bellson, an excellent technician and all-around musician, can power a big band with his driving beat, or tastefully accompany small combos and vocalists. He pioneered the use of twin bass drums during the mid-1940s, sparked the languishing Ellington Orchestra from 1951 to 1953, and during the 1970s led his own big band, for which he composed and arranged. Modest and gregarious, Bellson solos little for a drummer of his virtuosity and easily slips in and out of diverse environments: jazz clubs, TV, educational clinics, and orchestras.


The son of a music-store proprietor, Bellson learned to tap-dance as a boy, which he credits with developing his sense of time and rhythm. He was soon proficient on drums and won several competitions, including one sponsored by an early idol, Gene Krupa. Bellson worked for Benny Goodman in 1943 and again in 1945-46. In 1946, with Ted Fio Rito's commercial band, he inaugurated the use of two bass drums, which increases the drummer's ability to propel a large group. Bellson then replaced Buddy Rich, with whom he is often compared, in the Tommy Dorsey band (1947-49).


The subsequent period with Ellington, however, established him as a major talent. Bellson was a precise yet fiery drummer and a capable composer, adding to the band's book "Hawk Talks,""Ting-a-ling," and "Skin Deep," which showcased an extended drum solo.... In 1953 Bellson left the Ellington band to further the career of his new wife, Pearl Bailey.


Bellson accompanied Bailey, Ella Fitzgerald and Louis Armstrong, Oscar Peterson, Dizzy Gillespie, Art Tatum and various small combos. He rejoined Ellington (1965—66), served as Bailey's music director, and composed for various bands. During the mid-1970s, Bellson organized a Los Angeles—based group for which he wrote many brassy, extroverted pieces - The Louie Bellson Explosion.  In addition to performing, Bellson has been a popular visiting instructor at college percussion seminars and clinics.”


The distinguished Jazz author, critic and historian Leonard Feather offers a slightly different recap of Louie’s career, as well as, an elaboration of Louie’s Big Band Explosion in these introductory paragraphs that are excerpted from his insert notes to The Louis Bellson Explosion [Pablo/Original Jazz Classics - OJCCD-728-2]:


“Louis Bellson lives in two worlds, enjoying the best of both. By this I do not refer to his dual life as a drummer and composer, or composer and bandleader, but rather to his simultaneous occupancy of past and present. There is no better evidence than this new album of his ability to draw on early experiences while infusing his orchestra with a spirit that is contemporary in the best sense of the word.


Louis, of course, paid lengthy dues as a sideman, with Benny Goodman, Tommy Dorsey, Harry James, Count Basie, and most notably Duke Ellington. But because of his qualifications as an all-around musician, he probably was destined from the start to be a leader.
Historically, it is interesting to note that he undertook this role on records for the first time with a Los Angeles session for Norman Granz's Clef label in 1953.


Throughout the 1950s he continued to record for Granz, in addition to touring with Jazz at the Philharmonic. With his appearance in combos on several recent Pablo albums, and particularly with the return to records of his own orchestra via this flourishing new company, the wheel has come full circle.


Writing some years ago about Louis's juggling of multiple careers, I noted that he had found a successful solution to the problems posed by any attempt in the post-swing era to organize a big band. Instead of keeping an ensemble together on a year-round basis, he draws on a pool of important Los Angeles-based musicians who can be counted on to constitute a firm foundation. A key figure has always been trombonist Nick Di Maio, who has doubled as manager for the bands since the 1950s. Di Maio is one of a half dozen members of the present unit who play regularly in Doc Severinsen's band on the Tonight show, as does Louis himself whenever he has a little spare time in town.


Several of the sidemen have credentials that include long associations with Bellson. Cat Anderson was a colleague back in the Ellington days. Pete Christlieb, the powerhouse tenor player, now 30, was 22 when he began working with Louis. His section-mate, composer Don Menza, moved to Los Angeles in 1969 and started gigging with the band almost immediately. A more recent addition is Richard "Blue" Mitchell, the poised and expressive trumpeter who had put in long stints with Horace Silver, Ray Charles, and John Mayall before undertaking a cross-Canada tour with Louis in 1974. The two keyboard occupants who share duties here, Nat Pierce and Ross Tompkins, have worked separately with Louis for several years off and on.


To fortify the rhythm section, it was decided to enlist the services of Dave Levine and Paulo Magalhaes, whose additional percussion work was scattered through the two sessions.


All these elements, along with the band's characteristic esprit de corps in the brass and reed sections, come into focus from the opening track.”


For the following video montage, I have selected the closing track from The Louis Bellson Explosion [Pablo/Original Jazz Classics - OJCCD-728-2], about which, Leonard provides these insights:


La Banda Grande, by Jack Hayes [a long-established orchestrator, conductor and composer for films who has been collaborating with Bellson since they met at an Academy Awards broadcast in the 1960s when both were working for Henry Mancini] and Bellson, is characterized by Louis as "a Chick Corea type Latin thing." Along with contributions by [Blue] Mitchell and [Pete] Christlieb, and a brief spot for [guitarist] Mitch Holder, there is a joyous samba groove that brings out the value of that extra percussion as Louis plays off against Dave Levine and Paulo Magalhaes.


"We really got a good feeling in the studio," says Bellson, "with the help of a natural set-up. The band was arranged just the way we would be in a nightclub, which enabled us to relax; and the engineer got a great sound. John Williams was fantastic both on acoustic and on electric bass. In fact, I'm very happy about the way the whole album turned out."


What Bellson could not add, because bombast is not his style, is that no band of first-class musicians, directed by an instrumentalist so gifted and so unanimously respected, is likely to go very far wrong. "Working for Louis was a ball," somebody remarked to me after a recent gig with the band. I can't remember which sideman said it, because over the years some similar phrase has been echoed by just about everyone who has worked for him. If you don't care to take my word for it, the performance itself offers eloquent proof.”


—Leonard Feather






© -Steven Voce, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Louie Bellson [1924-2009]


Writing for The Independent, Steve Voce has kindly allowed JazzProfiles to reprint the obituaries of many of the by-gone stars of Jazz's early years who deserve a remembrance.


“Although he was with Duke for only a couple of years, Louie Bellson must be regarded as the last of the great Ellingtonians, for he had a lasting effect on the band. He replaced Sonny Greer, who had been the drummer in the Ellington band since it began in the Twenties, and he brought in a new and powerful style that brought Ellington’s music out of the almost classic style of the Forties into the new, more aggressive sounds of the Fifties.


Bellson’s long experience in guiding the bands of Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman from the drum chair flowered into maturity with Ellington. His then unique device of using two pedal-operated bass drums gave the band a new power, and yet his playing was always tasteful. He had firm control of the bands and guided them with an amazing technique.
Were it not for the almost supernatural Buddy Rich, Bellson could have been considered to be the very greatest big band drummer. But where Rich was flashy, Bellson was more subtle and complemented the music of the bands in which he played; when Rich played, brilliant though he was, he tended to crowd out the other musicians. In addition, Bellson was perhaps the only man who could play a 15-minute drum solo and sustain the rapt attention of an audience throughout.
The list of the big bands for which Bellson played covered a wide range of the very best in jazz. He changed the character of each of them for the better, and as well as Ellington’s, they included the bands of Benny Goodman – whom he joined when he was 17 – Tommy Dorsey, Harry James and Count Basie, as well as the many fine bands that he later led himself.
As a boy, Bellson spent much of his time in his father’s music store in Moline, Illinois, where over the years he learned to play most of the instruments in stock. But it was the drums that attracted him most, and he was still in school when he developed the technique of using two bass drums at once, one for the left foot and one for the right. He had tap-danced at a local nightclub with the barrelhouse pianist Speckled Red and he thought that this helped him to play the two bass drums with such dexterity.


In 1940, when Bellson was 16, he won a nationwide drumming contest sponsored by Gene Krupa, an idol of swing fans. The Second World War caused a shortage of band musicians and as a result Bellson was swept straight from high school into the Ted Fio Rito band when it passed through Moline. From here, Benny Goodman hired him late in 1942. Three years in the Army interrupted his progress, but he returned to Goodman in 1946. Although not the most famous of his bands, the Goodman band of this time was to have a powerful effect on big band style.
Goodman was a perfectionist. “He taught me how to listen, how to play in a big band, and how to swing. He wanted the sections playing in tempo on their own,” Bellson said. “He needed them to keep time without relying on the rhythm section. We’d have to sit through the entire rehearsal until Benny added the bass, drums and piano.”
When work in the Goodman band dipped, he moved to Tommy Dorsey’s band. Goodman and Dorsey were both, in their separate ways, monsters. Goodman was mindlessly cruel, whereas Dorsey’s sadism was usually calculated. But even amongst such a great band of musicians Bellson’s talent was outstanding and Dorsey valued him highly. Bellson, a slight man, had a huge appetite. Dorsey would show him off to friends by taking him to a restaurant and ordering half a dozen T-bone steaks, which Bellson would swiftly devour.
In 1950, business slowed for Tommy Dorsey and Bellson joined the resurgent Harry James band. He became friends with Juan Tizol, a valve trombonist who had previously been with Duke Ellington.
“We would play before 3,000 at the Hollywood Palladium,” recalled Bellson, “but I remember some of those navy and air force bases where we played to 14 or 15 thousand people.”
Then, in 1951, came what became known as the “Great James Raid”. “The phone rang in Tizol’s flat,” Bellson remembered. “It was Duke and he asked Juan to rejoin the Ellington band and to bring Willie Smith, Harry’s alto-sax star, and me along with him.” This was to tear the heart out of James’s band, but he took it in good part and wished the musicians well.
On the face of it, things didn’t look good for Bellson. He was the only white musician in a black band – then a serious problem – and not only were there no band parts written for a drummer, but most of the music existed mainly because the musicians knew it by heart. Also, the band was about to embark on a tour of the Deep South. “We’re going to make you Haitian,” said Ellington, and that was how Bellson was described to avoid trouble.
Bellson brought an original composition with him that became a permanent part of the Ellington repertoire and took the band’s big band sound into a new dimension. “Skin Deep”, a drum solo set in the band which covered two sides of a 78 record, became a huge hit. Soon after, Bellson wrote another seminal hit, “The Hawk Talks” (Hawk was Harry James’s nickname).
Whilst he had been with James, Tizol and his wife had often told Bellson stories of the singer Pearl Bailey and said that he should meet her. “When we were in Washington DC with the Ellington band this young lady came up and said, ‘Well, I’m Pearl,’ and I said ‘Well, I’m Louie.’ Four days later we got married in London.”
Bellson left Ellington early in 1953 to become Pearl Bailey’s musical director, although he returned to Duke on special occasions over the years. In 1954 he began a long association with Norman Granz, appearing in Granz’s Jazz at the Philharmonic, sometimes in duet with Buddy Rich. Over the years, Granz teamed Bellson with Oscar Peterson, Lionel Hampton, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald and a host of other luminaries.
The drummer joined Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey for a year in 1955 and made a Scandinavian tour with Count Basie’s band in 1962. That year, he also composed a jazz ballet called The Marriage Vows. He rejoined Ellington from 1965 to 1966 and then moved back to Harry James in 1966.
From 1967 he led his own big band based in North Hollywood and this included ex-Ellingtonians and many of the jazz stars from the Los Angeles studios. During the Seventies he also taught at jazz workshops in a variety of universities.
He was shattered when Pearl Bailey died in 1990, but picked himself up, and in 1991 met Francine Wright, a computer engineer, and they were married in September 1992. In 1993, Bellson travelled to New York where he assembled a potent big band of leading musicians to perform and record Duke Ellington’s seminal “Black, Brown and Beige” suite.
“There were ordinary nights when the music was very good,” said Bellson. “But there were others when you had to pinch yourself and ask if it was real. How do you explain that? You don’t. I had moments like that with Duke and Benny and also with Tommy Dorsey and with my dear late wife Pearl.
Steve Voce
Louie Bellson, drummer, bandleader, composer: born Rock Falls, Illinois 6 July 1924; married 1952 Pearl Bailey (deceased) (two daughters), 1992 Francine Wright; died Los Angeles 14 February 2009.
The following video features the Louie Bellson Big Band Explosion of Herbie Hancock’s Chameleon.  


Chameleon is a remarkable illustration of the adaptation for Jazz purposes, through skillful arranging (by Bill Holman), of a work with jazz/rock combo origins. After starting out in a manner not unlike the original Herbie Hancock version, it gradually shifts colors; the horns come in, Blue Mitchell makes a muted statement, and the brass section contributes to a massive and beautifully conceived buildup.



Kenton and Kandinsky - "El Congo Valiente"

Jimmy Rowles Drawings - Chet Baker Sextet

Bud Brisbois- "Woody 'n You"

June Christy - "I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me"

Bill Evans - "The Interplay Sessions"

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Written from the perspective of 1983, about 20 years after the original Bill Evans “Interplay Sessions” were recorded for Riverside Records and three years after Bill’s death in 1980, the following reminiscences are contained in Orrin Keepnews’ The View from Within, Jazz Writings 1948-1987 [Oxford].

Although the Jazz world would subsequently read a great deal about Bill from the pen of Gene Lees, the late author, critic and former editor of Down Beat, and a very close friend of Bill’s, no one knew Bill better during the formative years of his career, beginning in 1956, than Orrin who produced a number of definitive recordings by Evansl during this period on his Riverside label.

From an overall career perspective, Orrin is more associated with record producing for a series of labels he owned over the years [in addition to Riverside, Orrin also issued records on his Milestone and Landmark labels and produced recordings for the Fantasy Group], but after graduating from Columbia University in 1943 with a degree in English, Orrin’s first involvement with Jazz was as a writer on the subject for newspapers and magazines.

As is the case with so many of the works that have become part of the Oxford University Press treasure trove of books on Jazz, Sheldon Meyer convinced Orrin to put the The View from Within, Jazz Writings 1948-1987 compendium together and also served as its editor.

With the involvement of Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, Zoot Sims on tenor and Jim Hall on guitar, The Interplay Sessions under the leadership of pianist Bill Evans were somewhat of an anomaly as Bill usually recorded for Riverside in a trio format.

Here’s Orrin’s explanation for how this all came about.

Bill Evans—"The Interplay Sessions"
1983

“The late Bill Evans was one of the most innovative and influential piano stylists of his day. Since that "day" ended only a relatively short time ago, with his death in September 1980, it remains impossible to judge how far-reaching and long-lasting his influence will be. But if the depth and the extent of his impact on jazz performers of the past two decades is a reliable clue, we will be hearing partial and complete would-be Bill Evans clones for quite some time to come.

In one way, this is certainly not to be regretted: provided that enough future followers display much the same degree of taste and talent as has been shown by such artists as (just to pick two random examples) Herbie Hancock and Keith Jarrett, jazz listeners and the future libraries of recorded music can only gain. But looking at it another way, to be such a thorough influence both on your contemporaries and on succeeding generations poses certain dangers to the artistic status of the innovator. After a while, the original works may no longer seem as fresh and adventurous when we return to them—simply because we have heard so much music in approximately the same vein. Even worse, listening to various self-appointed disciples who actually only grasp (and consequently exaggerate) one aspect of the master's style almost inevitably tends to leave a lopsided and diluted memory of what the original artist was really trying to say.

Louis Armstrong, who was the first to do so many things in jazz, may well have been the first to suffer from this. Certainly the legends and legacies of pioneers like Charlie Parker and John Coltrane have at times been at least momentarily tarnished by the work of decidedly lesser performers who claimed to be following in the path of the master. Evans, even during his lifetime, was similarly somewhat victimized by more than a few pallid pianists capable of playing old pop ballads at slow tempos with a few modal quirks thrown in, presumably sounding "just like Bill Evans" but actually very much missing the point.

One way of appreciating how far off the mark such players are— and of recognizing as well the shortsightedness of listeners and critics who stereotype Bill as a Debussy-ridden specialist in languid mood music—is to pay attention to the several examples of other aspects of his playing, to the non-introspective and occasionally even non-trio Evans.

It is of course true that ever since December 1958, when he ended an eight-month stay with the Miles Davis Sextet, Bill appeared in public almost exclusively as the leader of his own trio. There's certainly no question about that being his preferred and most comfortable setting, and there's also no doubt that if a running statistical count had been kept for two decades it would have shown many more down tunes than up.

But there were times when those trio sets swung like mad—and that more often than not corresponded to the several different periods when Philly Joe Jones was his drummer. Their association had begun when Bill joined Miles in the spring of '58, and even though it was very shortly thereafter that Joe left the band (or was fired, or both—his relationship with Davis having always been a rather temperamental one), their influence on each other remained substantial.

A Miles Davis album that prominently includes Evans, the ground-breaking Kind of Blue, is an excellent place to begin paying particular attention to the more forceful and aggressive elements in his playing. The swinging involved doesn't really have too much to do with tempo, because what I'm referring to is much more a matter of what gets called playing "hard" or (even on a slow ballad) "with fire" than of playing fast. The drummer on Kind of Blues is not Jones, but his successor. Jimmy Cobb. So what is heard are two of the three elements that I feel fueled Bill's performances of that period: the fact of working with three horns and the added confidence and adrenalin that came from being thoroughly accepted as belonging in such company.

For recorded examples of the third element—being propelled by Philly Joe—you have to look elsewhere, but not very far. The Milestone Records reissue package called "Peace Piece" and Other Pieces happens to be titled in honor of a most celebrated example of "normal" Evans—a moody, even Debussy-ish solo improvisation. But it is largely devoted to trio sides recorded immediately after Bill had quite amicably departed from Miles's band to permanently become his own leader. Several numbers include the longtime Davis bassist, Paul Chambers, and the drummer throughout is Philly.

The Davis and Evans sessions noted would seem to represent the culmination of Bill's early period. They take the shy and self-deprecating young bebop pianist I had first met and recorded for Riverside in 1956 to a point some two years later where he briefly admitted liking his own work, had contributed very substantially to the new modal music of Miles and Trane, and had gained the praise and respect of major black jazz artists (a rare accomplishment in those years for a fledgling white musician).

The very next phase in his career took him in quite another direction. Not only did he choose to lock himself exclusively into a trio format, but he concentrated heavily on the possibilities opened up by a remarkable young bassist he had hired after a brief amount of on-the-job auditioning. Scott LaFaro's unique approach to his instrument, plus the always adventurous work of drummer Paul Motian, led to a two-and-a-half-year period in which there was much emphasis on collective improvisation and a constantly growing rapport that, at its most successful, simply reached levels of performance interaction that no other trio has ever equaled. They were often close to their best on what turned out to be their final day's work together. By fortunate coincidence, it was fully taped; two albums (Sunday at the Village Vanguard and Waltz for Debby) resulted from their matinee and evening sets of June 21, 1961.

The unique achievements of that trio were primarily a matter of the tremendous musical empathy between Evans and LaFaro. So, when Scott was killed in an auto accident ten days later, there could be no direct successor and no valid follow-ups. What had been created were some marvelous moments, and a suggested path (which no one as yet has really retraced and extended), but unfortunately not a tradition. Actually, for quite some time there was room for doubt as to whether Bill Evans as a creative force would entirely survive. He took the loss very hard; for a while he declined to work at all, and then only accepted a couple of brief solo engagements. In all, it took the better part of a year before he found a bassist he felt he could relate to on a regular basis. That was Chuck Israels, who then remained with the trio from the spring of '62 until replaced by Eddie Gomez a full four years later.

Bill had already begun to get back into the studio: he appears on a mostly big-band Tadd Dameron LP recorded early in the spring, and in April had started on a never-completed solo piano project. The latter was abandoned largely because of a quite uncharacteristic spurt of recording activity that began when Evans surprised me by announcing that he was ready to record with his new trio. Eventually it meant that he was in three different studios on a total of eight separate occasions between April and August 1962, creating four and a half albums’ worth of solo, trio, and quintet selections.

I don't know how impressive that sounds to anyone else; to me, who was on hand for all of it, it is still overwhelming. It must be understood that I had for years been frustrated by Bill's overly cautious approach to recording: more than two years had elapsed between his first and second albums (mostly because he felt he didn't have anything new to say!); and although there were four albums by the trio with LaFaro, two of these resulted from that one-day, last-chance taping at the Vanguard. Only rarely had he mixed with other players on the active New York recording scene: in the mid-'50s he had participated in some memorable experimental George Russell dates, but since then his only important non-trio moments had been on Kind of Blue, on Cannonball's 1958 Riverside debut album, and on a duet recording with Jim Hall made for another label in, I believe, 1959.

By early June of '62 we had two completed trio albums, only one of which was scheduled for quick release. So it was more than a little startling when Evans—that chronic under-recorder—came to me very shortly thereafter with the idea for a quintet album with trumpet and guitar. But it was a valid concept, and it was the sort of interplay with other major musicians that I had been hoping for. (Yes, the blues called "Interplay," which provided the album with its original title, was named by me.) In addition, it was an unfortunately practical idea. I am revealing nothing new when I note that Bill at this time and for some years before had been burdened with what often is described in public as "personal problems" and in real life as a severe dependence on narcotics.

I do not propose to discuss the physical, emotional, or sociological aspects of junk, or to make moral value judgments, l am specifically revealing some conflicting drives that I know to have been at work then, because I feel some awareness of the facts is helpful in appreciating the music and its setting. Evans, like certain others, was usually able to adjust externally to the problem; and I do not feel that his internal emotional reactions (whatever they might have been) detracted from his music. In other words, he could play. But this dependency uses up a lot of cash; the most feasible way for a musician who had not been working much in the past year to get money was from his record company. Bill's record company at that time was Riverside; I signed checks at Riverside. It was not easy in those days to be his friend and producer and record company all at the same time. Other jazz labels of that period stockpiled albums quite regularly; I have never liked the idea of recording a man's music with no intention of issuing it until two or three years later—when he might by then have drastically altered his musical concepts. Nevertheless, recording ahead—so that advances could legitimately be paid to Bill—seemed the only way to deal with both the artist's and the company's cash-flow problems in this situation. Rather ironically, it turned out that I was to delay the initial release of his second quintet album for not two or three but a full twenty years.

I have no reason to believe these two albums would have been recorded when they were if not for Evans's problem at that time. Actually, knowing his personality and recording attitudes, I'm not at all sure they would ever have been proposed under other circumstances. However, I also consider them to be fascinating and valuable pieces of work: quite different from each other, but both well conceived and well thought-out, and diligently (sometimes brilliantly) executed. Bill made some demands on me that summer; we struck a bargain; and he totally delivered as promised—as he always did.

The first album was quickly assembled: Philly Joe was an obvious choice, and Percy Heath (deeply involved in the Modern Jazz Quartet but still accepting occasional outside record dates) was a strong favorite with both of us. Evans decided that a guitar would give more lightness and flexibility »han a second horn; besides, he welcomed a chance to work with Jm Hall. On trumpet, his first  thought had been Art Farmer, who was unavailable; choosing young Freddie Hubbard, then only beginning to attract attention as an Art Blakey sideman. was a bit of a gamble, but it worked out just fine.

Bill's repertoire choices were mainly standards from the '30s, and Freddie was somewhat too young to know them. Instead of presenting a problem, that turned out to be an asset: it was easy enough for him to learn the tunes, and he didn't have any previous concepts to unlearn. In most cases here the Evans approach runs against the grain of the usual interpretation of the song. (Lyrics are good clues to how a pop tune is normally treated, but even if you don't happen to know the words, it's soon clear that these versions are not trying to retain the emotions that led to titles like "I'll Never Smile Again" or "You and the Night and the Music.") Tempos and spirits are mostly bright.

The story of the previously unreleased August 1962 quintet sessions is rather more complex. First of all, I wasn't even asked to do this one until after the July dates, making me feel a bit overloaded. Second, Bill informed me that he intended to record no less than seven original compositions. My suspicion was that the publisher he was dealing with was willing to give him advances on new tunes only when they were scheduled to be recorded. This did not mean that he was shoving any substandard compositions at me. Quite the contrary, they were almost all strong, and some were possibly too tough for the usual circumstances of early-'60s jazz recording— which meant little or no rehearsal and very limited studio time, because that was all the label could afford. (Long after the fact, I was able to figure out that a couple more originals in July and a couple of standards this time would have lightened the load on everyone, but hindsight has never been of much value.)

Such factors contributed to making me feel pretty edgy going into the studio, which surely didn't help. There were two personnel changes: the shift to tenor saxophone was deliberate and based on Bill's feelings about how the music should be handled; Ron Carter was the bassist because Percy Heath was on the road. It was one of Ron's earlier record dates, but he was already highly regarded and was no less than second choice; certainly he doesn't seem to have had much difficulty fitting in. Both Sims and Hall appear to have jumped on some of the material and to have had trouble with other numbers. In my mental reconstruction of the long-ago scene, no one was entirely comfortable, but it is also true that on working with the tapes in 1982 I learned that my recollection of Zoot's having had a hard time throughout was vastly exaggerated. However, there clearly were a lot of physical and emotional ups and downs over the two days. We spent a well-over-average total of four three-hour sessions and came away with Bill and I agreeing that we probably had an album, but would have to do a lot of editing work to finalize things.

Over the next year, we were never able to get at it, obviously somewhat influenced by the knowledge that this material had to wait in line for release behind two or three other albums. By the middle of 1963, various pressures—including the fact that Creed Taylor was very anxious to have him come to Verve—led to a mutual decision to end Evans's Riverside period. Another year later, a whole lot of other, unrelated pressures had led to the bankruptcy of Riverside, and all of its master tapes passed out of my hands.

More than eight years after that, late in 1972, myself and the Riverside tapes, traveling separate and circuitous routes, both ended up in the Fantasy/Prestige/Milestone jazz record complex. But, although almost all sorts of recorded material appeared to have survived the travels, I could not find the unissued August 1962 Bill Evans reels. We did turn up an edited version of "Loose Bloose," which I remembered had been worked on by Riverside's staff engineer, Ray Fowler. It was included in the previously mentioned Peace Piece twofer, under the impression that it was the only surviving relic of the two days' work. Eventually, after a massive re-filing project had taken place in the Fantasy tape vaults, I did succeed in locating all the original reels from these sessions. Stored in poorly marked tape boxes (which looked a lot like some totally unrelated boxes and were therefore quite thoroughly misplaced), they had indeed been on hand but unrecognized all along.

Finally putting the material into shape, with the valuable assistance of Ed Michel (now a noted jazz producer, but once upon a time my assistant at Riverside), turned out to be a fascinating and instructive job. In the intervening years, we observed with interest, Evans had recorded only three of the tunes: "Time Remembered" (which became one of his most enduring ballads), "Funkallero," and "My Bells." And the last-named, whose maddeningly shifting tempo changes had made it the unquestioned primary strangler on our date, had been put into much simplified one-tempo form for its inclusion on a Verve "with Symphony Orchestra" album!

It was decided to program the material almost entirely in sequence as recorded, with only "Fudgesicle Built for Four" placed out of order to balance the length of the two sides. (The tricky title of that tricky tune surely calls for explanation. First of all, Bill dearly loved puns: the reference here, of course, is to "A Bicycle Built for Two." Secondly, if fudgesicles aren't still around, be reminded that they were rather quick-melting ice-cream-on-a-stick concoctions; eating one that was specially constructed for four people would have been about as easy as recording this number.)

Three of the selections ("Time Remembered,""Funkallero," and "Fun Ride") had actually been recorded in relatively few takes. It was easy enough to decide on the preference in each case, and no editing was needed. The others did call for work, ranging from not much on up to the exasperating challenges of "My Bells," which had originally gone as far as Take 25 (although very few had been played to completion).

I learned that Philly Joe, even though way back then his problems had been similar to Bill's, had managed to remain an unerring timekeeper—otherwise, the four necessary major splices we have made in that piece would not have been possible. I learned also that Zoot and Jim and Ron, who might at times have seemed a bit unhappy on those afternoons, had actually been models of patience. (I wasn't too bad at remaining cool myself, except perhaps for the moment late on the second day when a still-functioning journalist—who, therefore, I will not name—tried to continue an interview with Philly when I really wanted to get back to work. Some of my comments were preserved on the original tape; I decline to share them with you.)

But there was one lesson I didn't have to learn, or even relearn, because it has always been very easy for me to keep in mind: the vast talent, dedication to his art, and human warmth of my friend Bill Evans.”


John Williams - Rollicking, Rolling and Rumbling

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© -  Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


"The pianist John Williams, who during his hey-day was a close friend and 
musical associate of Bob Brookmeyer, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims and Bill Crow, 
and who was also the only pianist ever employed in the Gerry Mulligan 
Sextet, died yesterday [December 16, 2019] in Wilmington, N.C. He had had a severe fall on the evening of 14 December, the latest of a series of bad falls.

John came up in the '50s when he was at the heart of the Stan Getz 
quintet with Brookmeyer, at the same time as fellow pianists Russ 
Freeman and Claude Williamson. The three men had much in common in their 
styles, despite the fact that all three displayed much individuality. 
John, influenced, like the other two, by Bud Powell, had a strong 
allegiance and devotion to the time and swing of Count Basie."
- Steve Voce, Jazz author and critic

Always one of our favorites, John Williams was born in Windsor, Vermont on January 29th and would have celebrated his 90th birthday in 2019.



Onomatopoeia - words that sound like the sound they are describing, words like rumbling, roaring, booming, drumming, thumping, et al.



I picked this particular set of onomatopoetic words to help describe the sounds I hear when listening to pianist John Williams. No, not that “John Williams.”


The musician I am referring to is John Thomas Williams, the pianist who worked with Stan Getz, Brookmeyer, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn and Cannonball Adderley in the ’50s not the John Towner Williams, who had a brief career as a jazz pianist and went on to write the music for Star Wars, a bunch of Steven Spielberg films and to also assume the resident directorship of the Boston Pops Orchestra.

Like Russ Freeman, Eddie Costa, and Horace Silver, John Williams often used the thumb and the ring finger of the left hand to play bass clef intervals instead of full chords and when you wiggle the wrist while doing this you can get a trembling, rumbling sound going reminiscent of the boogie woogie pianists but without the repetitiveness.

Because of the drum-like patterns and punctuations he constantly inserts in the bass notes of the instrument with his left hand, John adds a very percussive and propulsive dimension to the improvisations he creates with his right hand.



His piano playing sounds as though it moves from side-to-side and creates images of a music that is rocking, rolling and rumbling along. Not surprisingly, one of John’s original composition is entitled Railroad Jack. OK, I’ll stop here and not push the metaphors too far.


Although he was only on the Jazz scene for seven or so years [circa 1953-1960] John’s style of playing made a powerful [there I go again] impression on a lot of Jazz fans, including me.


I did not know a great deal about John’s time in the World of Jazz, but I reached out to some friends who did so I could do a proper job of remembering him on these pages.


The following overview and interview with John by Alun Morgan appeared in the October, 1962 edition of Jazz Monthly. I plan to follow it with a two, separate postings of an interview that Steve Voce conducted with John in 1988. Steve is a British journalist and music critic who has contributed regularly to The Independent and to Jazz Journal for almost 50 years.


John Williams: The Pianist from Vermont
by Alun Morgan
October 1962, Jazz Monthly



“THE REPUTATIONS OF JAZZ musicians would be ephemeral indeed were it not for the gramophone record. (The legend of Buddy Bolden is something of an exception for it dates from an essentially romantic period of jazz's history.) Pianist John Williams is a case in point, for although he was prominent in New York jazz circles during the middle nineteen-fifties I have heard no news of his whereabouts for some four or five years. Coinciding almost exactly with Williams's withdrawal from the spotlight came the appearance of another John Williams, also a pianist, who is still very active in Los Angeles as the leader of orchestras for film, television and recording studio work. The two are not, as far as I know, related in any way and to avoid confusion during the brief period when both pianists were making records the Los Angeles-based musician called himself both John Towner Williams and John Towner.


The subject of this article and the ensuing discography is a New Englander, born in the little town of Windsor in the Green Mountain state on January 28, 1929. Vermont is a small state which relies largely on its agriculture for economic stability but there is a long-established quarrying industry too. Although Vermont claims to have the purest racial stock in America the quarrying of slate brought in settlers from the slate quarry areas of Wales and it is possible that Williams is of Welsh descent. Be that as it may he gained his earliest musical experience during the four years he spent as a church organist.


From this beginning he moved into local dance band work until 1945 when he crossed the state line into Massachusetts to join Mal Hallett's last band in Boston. With Hallett at the time were trumpeter Don Fagerquist and tenor saxist Buddy Wise and it was this band which gave Williams his first taste of New York. By 1948 he was with Johnny Bothwell’s band (the drummer with Bothwell was Frank Isola who was later to work with Williams on many occasions) and had begun to play sessions with another New Englander, bass player Teddy Kotick. In January 1951 Williams was called up for Army service and played baritone horn at Fort Devens with an army band, later moving on to Korea with another service orchestra.


Demobilised at the beginning of 1953 John played piano for Charlie Barnet during February of that year then the following month became a regular member of the Stan Getz quintet and remained for six months until an incident caused the temporary disbandment of the Getz group. During the following year he spent six months at the Manhattan School of Music and worked with various New York based groups including that of Don Elliott. When Getz reformed his quintet in October, 1954, Williams returned to the piano stool and remained with the tenor saxist for another eight months. Getz, a strict disciplinarian so far as rhythm sections are concerned, was hard put to find a suitable replacement for Williams and asked John to stay on for a time when an arrangement with Lou Levy failed to work out to everyone's advantage. By the early summer of 1955 Williams was leading his own trio at the New York Clubs and was recording as a sideman with bands of all sizes, from Larry Sonn's big studio orchestra to the Phil Woods quartet.


Up until the end of 1956 he was prominently represented on record but since that time I have learned little or nothing of his career. He cropped up on a record made in Miami under the leadership of trombonist Lon Norman but I have no note of the recording date of the LP (Criteria LP2, 'Gold Coast Jazz Volume 2'). If any reader of this article has any news of Williams's whereabouts of late I would be grateful for the information.


Stylistically Williams is easily identifiable and his work is, in many ways, more typical of an older jazz era than of the post-Bud Powell pianists. He has been criticised for having a heavy touch and an unsympathetic approach as an accompanist. Both charges are unfair and untrue and may be refuted easily by reference to almost any of his records. Stan Getz is not a man to suffer fools gladly and it is quite unlikely that the tenor saxist—who has worked and recorded with Al Haig; Hank Jones, Bill Evans, Horace Silver, Duke Jordan, etc.—would have employed Williams for over a year had he not measured up to the demanded high standard. Williams admires Silver, Powell and Hank Jones and was quoted on the sleeve of his second trio LP (EmArcy MG 36061) as saying "I admire Hank Jones because he gets a flying flow into his phrasing and yet is still playing the crowded quaver type of solo; I don't know how he does it but it's beautiful to hear".


At this period in his career—1955—he was asked about his own playing style: "I have been feeling lately as if I must want to be a Zoot Sims— Al Cohn piano player, to do on the piano what they do with their horns. I find, in my rare good moments, that my rhythmic freedom will allow me to open up and widen out and damn near soar, as they do so easily". Swinging is something which seems to come easily and naturally to Williams whose basic style is founded on a see-sawing, syncopated use of both hands. This is hardly a "modern" approach but it is extremely effective as a foil to the long, sinuously swinging lines of men such as Getz and Zoot Sims.


Without a great deal of adaptation Williams's normal method of expression can be turned into a kind of boogie style, which is just what happens on the deliberately funny Getz record of Roundup lime. On ballads John sometimes uses the Bud Powell grand manner (albeit a little less florid) with spread chords and long runs between phrases but on other occasions he adapts his medium tempo style to give a highly individual sound. Typical of this is the quite charming half chorus he plays on the Bill De Arango LP version of These Foolish Things. The general concept is stealthy, with the left hand sneaking in to play sparse chords punctuating the right hand line. Like many other intelligent pianists he is very conscious of his instrument's limitations and has tried to overcome them.


He has found it hard to achieve the soaring, free-swinging style of the tenor saxophone at the keyboard "because of the piano's percussive-type action and the difficulty in sustaining notes or bending them. Emotion is, of course, harder to get out of just hands alone than out of mouth and hands. But sometimes 1 have an encouraging measure of success; even find myself using the sustaining pedal in a queer way in spots. Also, finally discovering the helpfulness of dynamics". He is represented as a composer on record by a handful of tunes all of which are interesting, each one being a natural outgrowth of his solo style. I’ll Take the Lo Road and Blue Mirror are both blues although the latter has eight bar interludes between the choruses. (Owners of the "Getz at the Shrine" set of LPs might be interested to know that the “warming-up" by Williams at the beginning of the first side, immediately preceding the Duke Ellington announcement, is a short and unscheduled version of I’ll Take the Lo Road.) Purple cow. a thirty-two bar AABA composition recorded by a quintet under Zoot Sims's leadership, could only have been written by Williams, for even though trumpet and tenor play the thematic middle-eight the sound is definitely pianistic. Williams Tell and Shiloh use the same form, viz. a thirty-two bar chorus split into two sixteen bar sections, while Okefenokee Holiday has a fifty-six bar chorus made up 16-16-8-16.

Although John Williams's style is very individual he seems to have had little influence on others and the occasional similarities between his work and that of both Russ Freeman and George Wallington are probably coincidental. His continued absence from record is regretted and I hope this short appreciation will draw some attention to a man whose work is in danger of being overlooked.”

John can be heard performing his original composition "Okefenokee Holiday" with Bill Anthony, bass and Frank Isola, drums on the following video.


Part 1 - The John Williams Interview with Steve Voce

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© -  Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.





I will keep this introduction brief so as not to interfere too much with the tone and tenor of Steve Voce’s marvelous interview with pianist John Williams, the first-part of which is featured below.


After reading it, I was reminded of the late drummer Joe Dodge, a musician who was a prominent member of the Dave Brubeck Quartet during the mid-1950’s and who like John Williams left Jazz and went on to a career in banking services.


Joe, much like John Williams, was very self-deprecating about his abilities as a Jazz musician.


I served on a San Francisco chamber of commerce committee with Joe in the 1990’s and during one of these get-togethers I screwed up enough courage to ask him why he left Brubeck’s Quartet and the West Coast Jazz scene. [Joe was still playing as a hobby and was the drummer in a combo called The Swingmasters.]


His answer went something like this: “I had my fun and I had my fill, but it was time to go. As [the actor/director] Clint Eastwood says in one of his Dirty Harry movies: ‘A man has got to know his limitations.’ I knew where Dave wanted to go with his music and rhythmically I couldn’t take him there. My chops [technique] were basic and mostly home grown [self taught]. I was pretty much a time keeper who traded fours on occasion[four bar breaks with another instrument]. It was exhausting being on the road all the time and I wanted the security and stability of a day gig [a professional career] and the world of banking and finance offered that. It was a pretty simple trade off, really.”


As you read Steve's interview with pianist John Williams perhaps John, like Joe Dodge, had had his time in the [Jazz] sun and decided to take his life in another direction? The reasons for John's decision are explained in more detailed in Part 2 which will post to the blog tomorrow [12/22/2018].


By way of background, Steve is a British journalist and music critic who contributed regularly to The Independent and to Jazz Journal for over 40 years.


I am very grateful to Steve for allowing me to feature his work on my blog.




© -  Steve Voce;  copyright protected, all rights reserved, used with the author’s permission.


“After galvanising the rhythm sections of Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Charlie Barnet and others with his distinctive comping style, pianist John Williams dropped from sight in the late fifties. Now rediscovered, he talks about his heyday to STEVE VOCE.


THERE is a school of thought which holds that the fifties was the most productive decade in jazz history. It was not a time for revolution-all that had happened in the forties and was to begin again with the sixties, but the jazz which was recorded in the fifties remains by and large undated and fresh and frequently much better than its exponents were to record in later years. Buck Clayton, Mulligan, Davis, Getz, Ellington-a glance at the CBS or Verve catalogues for the decade testifies to the quality of the music.


It was John Williams's decade. His piano playing sparkled with original and inspired ideas and he swung his rhythm sections with a dedication and sense of time which few could match. In the conversation which follows (from which I have removed my questions) he frequently denigrates his own work, as he often does in general conversation. His friends have learned to ignore him when this happens, for he was one of the most satisfying and effective players of his time.
Of his time indeed, for at the end of the fifties he mysteriously vanished from the jazz scene, and it wasn't until 30 years later, when Spike Robinson stumbled across him by accident, that the puzzle was solved.


Some time later I wrote a piece in this magazine praising John's work [“Time Remembered,”  JazzJournal - June/July 1994] and someone in Florida showed it to him. Eventually we got in touch with each other and John and his wife Mary visited me and my wife when they came on a holiday to England.


I learned then where he had been since the fifties. Although his love of jazz remained undimmed, he had been disillusioned by the wasteful predations of the then contemporary jazz scene-a number of his friends had died from self-neglect and drug overdoses-and by the hard life of the touring musician. He decided to leave New York for Florida, where he has lived ever since.


At first John worked regularly in clubs in Florida but then turned to a new career which eventually led to him becoming an executive with the Home Savings Bank in Hollywood. Much involved in local politics, he was elected City Commissioner for five four-year terms, and involved himself in conservation work with such distinction that the John Williams Park in Hollywood is named after him to recognise his achievements. Until recently he worked with the annual Hollywood Jazz Festival, both as organiser and pianist, playing there with musicians as diverse as Bob Brookmeyer, Buddy de Franco, Terry Gibbs and Scott Hamilton. Shortly before Getz's death, John tried to reassemble the Stan Getz Quintet with Bob Brookmeyer, Frank Isola and John on piano to play at the festival. Stan's poor health intervened but Brookmeyer and John did play the festival together, and the reunion, charged by some of Bob's most recent compositions, struck sparks from both men, although Williams typically deprecates his own part.

On December 31, 1986 John was driving home through The Everglades from a gig and listening on the car radio to the traditional New Year's Eve jazz broadcast which took music from each of the different time zones throughout the night. It was midnight in Denver when he was knocked out by a quartet broadcasting from there featuring a wonderful tenor sax player. John was delighted when he heard the tenor player announce that they'd had trouble getting their drummer Gus Johnson into the place because he was under 21 (Gus is an old friend and working colleague of John Williams's and at the time of the broadcast was 73).


The next day John, in search of Gus, called the club in Denver where the group was playing and managed to speak to the tenor player, who turned out to be Spike Robinson. John congratulated Spike on the band, and Spike reminded him that when John had played in Denver with a Norman Granz concert tour in 1954 Spike had sat in with John at a jam session after the concert. Happy to have spoken to Spike, John thought no more about it.


Eight months later, when Spike was approached to play a gig in Clearwater, Florida, he suggested to the promoter that since John lived in the area he should be hired to play piano. It was the tapes of that concert that revealed to the rest of us that John was not only still alive, but playing as well as ever.


Unfortunately John Williams doesn't get the chance to play regularly, although he seems to sit in at a local club each Friday. On taped evidence his playing is as rhythmically turbulent and unpredictable as it always was and is now if anything more creative than before. He should certainly record again, and would be ideal for an album in Concord's Maybeck series.


`I began like most kids of my age, listening to jazz on the radio. My brother and I used to listen under the covers because we were supposed to be sound asleep. These broadcasts started at 11.30 at night. Those were great days for big band music. Unfortunately I didn't learn piano at all well technically. I took lessons as a youngster from the time I was eight and then by the time I was 12 1 was a freshman in high school and I got a chance to play with a local band whose members were considerably older than I was. My so-called street education started there, but that's all the formal training I've ever had with the exception of six months at the Manhattan School of Music many years later. I've obviously regretted all my life not having had more.


`I was a junior in high school in 1945. The war was on. Most of all the good players had been drafted into the service. There was a very good band called the Mal Hallett Orchestra, which was booked out of Boston and which played the eastern half of the United States. One of the members was from Vermont and he was home during a break. They needed a piano player. He knew me. knew the band that I was playing with, and he came to the job one night and asked if I would like to go on the road with what was then a big name band. Of course it took much persuading of my parents to convince them that if they let me go for the six-month period-it was from March 1945 until September or October, that I would come back and finish school in the fall. I was 16 at the time.


`There were other 16 or 17-year-old players on the band-Sonny Rich was one of the trumpet players. Sonny had a record player and all the Parker-Gillespie records - Hothouse, Groovin' High and all those. He used to sit with me and teach me all the changes and make me listen-it didn't take much persuasion, and that's really what turned me on so terrifically in 1945.


`A couple of good players from that band who went on to be well recognised included Buddy Wise from Topeka, Kansas. He was 17. Later on he was with Woody and he ended up being another of many many victims of drug abuse when he was 27. There was also the trumpeter Don Fagerquist, who went on to play with Les Brown and the trombone player Dick Taylor who was on Gene Krupa's Disc Jockey Jump. Those were players who taught me a lot when I was 16. Mal Hallett had a sweet big band during the thirties, but during the war years he had good arrangements by Dick Taylor and a fellow called Mo Cooper. It was a cooking big band, like so many others from that era.


`I celebrated VJ-Day with that band by playing at the Steel Pier, in Atlantic City, New Jersey. That was some experience for a 16-year-old. But then I did go back home as I had promised and graduated from high school in 1946.


`The joy that I had playing, being paid for it and the thrill of it all meant that there was never any question in my mind about staying in the profession. That was a pretty poor decision at the time. So much had happened with the end of the war. First of all the big bands started to disappear into the woodwork faster than one could count. It wasn't more than a couple of years after that that television appeared on the scene so there were no more big band opportunities for someone with my relative inexperience and limited skill at my age. Nevertheless music was the thing, and I kept playing local clubs around Vermont, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and ended up in Lowell, Mass., playing with a nice little bebop group in 1947, and from there got a chance to go with the alto player Johnny Bothwell's big band in 1948.


`The business was so bad that we used to end up wondering if we were going to be paid that week, and some weeks we weren't. That was another good experience as far as meeting and playing with exceptional musicians was concerned. That probably lasted four or five months. It was in the Bothwell band that I first met Frank Isola, one of my very favourite drummers of all time, and the trombone player Dick Kenney. Again, Sonny Rich was there and there was a lot of bebop being played in that band.


`I'll never forget the time that we played a club up in Harlem and Frank and I went to the bar in the intermission, and who should be at the bar but Bud Powell. That blew our minds! We bought him a few drinks and got him to sit in. That was a real high spot. Naturally he was my favourite piano player at the time, and I guess he still is.


`I've always felt myself not as capable as I'd like to be in many areas of my playing, but my joy and the one true talent that I can feel strong about and not deny is the fact that I have a good sense of time. I'm a good time player, and that's where the thrill and the pleasure come from. In my view it's really where the joy in jazz comes from anyway. I'm really totally dismayed that so much has happened to jazz where that part of it has been sacrificed and when I hear some of that kind of music being played today I wonder how can they be having any fun? That was what brought me the pleasure. Sitting in the rhythm section and being part of the rhythm section more than being a soloist was what it was all about as far as I was concerned. That's what made the world go round. I recognise that people identified me as having a different rhythmic comping style. I don't think I imitated anyone to get it. It just evolved naturally.


`But if I was influenced in my comping, the one person that really did it dramatically in those years was Horace Silver. When Horace was playing with a group he really pumped that rhythm section. He put the air in it and made it buoyant. Nobody was going to sit down on their can on the time when Horace was working that rhythm section.


`That's where the exhilaration comes from. One of the things that distresses me today is that there are some incredibly skillful young players out there, but no one seems to be teaching them that if you have a three-man rhythm section the piano is one-third of that rhythm section. It should be played that way, but a lot of the time it doesn't happen.



`I was working one of my very first jobs with Stan Getz at the Hi-Hat in Boston. Bill Crow was the bassist and Al Levitt the drummer. I think it was a quartet in that first week before Brookmeyer came on. Al Levitt said to me "John, how do you do that? That's terrific, that comping thing that you're doing with your left hand". I specifically remember that I was very pleased, but I couldn't answer. All I could say was "I don't know, but I'm glad you like it". That was a big boost for me, because I was very insecure and knew where my failings were and to have someone say that my comping was a strength was very helpful.


'In regard to time in the forties and fifties, any 14 or 15-year-old player on the way up, if he was going to play with a local band or something, he was going to be influenced by Count Basie. Perhaps the first jazz solo anybody learned was Basie's on One O'Clock Jump. The stock arrangement copies off Count Basie's first 12 bars in the key of F, the blues. The problem was the youngster had to play two 12-bar choruses and they only wrote out the first one. Once he learned the first one then it was where do I go from here? He'd find something, probably eventually play the second chorus the same way all the time too, but once he'd got that first chorus down he knew what the time was, because Basie played it so good. And of course that little band that you played with when you were 13 or 14 played all of the Basie stocks-the one I was with did, anyway. Every Tub, Jumpin' At The Woodside, all of them. You can't miss the time there.


`I was late going into the army. All my friends were wiser than I. When we graduated from high school in 1946 with all the demobilisation and the troops coming home from the war they had to refill the ranks quickly. They left all those wondrous GI benefits in place as an inducement, and nobody had to go and get shot at. You could go in the service and didn't even have to stay in the full two years. I had just come off the road. I thought I knew what real wonderful life was like. Would I go in the services? Of course not. It was a dreadful mistake. I should have done it and I would have come out like my friends did and I would have had those benefits and I would have gone to school and hopefully would have bettered myself. But I thought that there was nothing like playing music. I wasn't going in the army. But of course I ended up there anyway. When the Korean war came they were looking for fresh bodies and I was drafted because I hadn't done my service before.


`So, I worked New Year's Eve with Charlie Parker and went into the army three weeks later. My only paid job with Bird was New Year's Eve 1950. I've still got the poster for the gig on my wall at home because I took it down from the wall where we played at the Rollaway Ballroom in Revere Beach near Boston. My dad had it on the wall of his garage until he died in 1980, and I've had it ever since!


`I had been in New York. After I left the Bothwell band I went to New York either in late '48 or '49 and worked out my 802 card. I decided I'd had three years of total economic hardship and finally my young brain decided that I had to find a way to make a living. I had an electronic background, because I'd worked for my dad who was an electrical contractor back in Vermont. TV was just becoming the in thing and it seemed like a practical thing to do which would give me a way of making a living and let me play jazz on the side. So I worked nights and I went to a TV technicians' school for eight months and worked out my 802 union card at the same time.


`I fell right back in with some wonderful players that I had known earlier like Frank Isola and Don Lanphere. I made a demo record with Babs Gonzales and Don Lanphere. We never got paid for it, but that was my first record date. Those were magic days when I began to get the chances to play with everybody. There were places to play all over the city. You may know an album called Apartment Jazz (Spotlite SPJ 146) which was an assemblage of old wire recordings that Jimmy Knepper had made. Jimmy and Joe Maini had a sub-basement on Upper Broadway-we called it the underground pad. They talk about it in the liner to the album, and I'm glad about that, because otherwise I wouldn't have remembered where it was. It was just one big room with an upright piano. I was there one time in the daytime and the only light that came in was through some glass blocks. It was only then that I realised that the apartment extended out under the sidewalk.


`Bird came by there many times to turn on. There was a lot of that. Somehow, I don't know how, I managed to avoid the heroin thing even though it was all around me. Whether it was because I was afraid of the needle or because I had too many friends that I'd lost, or maybe something to do with my upbringing, but whatever, thank God! So that was mainly why Bird would come by there, but also of course we would play. All the good players came by. It says on the album "John Williams, piano", and it was. I've always been thrilled about that.


`But I decided I had to make something of myself apart from playing jazz, so, in the spring of 1950, I went back to Massachusetts and put my new found skills as a TV repair man to work. I played nights around the Boston area. I had been set to be drafted into the army on January 21, 1951 when Charlie Parker had someone call me. He had a New Year's Eve gig in Boston at Revere Beach and wanted to know could I work with him. Could I work with him! I was thrilled to pieces. I arranged to meet him at the Hi Hat, and he was just as gracious as could be. We walked and talked and rode up to Revere Beach together. Of course I was worried sick, but he made it like velvet. So I did get to work with and be paid for one job with Bird.


`Immediately afterwards I was drafted and went into an army band at Fort Devens. I had met Al Cohn in New York, although at that stage I didn't know him well. He had lost his eye. His uncle owned a textile mill in an old mill town right near the section of Massachusetts where I was serving in the army. Chuck Andrus, a bass player friend of mine, was serving with me. We'd drive over to where Al was two or three times in the course of a month and we'd meet the trumpeter Sonny Rich, who lived nearby and we'd all play together with a local drummer.


`I got to know Al pretty well at this time. His father had wanted him to get out of music and learn about the textile business. Thank the Lord that didn't stick because Al went back to New York and became such a musical giant.


`When I got out of the army I went back to New York. Within a week I had joined Charlie Barnet's band. It was terrific, another dream come true, and Al Cohn, Ray Turner and Johnny Mandel were on the band. Johnny took me over to his home and played me all these tapes that he had made of the Elliot Lawrence band with Tiny Kahn on drums. That was one of those dream bands. I'll never forget that.



`All of a sudden out of a clear blue sky my old buddy Frank Isola called me up and told me that Stan Getz was looking for a piano player, and that I was to come down to Nola's, a set of studios at Broadway and 51st, to audition. I played at Nola's many many times. We used to chip in a few bucks each to hire the place and have sessions there. Anyway, I went there to audition and I got to go with Stan. Two long stints first began in January 1953 and the second in 1954. The first one had Al Levitt on drums for a while and Bill Crow on bass. Johnny Mandel played the first week or two on trombone with the band while we waited for Bobby Brookmeyer to work out his notice. He was playing piano with the Tex Beneke Orchestra. How about that! Johnny Mandel wrote Pot Luck at that time-the quintet recorded it later. The reason that there were two separate stints was that Stan disbanded to do a concert tour on his own in the fall of 1953. The photographs which I've sent you come from that period. They're poor quality because I had them made from existing prints that I had. Originally I had them done for Stan about four years ago at a time when we talked a lot over the 'phone when he was at his home in Malibu.


`Three of the pictures were taken on the trip we made by road between Washington DC and LA. I had only been with Stan about four months, so it would have been about May, 1953. We were on the road and as I remember the girls were very pretty along the way.


`We were working at The Blue Mirror in Washington DC which then was the jazz club in the city. It was a great jazz city in the early fifties. Every time you played Washington the good players came out of the wall. They were all over the place Earl Swope, Rob Swope, Bill Potts. Bill put together and wrote for that wonderful local band which worked under Willis Conover's name. Charlie Byrd used to work in an after hours club in the city. We got through at two o'clock and then there were all these private clubs all over the city where you could go and play until eight in the morning. We went to the place that Charlie was working with his trio and sat in almost every night that we were there.


`We closed on Sunday night at the Blue Mirror and we were supposed to open at the Tiffany Club in Los Angeles on Friday night. Bobby Brookmeyer was going home to Kansas City and was going to fly out and meet us in LA. We left Al Levitt in Washington. I think that was his last week with the band. Frank was going to join later, and somebody from LA subbed until he did. I'm sorry to say I can't remember at this time just who it was.


`Anyway, it left three of us to go from Washington to Los Angeles in Stan's old stretch De Soto, longer than the usual car and with room for instruments and stuff.


So there was bassist Teddy Kotick, Stan and I. But Teddy didn't have a licence and didn't know how to drive. So Stan and I had to drive these three thousand miles between us. Now I wasn't too orderly in those days, but there were times when I felt a lot more orderly than some of the people I was working with and I'd assumed that we ought to leave Monday if we were going to open Friday three thousand miles away. But Stan, as always, had better things to do on Monday, namely some lovely young lady. That happened with him in every city we played. So he called Teddy and me at our hotel and told us that we couldn't leave until Tuesday. It was about five o'clock on Tuesday that we finally pulled out of Washington.


`Thankfully there was a friendly little druggist in Washington who was a real jazz enthusiast-he particularly loved Louis Armstrong as I recall-and with the help of his amphetamines we made it to LA in about 60 hours of driving time!


`Teddy was relegated to the front seat because he was a non-driver. Stan and I would take turns to drive eight hours, then wake the other guy up and he would drive eight hours. Of course, when you finished driving after eight hours you took a big swig of whiskey and lay down in the back seat while the other guy drove. We did so good that we even stopped in Kansas City for about six hours. Stan and I crashed out in a hotel while Teddy went to see his estranged wife Peggy (they got back together later). As you can see from the photo of the stop at Salt River Canyon, Arizona (we probably just stopped to relieve ourselves), with Stan and Teddy cheek to cheek, it was kind of a cuckoo ride. But not only did we make it to the gig, we pulled into Santa Monica at the Pacific Ocean about 10 o'clock on Friday morning. We stopped at Red Norvo's place. By pre-arrangement his wife had gotten us some rooms at a motel on the beach. I went down to the beach and fell asleep and ended up with one of the worst sunburns I've ever had in my life. I had to play that night and subsequent nights in real misery.


`We were at the Tiffany Club in LA at the same time as Gerry Mulligan, Chet Baker, Carson Smith and Larry Bunker were at The Haig. That was the origin of the Gerry Mulligan pianoless saga. The Tiffany Club and The Haig were only about 10 or 12 blocks apart, so every intermission we'd run out to the car, and head for The Haig and hope that we would hit it while they were playing. We'd listen to the band for 20 minutes or so and then back to The Tiffany. Chet and Gerry would do the same thing in reverse. It was during that period when I got to know Chet pretty well. We went to Chet's house one afternoon and jammed, and on another day Chet took Teddy and me down to Balboa Bay and took us sailing in his yacht as you can see from the photo.


`I think we were at Tiffany's for three or four weeks and then Frank Isola came out and joined the group. We went into a place called Zardi's at Hollywood and Vine and we stayed there all summer, for about three months. We all lived at the Elaine Apartments on Vine Street. There was a pool, and the picture that you see of the rhythm section was of us sitting round that pool at the Elaine. It takes me back, because on my feet are the rubber shoes that I had brought home from Korea five or six months before. The final picture is of Frank Isola warming up before the concert at the Milwaukee Auditorium. [Both of these pictures were published on page 10 of the December 1993 issue-S.V.] That was on the concert tour when Stan Getz At The Shrine was recorded. We went right across the country and played every major city and concert hall. We had Art Mardigan on drums with Stan's group. Frank was on the tour but he was then with Gerry Mulligan's Quartet. The others on the tour were the Dave Brubeck Quartet and the Duke Ellington Orchestra.


`Right after that Frank came back to the Getz group. There was some confusion amongst record collectors because the day after The Shrine concert recordings were made; we made some more in the studios with Frank, who of course was still with Gerry, playing in our quintet instead of Art Mardigan.'


[There was some friction and rivalry between Getz and Mulligan. Bob Brookmeyer had already given Mulligan his notice in June 1954 when the famous Mulligan quartet concerts were recorded at the Salle Pleyel in Paris. Mulligan wasn't pleased when Frank recorded with Stan's group before he'd actually left Mulligan. When Frank did leave Gerry to join Stan's group, Mulligan drove off with Frank's drum kit in his car, and for a few days Getz had to hire drums for Frank. S.V.]


`I never understood why Norman Granz had left that fragment of my solo piano at the beginning of the Stan Getz At The Shrine album, sitting there all by itself before Duke Ellington introduces the band. I can't remember playing the piece, which I suspect is a blues I wrote called I'll Take The Lo Road. The chances for a pianist to warm up on that tour were so rare that whenever I saw a piano I'd rush to it. I must have been doing that before the concert when the sound engineers were coincidentally testing for level and recorded me. It was a real problem for a pianist out on a seven-week tour like that. I was called on to play maybe 45 minutes a day at each concert. You can't keep your hands in shape that way. So wherever we were, whenever anyone invited us to jam after the concerts I always accepted. And there was nearly always somebody in every town who asked us. Consequently I'd be up all night playing my heart out and then spend the next day travelling. It was a hard way to live!'


...To Be Continued in Part 2


Candoli Brothers - "Boulevard of Broken Dreams" - Metropole Orkest

Nighthawk - Dick Grove Orchestra

"Azure" - Phil Woods Quintet

Part 2 - The John Williams Interview with Steve Voce

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© -  Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Here’s Part 2 of Steve Voce’s extended 1998 interview with pianist John Williams. As noted in Part 1, Steve is a British journalist and music critic who contributed regularly to The Independent and to Jazz Journal for over 40 years.


In this segment of Steve’s brilliant interview, John is extremely candid about why he left the Jazz scene in the early 1960s and I daresay that many Jazz fans from that era can relate to his reasons for doing so.  The music changed dramatically and not necessarily for the better.


Without going into a lot of technical detail, both Parts 1 and 2 of the original manuscript had to be modified to fit [work on] the blogging platform. It took a bit of doing and I think I corrected most of the errors caused by the transition, but should you find any mistakes the fault lies with me.


“'WHEN Stan disbanded in the fall of 1953, I went back to New York. I decided
to study at the Manhattan School of Music and worked there for six months. I
joined in the second semester but realised that I had gone in over my head.
Also they were still teaching heavy classical courses which didn't interest
me and I didn't really have the ears for it. After I got out of the school I
went back with Getz and I was with him for about a year.


' Stan was tough to work for because of his own problems. I usually felt
like I was the mediator on the band. God knows I had my own psychosis, but
not anything compared to what Stan had. I'd find myself saying to other
players on the band "When Stan said what he said to you he didn't really mean it. He said it because ...--Remember the old one-liner about the guy who says "Hey
man, how're you doing?" and the other guy says "What do you mean by that?"?
That was the Stan Getz group. It was then that I realised that you've got to
take people as they present themselves, and you mustn't keep looking for the real reasons as to why they are what they are. You can't keep looking for the excuses. Stan was tough to work for, but I was of course thrilled to be a part of the group. When we came back to New York and the band broke up a second time, I went through yet another personal fiasco.


' I have always had an intense interest in American history, and I thought
I'd get myself an education under the GI Bill Of Rights, which I was
entitled to do after my service in Korea. I went down to New York University
and I signed up with the intention of taking a major in American history and
a minor in music. That way I could take the music courses that I wanted to but I could also get something that really interested me for my future and to give me some stability. I'd gotten everything signed, sealed and accepted, when I discovered that if you interrupted your schooling for more than I2 months, all your benefits were cancelled. Since I had left the Manhattan School Of Music a year and three months earlier this applied to me. I really fouled up because right there I
cancelled all opportunities to get the higher education that I really needed and wanted to have. I've regretted it all my life.


'I stayed in New York, played some wonderful sessions, made a lot of records
and went out on the road a lot with Zoot Sims, which was the high point for
me musically. Zoot was always my favourite and, any of these records that
I'm on, if I had any good moments-and they're very rare and very few-that I
feel were OK, I can take you back to a few of the Zoot Sims records, because
that was the only time that I really felt that I began to open up and play with some potential. Zoot wouldn't have it any other way with his playing. Because of his incredible time, the whole thing in playing with him was to your wings out, get up there and soar. I loved Zoot Sims.


'But of course, the need to earn a living meant that I had to play music other than jazz. A lot of good musicians would from time to time get a chance to go on the Vincent Lopez Orchestra which worked at the Taft Grill for 25 years. It was in the Hotel Taft, a block from Charlie's Tavern. You played two hours at lunch time and another two hours at dinner time.


‘The salary was terrific and at both lunch a dinner there was a radio remote
which gave you extra money. But playing second piano to Vincent Lopez was
not terrific, but I stuck it out for three months from Christmas to spring. It was great because you'd get out of there by 8.30 so if you had a bebop gig you could do it afterwards. Also you could make the union floor in between your day and your evening shots.


'Vincent Lopez used to leave the stand to talk to the diners. We'd play all
this bad stuff, dance things that would have made Sammy Kaye sound good by
comparison There were two Baldwin grands on different  levels, one for me in the rhythm section  and one for him to play his solos on If he was talking to the people and didn't get over there I played the solo. Lots of times he'd let me do so whether he whether there or not. I remember one time when we were playing The Man I Love Vincent was late running over to the piano, sat down and came in two beats out of place. I just kept playing louder and louder at the right spot in the time until he shifted. From that moment on I was on his list!


'I was always the last one on stage. I'd run out of that subway station and run that block, into the building and onto the stage. Of course everyone else had had to be there to get their instruments out, and I used to try to arrive at the last minute.


'St Patrick's Day came and I came running in almost late as usual. The band was up on the bandstand wearing green hat,, green boots and green bow ties. I couldn't handle that. I got up on the bandstand and Vincent said "Go get your suit". I said " don't think I wanna do that and of course I got fired on the spot.'


'While I was working that gig I'd go on and play all the jazz I could. One night I had been out drinking and playing, and I'd been in bed probably an hour and a half when, at about four in the morning, Hank Jones called. My wife answered, woke me up and handed me the phone. "Al and Zoot are doing , recording gig down at Webster Hall tomorrow," said Hank. "I just got a chance to go out of town and I can't make it. Will you do it for me?" I said "Sure, Hank, of course. What time?"


'I got up the next morning with no recollection of this whatsoever. It hadn't registered at all. My wife remembered, but she didn't say anything to me. I went to the lunchtime gig at the Taft Grill and was given a message by the Maitre D. to call this number. I called in and it was the A & R man.


"Where the hell are you? You're supposed to be here!"


‘Where?’ I asked.


"Here! You're supposed to be doing this record date with Zoot and Al'


'I said "For Christsakes, I'm working at the Taft Grill! Don't you think that . . ."


“Hank Jones said that he'd called you and YOU were going to sub for him.”


‘Don't you think that if I had been given a chance to play for Zoot and AI I'd be there?’


"You mean he didn't call you'?"


‘No, he didn't call me.--’"


'The next day I'm sitting playing piano for Vincent Lopez and all of a sudden I looked down and saw Hank Jones and his big brother Elvin sat at a table near the stand. They're mad.


'I said "Hi. Hank."-


'He growled some extremely uncomplimentary things and said "What're you trying to do, set me up?"


'I couldn't believe what he was telling me. Before he and Elvin left he knew that I was innocent. He believed that I had no recollection. My wife said "Yeah, of course he called you.---I was mortified that I would screw up so badly, but most important, I missed a date with Al and Zoot together. It all resolved nicely and Hank and I got on speaking terms again. I guess he knew how much I would not have missed that date!


'I tried to book Hank for the Hollywood Festival a couple of years ago. When I got him on the phone I said "Is this Hank Jones?" He said "Yeah," and I said "Hank, this is the piano player that you and Elvin were going to beat the hell out of at the Taft Grill---. He remembered the whole thing and fell out laughing.


'I was on a 1956 album of AI Cohn's called The Saxophone Section (Epic
LN3278). The tracks were intermingled with me on some and Hank on the rest.
I had what I thought were for me two or three good spots, but Hank was fabulous.
'There was a loft down in West Broadway owned by a guy who had a decent grand piano there. In those days everyone wanted to play. The loft was a great place. It wasn't a drug hangout. It was just a guy's apartment. We'd be sitting round in Charlie's Tavern on 7th Avenue at four o'clock in the morning. You could call him up at four o'clock in the morning from Charlie's and ask "Can we come down and play?" and he'd say "Sure." We'd go down there and play for four or five hours and walk out at eight or nine in the morning.


'You know me well enough now to know the insecurities I felt at that time (and still do) about my playing. But when I played with those guys, particularly Zoot and Al, the doors would get opened. I can remember walking out in the morning sunlight and thinking ---”My God. That was O.K!" Of course there was always some serious drinking involved and maybe some other minor vices from time to time, but there were no serious drugs down there, which was important. I'd go home feeling like I was on top of the world. It always felt like it had been the best fun I'd ever had and seven or eight hours later I'd wake up and say "Boy, that was terrific last night!" Then I'd start with the doubts and say "Well, I think it was. I had a little to drink . . ." and the old insecurities would come rushing back!


'I've always envied the artists who paint. An artist who sits up all night and paints something on canvas can see what he's done the next morning. And of course today the kids have all this marvellous recording equipment. Back  then, if anyone had a wire recorder like Jimmy Knepper had, he was really something unique. So the next time we were down there at the loft three or four days later I'd do the same thing again and open that door and this door, and have the same good time. But I never had any verification when I needed to have my mental pump primed the next day.


'I made at least three quartet albums with Zoot, and I did one with Brookmeyer and Zoot [The Modern Art Of Jazz, under Zoot's name and currently available on Fresh Sound FSR-CI3 25] and I wrote a tune on that called Down At The Loft. I called it that because you used to go down to the Village to go up to the loft. Didn't turn out too badly.


'And I loved Al Cohn. And I loved the two of them together. The sun shined when I played with Stan, too. The difference between those two and Stan was that with Stan you were always on stage making an appearance, and that always helped me self-destruct a little bit extra. I don't want to sound unfair to Stan, but I think a lot of his contemporaries would say the same. Even with all his skills and his incredible ear, he was showbiz too much of the time. He would inflict that on himself. He had the same problem "I've got to impress, I've got to perform," night in, night out. The best times with Stan were like so many times with Al and Zoot. If you got Stan in a corner and were playing with him in a non-performing environment, the meat and potatoes would come out. He was a most wonderful player, but again I think Stan's
minor paranoia, as with so many players, hindered him a lot.


'You suggest that I influenced Bob Brookmeyer's piano playing? I would say it was vice versa! Bobby was such an excellent piano player and, as I've said, he went out on the road as Tex Beneke's piano player. I think a lot of his skills as an arranger and a writer stem from his ability to express himself on the piano. Time and time again when we were on the road if there was ever a piano available where we were with Stan, we'd sit down and play four-handed piano. I learned a lot from Bobby right there. I was always in awe of Bobby. His ear and his harmonic ability. He is an exceptional musician and in the bleak era in the sixties when my kind of jazz disappeared into the woodwork, Bob went through a rough time for I0 years when he nearly killed himself because he apparently couldn't get a handle on his genius. But he got over that and came back to New York from the West Coast and look what happened! Nobody in my view has ever written better swinging and modern big band arrangements than Bobby wrote for the Mel Lewis band.


'I'm not a member of the Flat Earth Society that you've referred to in some of your articles, but I have great difficulty when jazz leaves the time. Bobby is at the point now where his mind is so full of sound and music and harmony, that he's experimenting in ways that are worlds apart from true jazz, and I have to say that I felt personal disappointment when he started to write these things where time is no longer a major factor. But oh, those things that he wrote for that Village Vanguard band of Mel's in the mid-eighties! Anyone who wants to listen to those and tell me that those pieces aren't an advanced form of pure true jazz when the time is doing what it's doing and all of the things that he's written in there are doing what they're doing - that was a real peak in jazz to me. I have no doubt that he's one of the major figures in jazz today. And I know what a personal loss it was for Bobby when Al Cohn died. I know they had the highest regard and respect for each other and enjoyed each other's music as much as they did each other's friendship.


'I made two trio albums for Mercury, one with Bill Anthony on bass and Frank
Isola on drums was done in September 1954, a month or so before the Shrine
concert, and the other was done in two sessions  in June 1955 with Bill and Dick Edie on one and Chuck Andrus and Frank or the other.
'Bobby Shad hired Leonard Feather to write the album notes. I waited to Leonard to call me or whatever, and he never did. Finally I got through the mail from him a questionnaire. It was almost like a government form. I didn't like it because he was finding things out about me but not really asking me anything to do with my opinions about music or anything about playing. I filled out my name address and social security number, whatever it was he was asking, and then I wrote something about my feeling for him to review, not to put in quotes and put on the back of the album cover.


'I was badly embarrassed when the album came out and all he had done was to
take what I had said and print it verbatim. If I were going to write my own notes, I wouldn't have said what I'd written in notes for him. I was trying to tell him how thrilled I felt about the time, particularly about playing with Zoot and Al. They epitomised  what I felt and wanted to play like They were my heroes. When he printed those remarks I felt, who am I to say these things and have them on the album cover Of course they keep being quoted from time to time and each time it embarrasses me anew!'


'I never recorded with him, but I was the only pianist the Gerry Mulligan Sextet ever had! I was at a session in a New York apartment with Gerry one time and we were standing out on a rooftop drinking and talking. Finally I'd had enough to drink so that I could tell Gerry what I thought of rhythm sections without pianos in them. I really harangued him. "Everything sounds so flat without a piano. Go ahead with all your harmonic creativity, but for Pete's sake give me a rhythm section!"


'He had just expanded from a quartet to a sextet and was going out on a package tour. With himself he had Jon Eardley, Zoot and Bob Brookmeyer as his front line. Those are four incredible players. They had a lot of things written but they also had a lot of genuine creativity and they'd often have four intertwining lines going. But again, a two-piece rhythm section. Very flat. It didn't do anything for me.


'A few days later on a Friday Gerry called me and said "John, you wanna join the group? I've got a concert tour with Carmen McRae and others and we're opening in Columbus on Monday then on to Ann Arbor and so on".


'I said "Gerry, I'd love that, but this is Friday and you're going out on Monday". Besides that I was booked that Monday night at Birdland and another gig which was to be recorded, and also I had a booking to record with the Larry Sonn big band. I made the decision that I should go with Gerry, especially after having shot my mouth off to Gerry about the piano. So I cancelled all three.


"OK." he said, "You'll ride with Bobby and we'll meet in Columbus."


"But Gerry," I said. "This is a concert tour. I need something to work with.


You got any charts?"


"No," he said. "We'll work it out at the time."


'Well, it became very obvious that the minute Gerry had decided to add a piano he'd actually changed his own mind again.


'I got in the car with Bobby and we rode to Columbus. "Bobby," I said, "the guy's given me no charts, no lead sheets and no indication of what we're going to play. He hasn't used a piano before and as far as I can see he's made no preparation for one. What the hell's going on?"


'Bobby drove and from New York to Columbus he did his damnedest to try to sketch out the formats of some of the sextet's more famous numbers while I wrote them down. When we got to the concert I hit on Gerry again. "Don't worry about it," he said, and it was obvious that he was already regretting that he had taken me on.


'We got on the concert stage and, thanks to Bobby, I had some idea of what was going on. You know the word “stroll"? It means when the piano player lays out and lets the rest of the rhythm section carry on. We'd play something and I'd just begin to feel it was going to be all right, to begin to cook and feel that this was working when Gerry would turn round and say "Stroll!" and I'd have to drop out. Then he'd turn around and say "Come back!"


'You can't do that! You cannot build the time element of the machine, you can't put the wings up and put the buoyancy in the time and then let it all go phhhh! And then come back in and rise again from ground zero. It bothered me tremendously because I just was not prepared. And Gerry was apparently determined that I be not prepared.


'The next night was at Ann Arbor in the University Of Michigan where we had a massive big audience, then we went to Cincinnati. On the fourth night we were back in Philadelphia at the Academy Of Music and Gerry came to me and he said "John, I don't think I want to continue with the piano". So he paid me and sent me back to New York.


'Of course I was greatly relieved because, other than Bobby, I was getting zero help as to what was supposed to be happening. And I couldn't handle that stroll, come back in, stroll, come back in. That is no way to run a rhythm section! So I was Gerry Mulligan's only piano player. Besides that, don't ever forget this - Gerry Mulligan wants to be his own piano player. He doesn't want anyone else to play the piano anyway! He used to do that at sessions and frankly none of us ever cared too much for it because he wasn't working in the rhythm section, he was creating.


'My disappointment about piano players in rhythm sections goes back to the sixties. When I left New York and went to Miami I only turned around twice and all of a sudden Miles and those guys are going into this free thing. I'm sitting in Miami and I'm working with a nice group when we get to the bass solo and the bass player just drops the time altogether and starts to play a solo, totally out of left field. It was madness from my point of view! Why would you build this castle in the air and then just demolish it and forget it? To me that, and when, further down the road, they got into fusion and all that, call it what you will but don't call it jazz.


'We all evolved as jazz did. You can go back and listen to ragtime and it's happy music, right? Dixieland! Is there anything more joyful and happy than that? It's joy.
Zoot Sims, John Williams and Frank Isola in the loft joyful because the time is happy. The big bands, bebop, just the same. You can take a Charlie Parker solo and dissect it and everything in it is a gorgeous beat beautiful melody all worked right around the time. Nowadays, it seems to me, many of the players are playing meaningless "exercises" and sounding very angry. What happened to the fun?


'However, I am very relieved to see so many brilliant young players coming along now. Perhaps it's because of the schools. But whatever, some kind of return to reality has taken place and the young players today at least seem to be reaching back and trying to establish these roots before they do their things. There was none of that in the sixties and seventies. Then it was like taking Bach and Beethoven and saying "Forget that, that's nothing".


'I read an article, was it by one of the Harper Brothers or some young player where he asked "Who says that we should try and play our own music until we can understand Charlie Parker's music?" To me that was very eloquent. You listen to Bird today and nobody has been able to do what he had done. So much has beer wasted. And I have a personal animosity that I might as well tell you about. It's what seems to have happened to all the tenor players as a result of John Coltrane. They don't seem to go back to early John Coltrane when he was less involved with exercises, I will call them disrespectfully! In the big bands run by the young players many of the trumpets and trombones are superb, a lot of the piano players are outstanding-maybe I'm generalising, but all the tenor players coming out of the schools, they're all John Coltrane tenor players. You don't hear the Prez roots, the Al Cohn, Zoot Sims and Stan Getz roots that I think tell a much better story than
John Coltrane did, at least in his flamboyant playing.


'When I left New York in the late fifties to go to Florida it was because I was unhappy in my personal life. I had friends in Florida and when I got there I thought I was in heaven. I played Miami Beach with a jazz trio and a good singer. There was jazz all around and I played everywhere. Joe Mooney had a beautiful quartet there


'All the tenor players coming out of the schools, they're all John Coltrane tenor players. You don't bear the Prez roots, the Al Cohn, Zoot Sims and Stan Getz roots that I think tell a much better story than John Coltrane did, at least in his flamboyant playing.


'There were good players and clubs all over the place. But then came Elvis and the Beatles and jazz in Miami just did not survive. For me then music
had strictly become a way to make a living, and there's no poorer way to
make a living. I had one of the ---better---jobs in Miami Beach because I
worked at a night club that stayed open a] I the year round, not just during
the winter season. I played shows and a little dance music and was just
about ready to blow my brains out! If you can't have that intense pleasure
that jazz brings you, what the hell are you in that business for?


‘I've always had an intense interest in American history and politics, and
as a result of this I became involved with my city's political life and I
ran for office in I97 I. I was urged and pushed to do it. Nobody thought I
could win, least of all myself. Who's going to vote for a piano player
working in a club in Miami? But they did, I don't know why. After that I was
on the Commission three or four years-it was a part-time job, you know. I
was satisfied that I was able to do things which I felt had some lasting
importance.


'I took the opportunity to go to work for an advertising agency for two
years and then I went to work for the Home Savings Bank, where I've been
since I978. I can't tell you how fortunate I am. I love the people I work
with. I like what I'm doing and I'm happy that I feel like I'm contributing
and I'm making a good living.


'I suppose I was the environmentalist on the commission, very much an
advocate of controlled growth. I fought like the dickens to save some major
tracts of pristine land before they could be built on. It was a good major
accomplishment. It'll be there long after I've gone.


'Over the years I was much involved with the Hollywood Jazz Festival, both
organising and playing and indeed played with Bobby Brookmeyer, Buddy de
Franco, Terry Gibbs and Scott Hamilton at various concerts. In I989 I tried
to reassemble the original Stan Getz Quintet to play there-minus Teddy
Kotick, of course, who had died. Stan was keen to do it and I talked to him
many times on the phone to his home in Malibu to try to arrange it. Bobby
wanted to do it too, and I planned to bring Frank Isola down from Detroit.
'By then Stan had the quartet with Kenny Barron, Victor Lewis and Rufus
Reid. Phenomenal!


‘Kenny was wonderful on that Anniversary album with Stan (EmArcy 838 769 2).
On Stella By Starlight he's superb. There's a lot of Stan on there which is great too, but there an also a lot of times when he's throwing away stuff. So many times you hear Stan playing just for effect.


'I did my best to get Stan to the festival but he was already ill and he'd decided that he couldn't go anywhere without a big entourage - a Japanese cook, his manager, his acupuncturist and his lady friend, and it kept on building in cost.
Of course our budget was limited and I finally just had to tell him that we couldn't do it. So Bobby and I played with the quartet that year very enjoyable. I was sad about the quintet, but I felt good that I had come back, I really did.'


The recording career of John Williams resumes in October 1994 when he leads
a quartet date to be recorded in Hollywood for Mitsui Johfu. Apart from John
the lineup will include his old friends Spike Robinson on tenor and Frank
Isola on drums.”

"My Groove, Your Move" - The Music of Hank Mobley 10.29.1990 - Part 1 - Program

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


"Hank was always special to me. His lyricism as a player and writer really attracted me. When I was trying to learn how to play, I spent a lot of time listening to Hank. Out there in Spokane I didn't have any music to look at, all I had were my records. His solos were so melodic. It wouldn't take too many listenings before I could start humming his lines along with him. He was always with the chord progression. Whenever I couldn't figure out the harmonies by just listening, I would transcribe Hank's solo. Then I would be able to figure out the harmonic progression."
- Don Sickler, trumpet, arranger, producer


As a memoriam to Hank Mobley and his music, on Monday, October 29, 1990, Don Sickler with the assistance of Kimberly Ewing produced "My Groove, Your Move" - The Music of Hank Mobley” which was performed at the Weill Recital Hall located in Carnegie Hall in New York City.


A special program and booklet was given to the audience in attendance that evening and thanks to the generosity of Grammy Award winning author and critic Bob Blumenthal, the editorial staff at JazzProfiles, as part of our quest to uncover and represent as much about Hank and his music as possible on these pages, is able to bring you a facsimile of these documents in the form of this blog posting .


This is rare memorabilia about Hank Mobley, an all-but-forgotten artist who was deserving of so much more recognition both as an original stylist on tenor saxophone and as one of the significant composer of many modern Jazz standards.


© -Don Sickler, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


PROGRAM


Hank Mobley - Composer


“Hank Mobley was a prolific and extremely talented composer. From an examination of the discography in the attached program, you'll see that Hank contributed many compositions to his own sessions. He also contributed compositions to albums when he was a sideman, as well as to sessions in which he did not perform. All in all, to date, I've found over 140 titles recorded.


Hank took full advantage of the opportunities he had to write for different artists. Each of the musicians he played with had an individual voice on his instrument, and Hank wrote music that would get the best out of each of them. He told me he always tried to tailor each piece to the musicians who would be playing it. His musical insight and the path of his career thus produced a remarkable body of work that conveys a joyful sense of swinging well-being.


So you can see that selecting the compositions for tonight's performance was not an easy task. I first decided to limit the concert to compositions that Hank either wrote for his own albums as a leader, or that he wrote for the Jazz Messengers. Next I re-listened to all of those albums, attempting to come up with a balance of material. It soon became exasperating: the more I listened, the longer my list got. After regretfully eliminating many great titles, yet finding still too many on my list, I decided to try a new approach.
I selected compositions I felt were essential to convey the depth and variety of Hank's creative composing talents. Obviously, if everyone soloed on each arrangement, we'd only have time for a few compositions. Therefore I decided to limit the number of soloists on each composition. This, coupled with a medley approach from time to time, should let us present many of your favorite Hank Mobley compositions.


Obviously, there are some drawbacks to this scheme, and Hank would have been the first to insist that each soloist must have sufficient space to express himself. Don't worry, that's still the plan. If there are some lengthy musical discussions, there won't be time to play all the compositions listed in the program. However, just in case, I've made the musicians rehearse all the material.


I hope this approach will be rewarding both for the performers and for you, the audience. Since I don't think anything like this has been tried before, we'll only know at the end of the concert how successful my plan was.
Whatever happens, I know I speak for all the musicians in saying that we've had a lot of fun playing Hank's music, and we hope you leave here humming his melodies. I also hope that hearing this presentation will encourage you, discography in hand, to seek out and listen to Hank perform his own compositions on the various records and CDs that are now available. Once you do, you'll not only have the pleasure of hearing his great melodies and harmonies, but you'll also be reminded of the power and cohesiveness of his solos and the lyric beauty of his sound.


Many of Hank's friends felt that his own opinion of himself didn't match reality. He didn't see himself as others saw him: a major composing talent and a unique and important voice on tenor. If he were here tonight, I hope he'd see himself through your eyes and ears and judge himself differently”.
—Don


Clifford Jordan, tenor saxophone


Clifford met Hank Mobley when both were working in New York in the 1950s. During the late fifties both Clifford and Hank worked frequently with the bands of Horace Silver and Max Roach. "Hank was playing with the Jazz Messengers, then Horace formed his group and Hank went with Horace. After Sonny Rollins quit Max he recommended me for the band. So I played with Max two or three or four weeks and then Max and Horace made a switch. Max took Hank because Kenny Dorham was playing trumpet, and I wasn't alt that experienced with playing ensembles. .. so to make the band sound better they said, 'Well, we'll put Hank in there and Cliff. . . with Art Farmer.’  So that's how I started playing with Art Farmer—in Horace's band."
During that time Jordan recorded the album Cliff Jordan for the Blue Note label. Curtis Fuller and Art Taylor were sidemen on that session. Clifford has worked and recorded with J.J. Johnson, Charles Mingus, Andrew Hill, Randy Weston, the other members of the "My Groove, Your Move" ensemble and many others, as well as leading and recording with his own groups.


Don Sickler, trumpet


Don spent his first 23 years in Spokane, Washington. Since coming to New York, he has developed a multi-faceted career, combining playing the trumpet (his recording credits include Philly Joe Jones’ DAMERONIA,  The Music of Kenny Dorham, SUPERBLUE and BiRDOLOGY), arranging (#1 in Downbeat's latest critics' poll for Arranger ), publication and record producing, and conducting. Don is also a music publisher specializing in jazz. His companies Second Floor Music (BMI) and Twenty-Eighth Street Music (ASCAP) together protect and develop the music of over 100 composers, including that of Hank Mobley.


Don met Hank in New York in the 1970s, and the two worked on several projects involving Hank's music. Hank's death in 1986 cut short the
realization of some of those dreams. Don hopes that this retrospective will focus attention on Hank and his music, and help create a climate where his music can flourish.


"Hank was always special to me. His lyricism as a player and writer really attracted me. When I was trying to learn how to play, I spent a lot of time listening to Hank. Out there in Spokane I didn't have any music to look at, all I had were my records. His solos were so melodic. It wouldn't take too many listenings before I could start humming his lines along with him. He was always with the chord progression. Whenever I couldn't figure out the harmonies by just listening, I would transcribe Hank's solo. Then I would be able to figure out the harmonic progression."


Curtis Fuller, trombone


Curtis first heard Hank Mobley in 1954, when Hank was with Dizzy Gillespie’s sextet, and Curtis, then barely twenty, was a private in the U.S. Army and playing with Cannonball Adderley's legendary Army Dance Band. It was Mobley's tone that made the strongest impression on the young trombonist. "He had that pretty, warm sound," Curtis recalls, "I mean, it was so fluid. He had good control, for a youngster. You wonder where a guy that young could have learned that kind of control," Having recognized in Mobley a kindred musical spirit, Fuller introduced himself, and the two became "instant friends."


Following his discharge in 1956, Fuller returned to his native Detroit, where he jammed with Mobley whenever Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers came to town. In 1957 Fuller left Detroit to come to New York, where he soon started recording regularly, both as a sideman and as a leader.


Curtis and Hank recorded a total of seven albums together, two under Curtis' name (The Opener for Blue Note and one for United Artists), a Sonny Clark date for Blue Note, the two Monday Night At Birdland LPs for Roulette, the two-drummer Elvin Jones/Philly Joe Jones date for Atlantic and Hank's
A Caddy For Daddy for Blue Note.


Cedar Walton, piano


Cedar came to New York in 1955. He met Hank Mobley that same year at a regular jam session at Ken Carp's loft in the East 20s. "Hank looked studious — with his glasses on," explains Walton, "although he seemed to have a mischievous nature, too. I always thought this mischievous side was especially revealed in his solos." Shortly after meeting Mobley, Cedar was drafted into the army. After his discharge. Cedar recorded with Kenny Dorham, then played in J.J. Johnson's group and the Jazztet. From 1961 64 he was a member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers.


Walton has performed and recorded frequently with the members of the "My Groove, Your Move" concert ensemble. He was a Jazz Messenger with Curtis Fuller. He recorded with Art Farmer in 1965, then again in the mid-seventies. He and Billy Higgins have been playing together for years, performing in the Magic Triangle band with Clifford Jordan and most recently, with Buster Williams and Curtis Fuller, touring and recording as members of the Timeless All Stars.


Cedar and Hank worked together many times in the late 1960s and early 1970s. In February 1972 they collaborated again, also with Billy Higgins, on what was to be Hank's last recording. "I love Hank's composing," says Cedar, "he mixes intellect with a very natural basic feel that gives the tunes a special flowing, sometimes daring, but always sensible character. He is one of the most ingenious composers in modern Jazz. I'm very proud to be a part of this tribute to his creativity."


Billy Higgins, drummer


Billy is one of the most widely recorded drummers in jazz. There is no way anyone who is alive can sit in front of Higgins while he is playing and not feel good.


During the 1960s Billy Higgins was one of the house drummers for Blue Note Records. Billy and Hank, who also had a close association with Blue Note during this time, often joined forces In the recording studio and on the bandstand. They recorded together on a total of fourteen LPs between 1965 and 1972. Between recordings, they could be heard live in various venues around New York's Greenwich Village:


Toward the end of 1963," Billy remembers "we worked at a few places on 1st Avenue, a few coffeehouses and one particular place called the White Whale on 10th Street near 4th Avenue. We worked in a band that also had Jackie McLean, Tommy Turrentine and Sonny Clark. When Slugs first opened up we worked there with Kenny Dorham in the band.


"While the Blue Note recordings were happening we were working in different combinations. Sometimes we had a band featuring Hank and Lee [Morgan], then we would have Hank and Kenny Dorham and sometimes Donald Byrd. We had a band at the Five Spot with Donald Byrd and Sonny Red. From night to night Hank was just— whew! Hank was incredible. But him and Kenny Dorham together— those cats were just IN-CRED-I-BLE! They were really special."


Buster Williams, bass


Buster is unquestionably one of the giants of the double bass. His 30 years of professional bass playing have included work with such jazz luminaries as Miles Davis, Dexter Gordon, Sonny Rollins, Art Blakey, Freddie Hubbard, Herbie Hancock, Chet Baker, Woody Shaw and McCoy Tyner.


"When I first came to New York, Hank was one of my idols. We met around 1963 at a soul food spot called Cozy's on 125th Street & 8th, that was 12 seats long. Lee [Morgan] used to come in there with Hank and Bobby [Timmons]. Hank liked the way I played and I liked the way he played. A lot of times he would say 'Hey Bus, what are you doing next Wednesday? I got a record date.' I never got that call for his record date."


Art Farmer, trumpet


Art is a truly gifted musician who has worked with many prominent artists representing a variety of schools and styles of Jazz. In 1959 he formed a sextet with Benny Golson called the Jazztet which has also featured Curtis Fuller and Cedar Walton. Over the next few years Farmer gradually turned from the trumpet to the flugelhorn and today plays his new instrument, the flumpet.


Art was with Lionel Hampton's band when he first met Hank. "I met him one night when I came to New York with Lionel. I heard that Miles was playing at a place called the Downbeat. I went there, and Hank and Sonny Rollins were there."


In 1956 Art featured Hank on his LP Farmer's Market. They recorded together again in 1957 on two of Hank's albums, on another under Horace Silver's leadership, The Stylings of Silver, and on Sonny Clark's Dial S For Sonny.


"I enjoyed working with Hank. Hank was really a very nice guy, but I don't think he realized how good a player he was. Hank was a hell of a creative player and a damn good composer."


Arthur Taylor, Master of Ceremonies


Art started as a professional drummer nearly 40 years ago, beginning his career under the tutelage of Coleman Hawkins and Bud Powell. He has performed with bands that included Charlie Parker, Jackie McLean, Sonny Rollins, Kenny Dorham, Paul Chambers and Hank Mobley. He has recorded more than 200 albums including 14 with Hank Mobley, made under the leadership of Horace Silver, HanK, Hank and Lee Morgan, Doug Watkins, Kenny Burrell, Curtis Fuller and Dizzy Reece.


Also known as a true "keeper of the flame," Mr. Taylor has published his first volume of musician-to-musician Interviews entitled "Notes And Tones."


To be continued in Part 2 with The Booklet from the 10.29.1990 tribute -
"My Groove, Your Move" - The Music of Hank Mobley.



"My Groove, Your Move" - The Music of Hank Mobley 10.29.1990 - Part 1 - Booklet

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


“The music and recording career of Hank Mobley reflects the period in jazz history from 1955-1970. With a reputation as a highly creative and inventive player, his life as a recording artist started to mature while serving an apprenticeship with Max Roach. Following that period, between 1955 and 1958, he went on to record eight albums as a leader for Blue Note Records, while making legendary contributions to the Jazz Messengers and groups led by his friends, like Horace Silver. During these years he developed an original style characterized by a soft, warm and compellingly lyrical sound.


The 60s provided Hank with an equally fertile environment. SOUL STATION,
ROLL CALL, WORKOUT and ANOTHER WORKOUT, for example, were recorded in 1960 and 1961. In 1961 he also became a member of the Miles Davis Quintet. As Cedar Walton comments, "Miles Davis’ choice of Hank to succeed John Coltrane in his quintet demonstrated how highly regarded Hank was in jazz circles." Hank continued developing his craft through
the 60s, giving us NO ROOM FOR SQUARES (1963) along the way. His last session as a leader was in 1970, but wasn't released until 1980 (THINKING OF HOME).”
- Don Sickler, Second Floor Music


"The most lyrical saxophonist I've ever heard. He sang into his horn. And obviously what he 'sang' came directly from his heart. Those beautiful things accurately reflected what a loving and sensitive man he was—always low keyed but profound. We all learned something from Hank."
- Benny Golson


"Hank had that pretty, warm sound. I mean, It was so fluid. He had good control, for a youngster. You wonder where a guy that young could have teamed that kind of control." ...


The thing in particular I remember about Hank, is how happy he was, and smiling, and how beautiful he was on all the things we did together."
- Curtis Fuller


“We did a lot of Hank's tunes then and I still play them today. All of his tunes flow so freely, you can really swing with them — I mean really swing! I travel a lot and I hear Hank's music everywhere I go. Hank's music is played all over the world."
- Al Grey


As a memoriam to Hank Mobley and his music, on Monday, October 29, 1990, Don Sickler with the assistance of Kimberly Ewing produced "My Groove, Your Move" - The Music of Hank Mobley” which was performed at the Weill Recital Hall located in Carnegie Hall in New York City.


A special program and booklet was given to the audience in attendance that evening and thanks to the generosity of Grammy Award winning author and critic Bob Blumenthal, the editorial staff at JazzProfiles, as part of our quest to uncover and represent as much about Hank and his music as possible on these pages, is able to bring you a facsimile of these documents in the form of this blog posting .


This is rare memorabilia about Hank Mobley, an all-but-forgotten artist who was deserving of so much more recognition both as an original stylist on tenor saxophone and as one of the significant composer of many modern Jazz standards.


© -Don Sickler, copyright protected; all rights reserved


This limited edition program was created In conjunction with the "My Groove, Your Move' concert tribute to Hank Mobley held on October 29,199O at Weill! Recital Hall at Carnegie Hall. The concert was made possible In part by a grant from the National Endowment For The Arts. Additional support was provided by Blue Note Records and Second Floor Music. Copyright-SEC0ND FLOOR MUSIC


BOOKLET


Foreword


“With this concert and program booklet we hope to provide a different perspective — an "inside" look at an artist's creative output during a seminal time in jazz history. The time to which we refer ran from the early 1950s through the 1960s, when the recording climate for jazz was at one of its highest peaks.


Young artists of the day, like Hank, Horace Silver and Art Blakey were in the recording studio much more frequently than artists are today. When they weren't in the studio, they were gigging or jamming together. The result of all of this activity, combined with the tremendous talent and dedication of the artists, provided some of the greatest music ever to grace the archives of record companies like Blue Note, Savoy and Prestige.


Through the performance of the compositions presented this evening, the words of the musicians involved and the remarkable photographs by Francis Wolff, we hope you will sense the spirit of the time. A time that is best described here by ons of the musicians who lived it — Cedar Walton:


"In those days there was a lot of recording, a lot of playing together, and our approach to the music was definitely a life approach. Our music expressed how we were thinking, feeling and living, and our inspiration came from each other — from the admiration we had for each others' talent and intelligence. It was a very creative time for the music. Yes, we were rebelling against the past, rebelling against bebop, but we had something very valid of our own to say. Using the foundation laid down by bebop, we were building a whole new vocabulary for jazz."


The music and recording career of Hank Mobley reflects that period in jazz history. With a reputation as a highly creative and inventive player, his life as a recording artist started to mature while serving an apprenticeship with Max Roach. Following that period, between 1955 and 1958, he went on to record eight albums as a leader for Blue Note Records, while making legendary contributions to the Jazz Messengers and groups led by his friends, like Horace Silver. During these years he developed an original style characterized by a soft, warm and compellingly lyrical sound.


The 60s provided Hank with an equally fertile environment. SOULSTATION,
ROLL CALL, WORKOUT and ANOTHER WORKOUT, for example, were recorded in 1960 and 1961. In 1961 he also became a member of the Miles Davis Quintet. As Cedar Walton comments, "Miles Davis’ choice of Hank to succeed John Coltrane in his quintet demonstrated how highly regarded Hank was in jazz circles." Hank continued developing his craft through
the 60s, giving us NO ROOM FOR SQUARES (1963) along the way. His last session as a leader was in 1970, but wasn't released until 1980 (THINKING OF HOME).


An examination of Hank's output as a composer is revealing. He contributed over 140 compositions to recording dates, creating a repertoire of intriguing variety. This evening's concert, while paying tribute to his overall talent as a musical artist, focuses primarily on his ability as a composer. As Art Farmer once so accurately exclaimed, "He was a damn good composer!"


It was very important for us, as producers of this tribute, to work with musicians who performed and recorded with Hank, and who were active during that particular time in jazz history. Those you see on stage this evening are not the only ones who were involved in this production. We interviewed many others in our quest for accurate biographical information on Hank, including the recording engineer who recorded the majority of Hank's sessions, Rudy Van Gelder.


It is our sincerest hope that you will find this booklet informative and enlightening. Yet most of all, we hope the entire production is worthy of the very talented and much loved Henry "Hank" Mobley.”


Second Floor Music
October 29, 1990


Hank Mobley, My Groove, Your Move


“Ah, yes, the Hankenstein. He was s-o-o-o-o-o hip." That was the response of Dexter Gordon when Hank Mobley's name came up in a conversation between Gordon and writer Larry Karl, who wrote the notes for Hank's POPPIN' LP. "Hankenstein" most surely identifies Mobley as a genuine "monster," while the slow motion relish of "he was s-o-o-o-o-o hip" seems to have musical and extra-musical implications.


Hank was a natural musician and a quick learner who was largely self-taught. He started playing saxophone at age 16, inspired by a home environment that was rich with music. Hank's uncle, Dan Mobley, was a multi-instrumentalist who, according to Hank, "had a jazz band like Count Basie or The Savoy Sultans." Continuing about his family, Hank explained, "My mother wasn't a musician, but if you played something that didn't sound right to her, if she couldn't pat her foot to it, she'd probably throw her chair at you." His grandmother Emma, a pioneer black opera singer who also played piano and organ, helped Hank get the books he needed to study theory and harmony at home. Hank's early influences on the tenor saxophone included Dexter Gordon, Lester Young and Wardell Gray.


Hank was hired for his first professional gig in 1950, when he was 19, touring and recording with rhythm and blues man Paul Gayten's band. The great respect Gayten had for his young sideman's knowledge and talent is apparent in his recollections of their association:


"It happened in a strange way, Hank was recommended to me by someone who had never met or heard him, but simply knew about him by reputation — Clifford Brown. I was working around Newark, but Clifford was hospitalized in Wilmington after being seriously injured in a car crash. I saw him in Wilmington and he hipped me to some of the guys I could find to work for me in that area. He said he'd heard about this wonderful 19 year old tenorman who was coming up fast. I wound up with a band that included not only Hank, but also Sam Woodyard, Cecil Payne, Aaron Bell and sometimes Clark Terry. Hank was beautiful, he played alto, tenor and baritone and did a lot of writing. He took care of business and I could really leave things up to him. He was on some records that we made, but the band had to play mostly rhythm and blues. Whenever we got a chance though, we'd stretch out on something like Half Nelson and you could really hear that some exciting things were going to happen with Hank. He stayed with me until I broke up the band at the Savoy in New York in 1951. He was one of the greatest sidemen I ever had."


In 1951, soon after leaving Gayten's group, Mobley worked in the house band of a Newark club along with Walter Davis Jr., until both of them were hired by Max Roach. Officially introduced by Roach to the New York jazz scene, Hank quickly earned a spot among New York's best and brightest recording stars. In 1953, Hank was featured on two 10" LPs with Roach's group on the Mingus/Roach Debut label.


Max's band broke up after those two sessions, but Mobley found freelance work which included night club gigs, studio sessions, another tour with Gayten, and a stint with Duke Ellington.


In an interview by John Litweiler for Downbeat magazine, Hank recalled his brief experience with Ellington's band: "Jimmy Hamilton had to have some dental work done. Oscar Pettiford called me; I didn't play clarinet, but I played some of the clarinet parts on tenor. Paul Gonsalves, Willie Cook, Ray Nance and myself, we were the four Horseman…." In the summer of 1953
Mobley worked with Clifford Brown in Tadd Dameron's Club Harlem band in Atlantic City. Later that year Hank joined Dizzy Gillespie's big band and recorded with them twice. He also did a quintet and a sextet recording with Gillespie's group. After a year with Dizzy, Hank joined Horace Silver.


Horace's quartet, with Hank, Arthur Edgehill (drums) and Doug Watkins (bass), was playing at Minton's in New York City when Horace was approached by Alfred Lion of Blue Note Records. According to Horace, who had already made two trio recordings for that label, Alfred wanted him to do a third. "I said I'd like to do something with horns this time. And he said, 'Well, who do you want to use?' I said Hank Mobley and Doug Watkins, and instead of using the drummer here at the club, I'd like to use Art Blakey, and Kenny Dorham. We got together and rehearsed at Minton's, during the daytime, and then we did the session. We kind of liked the way we sounded together, enjoyed playing together, and said we ought to try to get some gigs." That was how the Jazz Messengers got started.


Hank further described the beginnings of that cooperative group: "Out of that [session] we started feeling something, and we said, 'Let's do our thing, we all got something going name-wise, if anyone gets a job let's use all of us.' Horace would get a job, or Art, or Kenny or I'd get a job; we'd split the money equally. I think that's where the cooperative thing started."


The Jazz Messengers cooperative, with Hank, Kenny Dorham, Horace Silver, Doug Watkins and Art Blakey, became the most influential hard bop group of all. Blue Note recorded their first session on November 13, 1954 which, coupled with a session recorded on February 6, 1955, became the LP entitled HORACE SILVER AND THE JAZZ MESSENGERS. This 1954 date marked the beginning of an association between Hank and Blue Note Records that spanned three decades.


The Jazz Messengers continued to work together as a unit whenever they could, but as Horace described it, "The first gigs we got as a group, with the Messengers, were few and far between." But they soon began to record together in various combinations with bewildering frequency. For example, Hank, Horace and Art joined Kenny on his first AFRO CUBAN session, which was sandwiched in on January 29,1955, between the two Horace Silver and the Jazz Messenger dates and finally completed on March 29. On March 19, Hank and Art joined Julius Watkins for his Blue Note sextet date. Eight days later (March 27, 1955), Hank was back in the studio recording his first date as a leader, a Blue Note quartet session with the Messengers' rhythm section backing him up. This session came out as a 10" LP titled HANK MOBLEY QUARTET.


On June 6, Hank and Horace went into the studio again, for a Blue Note session led by J.J. Johnson. Five months later, on November 23,1955, the Messengers got together at New York's Cafe Bohemia to do a live club recording. Recorded on location by Rudy Van Gelder, the Bohemia date eventually produced three albums worth of Jazz Messenger material for Blue Note. That month, Kenny Dorham left the Messengers to form his own group and the trumpet honors were turned over to Donald Byrd. Oddly enough, Donald's first recording with Hank and the Messenger rhythm section wasn't on a Jazz Messenger session but on Donald's own date. That Transition album, also featuring trumpeter Joe Gordon, was recorded on December 2, 1955 in Cambridge, Mass., while the group was working in Boston.


Hank's second session as leader, on February 8,1956 was for the Savoy label. Donald and Doug joined Hank for this one, along with pianist Ronnie Ball and drummer Kenny Clarke. The original Jazz Messengers made their last recording, for Columbia, over two sessions, on April 5 and May 4 in New York City. On May 3 the group also accompanied singer Rita Reys for her Columbia date. However, soon after these sessions, the Jazz Messengers disbanded. When the group later reformed, subsequent albums were made under the leadership of Art Blakey And The Jazz Messengers.


Shortly after their last recording with the Messengers, Hank and Donald returned to Van Gelder's studio for a Prestige session led by pianist/composer Elmo Hope. This was the first time Hank recorded with three musicians who would appear often in his recording career: Paul Chambers (P.C.), "Philly" Joe Jones and John Coltrane.


July 1956 was a busy recording month for Hank. He recorded two Horace Silver sessions for Epic records: the first included Doug Watkins, Joe Gordon on trumpet, and drummer Kenny Clarke. For the second session, Donald Byrd took Gordon's place while Arthur Taylor (A.T.) replaced Clarke.


On July 20, two days after the Epic sessions, Hank, Donald, Doug and A.T. were back in Hackensack, recording Hank's third album as a leader, this time for Prestige. Barry Harris was on piano and Jackie McLean was featured on one selection. On the same day, Hank returned the favor to Jackie, playing on one selection which completed an album Jackie was making for Prestige. Pianist Mal Waldron was the only change in personnel for the McLean session.


On July 23, Hank recorded three selections at Rudy's for Savoy. They were used on what became Hank's third album released by that label, his fourth as a leader: THE JAZZ MESSAGE OF HANK MOBLEY NO. 2. Before completing this album and doing another for Savoy, Hank recorded a quintet session for Prestige. This date reunited Hank with Kenny Dorham and also featured Walter Bishop Jr., Doug Watkins and A.T. Released as HANK MOBLEY'S SECOND MESSAGE, it was his fifth album as a leader.


In a change of pace, Hank joined John Coltrane, Al Cohn and Zoot Sims on a four tenor sax date for Prestige. It was called TENOR CONCLAVE and was recorded on September 7 with the rhythm section of Red Garland, P.C. and A.T.


On November 5 and 7 Hank completed the material he had begun recording for Savoy in July. Some of the takes became part of Savoy's second Hank Mobley release entitled HANK MOBLEY—INTRODUCING LEE MORGAN, while the remaining music was included on THE JAZZ MESSAGE OF HANK MOBLEY NO. 2. Despite Savoy's album title, Blue Note actually recorded Lee Morgan one day earlier (November 4).


In August of 1956 Hank became a member of Horace Silver's new quintet. They recorded for Blue Note in November, producing Silver's THE six PIECES OF SILVER. Before his next album as a leader, Hank recorded again as a sideman with Kenny Drew, Addison Farmer and Elvin Jones on Art Farmer's FARMER'S MARKET, recorded for the New Jazz label on November 23. On November 25, the Hank Mobley Sextet recorded for Blue Note. In addition to Hank, the front line included Donald Byrd and Lee Morgan. Horace and P.C. were joined by Mobley's childhood friend and the drummer on all of Hank's dates with Dizzy Gillespie, Charli Persip.


On December 2,1956 Hank played on a Lee Morgan sextet date for Blue Note. He did another sextet date, in Detroit on December 8, with Doug Watkins for the Transition label. The session produced the WATKINS AT LARGE LP which also featured Donald Byrd, Kenny Burrell, Duke Jordan and A.T. (some sources give November 1955 as the recording date). On December 28, Hank returned to Van Gelder's to record the Kenny Burrell Prestige session ALL NIGHT LONG.


The original Messengers' rhythm section was reunited for Hank's next session as a leader on January 13,1957. The album was entitled HANK MOBLEY AND HIS ALL STARS and also featured Milt Jackson on vibes. Hank used the Messengers rhythm section once again, along with Art Farmer, when he recorded the HANK MOBLEY QUINTET (March 8). However, before that date he worked as a sideman on another Kenny Burrell session and a Jimmy Smith date for Blue Note.


On March 28, 1957, Hank recorded three selections on a Kenny Drew quintet session for Riverside Records in New York City. The following month (April 6) Hank participated in Johnny Griffin's Blue Note A BLOWING SESSION, which included a front tine of three tenors (the third being John Coltrane) and one trumpet (Lee Morgan). The rhythm section included P.C. and Blakey, and marked Hank's first recording with a pianist he played and recorded with many times, Wynton Kelly.


HANK, a sextet date, was recorded later in April at Van Gelder's with pianist Bobby Timmons, Philly Joe Jones, Donald Byrd, John Jenkins on alto and bassist Wilbur Ware, whom Hank had recorded with less than a month before on the Kenny Drew date.


Hank's next record date (May 8, 1957) was his last with Horace Silver. It was for Horace's THE STYLINGS OF SILVER and featured Art Farmer on trumpet. Hank was a member of Horace's working Quintet from August of 1956 until shortly after this album was completed.


Curtis Fuller asked Hank to join him on Curtis' first Blue Note date as a leader, THE OPENER, recorded for Blue Note on June 16, 1957, only fourteen days after Curtis' first Blue Note sideman date, on Clifford Jordan's CLIFF CRAFT. One week after THE OPENER, Hank recorded HANK MOBLEY, a sextet date, with Bill Hardman (trumpet), Curtis Porter (alto and tenor) and Hank in the front line. The rhythm section consisted of P.C., A.T. and pianist Sonny Clark.


Hank played on one date in July with Art Farmer, Curtis Fuller, Wilbur Ware and Louis Hayes: Sonny Clark's DIAL S FOR SONNY. Louis Hayes never recorded with Hank on any of Hank's own dates, but he played on Horace's last two dates with Hank. They also recorded together on a Kenny Burrell session mentioned earlier, and in December of 1960, they worked together on a Kenny Drew date.


Sonny Clark was on Hank's next two sessions, which were recorded on August 18 and October 20,1957. These sessions were released only in Japan. Kenny Dorham and A.T. were on the first session while Art Farmer, Pepper Adams (baritone sax), P.C. and Philly Joe were on the second one.

Hank had left Horace Silver's quintet to rejoin Max Roach, whose group did two recording sessions. The first, on December 23 in New York City, was a pianoless quartet date, with Kenny Dorham and George Morrow (bass). For the second date, in Chicago on January 4,1958 for the Argo label, pianist Ramsey Lewis was added to the quartet. Then, with Lee Morgan, Wynton Kelly, P.C. and Charli Persip, Hank recorded PECKIN' TIME on February 9. In April, he recorded the two MONDAY NIGHT AT BIRDLAND LPs.


Hank played with Art Blakey And The Jazz Messengers at Van Gelder's on March 8, 1959, but the material they recorded was not issued. However, they did record most of the same compositions, along with some additional selections, on a live Blue Note date at a New York City club that became ART BLAKEY AND THE JAZZ MESSENGERS AT THE JAZZ CORNER OF THE WORLD, Vol. 1 * and Vol. 2 (recorded April 15,1959).


Between these two sessions, Hank and Blakey joined Donald Byrd and P.C. for Sonny Clark's MY CONCEPTION (March 29,1959). This was Hank's last trip to Rudy Van Gelder's Hackensack recording studio. By the time Hank did his next session (Dizzy Reece's quintet date STAR BRIGHT, with Wynton Kelly, P.C. and AT.), Rudy had relocated to his new state-of-the-art facility in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey.


In December, Hank joined Curtis Fuller and Lee Morgan to make CURTIS
FULLER SEXTET: SLIDING EASY for United Artists Records. This was Hank's only recording session with pianist Tommy Flanagan. P.C. was on bass, and the drummer was Elvin Jones, whom Hank previously recorded with on Art Farmer's FARMER'S MARKET.


Throughout the 50s, in addition to recording extensively, Hank was doing many live performances, leading his own ensembles and working under the leadership of other more established artists like Max Roach and Thelonious Monk.


Hank returned to Blue Note for seven more sessions, all recorded in 1960 except for Kenny Dorham's WHISTLE STOP, which was done in early 1961. The first two sessions in I960, led by Donald Byrd, developed into Donald's BYRD IN FLIGHT album. These were Hank's first sessions with pianist Duke Pearson. Doug Watkins was on bass and Lex Humphries on drums. Next came Hank's great quartet date, SOUL STATION (February 7, 1960), with Wynton Kelly, P.C. and Blakey. Hank recorded with McCoy Tyner and Freddie Hubbard for the first time, in 1960, on Freddie Hubbard's GOIN' UP session. This November 6 studio date included P.C. and Philly Joe in the rhythm section. One week later Freddie returned to Van Gelder's to record Hank's ROLL CALL album with Wynton, P.C. and Blakey. On December 11, Hank's last date in 1960, he and Freddie recorded together again, this time for Kenny Drew's UNDERCURRENT date for Blue Note. With Louis Hayes on drums, it was Hank's first recording with bassist Sam Jones.


As mentioned previously, Hank's 1961 recording sessions started with Kenny Dorham's January 15 quintet date for WHISTLE STOP, with Kenny Drew, P.C. and Philly Joe. Then on February 2, Hank did a NYC session for Atlantic Records: three tracks on a two-drummer date with Elvin and Philly Joe for the album TOGETHER. This was his first session with trumpeter Richard "Blue" Mitchell. Curtis Fuller, P.C. and Wynton were also on the date.

1961 also marked the beginning of Hank's association with Miles Davis. In January of that year Miles hired Mobley to succeed John Coltrane in his quintet. The first of the three sessions for Miles' SOMEDAY MY PRINCE WILL COME album, On Columbia Records, started on March 7. It was a quintet date with Wynton, P.C. and Jimmy Cobb. March 20th's session added John Coltrane and on March 21, Philly Joe replaced Jimmy Cobb for one selection.


On March 26, Hank recorded his WORKOUT session with Philly Joe and the rest of Miles' rhythm section. This album also featured guitarist Grant Green.


In April, Miles' group (Jimmy Cobb on drums) recorded the LIVE AT THE BLACKHAWK LPs on Friday and Saturday, April 14 and 15, and also on Friday, April 21, in San Francisco. On May 19, back in New York, the quintet produced the live MILES DAVIS AT CARNEGIE HALL session/concert. Also in 1961, on December 5, Hank recorded ANOTHER WORKOUT with Wynton, P.C. and Philly Joe.


Hank's next recordings took place in 1963: 5 sessions for Blue Note. The first was Donald Byrd's A NEW PERSPECTiVE date (January 12). Hank's own session, his first in the recording studio with pianist Herbie Hancock and bassist Butch Warren, took place on March 7, and also included Donald Byrd and Philly Joe. This session is now available, intact, on the Blue Note CD STRAIGHT NO FILTER. Previously, some of the tracks were available on the NO ROOM FOR SQUARES record, while others were available on THE TURNAROUND record. The "record" STRAIGHT NO FILTER contains one cut not found on the other two LPs, but does not complete the original session. The whole session is only available on the STRAIGHT NO FILTER CD.


Hank's third 1963 Blue Note session was Herbie Hancock's MY POINT OF VIEW (March 19). Hank and Donald Byrd were joined in the front line by trombonist Grachan Moncur III for a few tracks. Grant Green was on two tracks, and drummer Tony Williams and bassist Chuck Israels rounded out the rhythm section.


Hank's next quintet session, on October 2, featured Lee Morgan, Andrew Hill (piano), John Ore (bass) and Philly Joe. The music recorded on that day is available for the first time in this country on the Blue Note CD entitled NO ROOM FOR SQUARES. On December 10,1963, Hank played on organist Freddie Roach's Blue Note session.


On February 5, 1965, Hank was joined in the studio for the first time by a drummer he would record with many times, Billy Higgins. This session also featured Freddie Hubbard, pianist Barry Harris and P.C. Blue Note's CD THE TURNAROUND contains all the material from that session. The original "record" THE TURNAROUND contained two cuts from the March 7,1963 session. The entire March 7 session is available on the Blue Note
CD STRAIGHT NO FILTER.


Hank recorded Freddie Hubbard's BLUE SPIRITS session on February 26. This was his first recording with Kiane Zawadi (euphonium), Bob Cranshaw (bass), and Pete LaRoca (drums). The pianist was McCoy. Next was a Grant Green session lor Blue Note (March 31) with Larry Young (organ) and Elvin Jones. On June 18, Hank recorded DIPPIN’ with Lee Morgan, Harold Mabern (piano), Larry Ridley (bass) and Billy Higgins. On September 18, essentially the same group, except with Herbie Hancock on piano and Jackie McLean on alto (3 tracks), recorded Lee Morgan's CORNBREAD session. On December 18, Hank was reunited with Curtis Fuller for Hank's A CADDY FOR DADDY session, which also featured Lee Morgan, McCoy, Bob Cranshaw and Billy Higgins.


Duke Pearson arranged Hank's compositions for Hank's 5 horn session on March 18,1966. Besides Hank, the other members of the group were Lee
Morgan, Kiane Zawadi, James Spaulding (alto), Howard Johnson (tuba), McCoy, Reggie Workman (bass) and Billy Higgins. On March 24 and 25, Hank played on Elvin Jones' MIDNIGHT WALK date for Atlantic Records. This was also Hank's only recording with Thad Jones (trumpet) and Abdullah Ibrahim (piano).


Only 3 selections were recorded during Hank's next session (June 17, 1966). These are the first 3 cuts on the STRAIGHT NO FILTER CD. It was a quintet
session with Lee Morgan, McCoy, Cranshaw and Billy Higgins. One week later, on June 24, Hank played on Donald Byrd's MUSTANG session, with Sonny Red (alto), McCoy, Walter Booker (bass) and Freddie Waits (drums).

Pianist Cedar Walton first recorded with Hank on Lee Morgan's CHARISMA date, September 29, 1966, which also featured Jackie McLean, P.C. and Billy Higgins. Minus Jackie McLean, this whole group recorded again on November 29 for another Lee Morgan session. On January 9, 1967 Hank recorded with Donald Byrd in essentially the same sextet format as Donald's June 24,1966 MUSTANG session, except Cedar was on piano, with Higgins on drums. Hank's THIRD SEASON session was done on February 24, with Lee Morgan, James Spaulding on alto and flute, Cedar, Walter Booker and Billy Higgins. The FAR AWAY LANDS session (May 26,1967), with Donald Byrd, Cedar, and Billy Higgins, was Ron Carter's only recording date with Hank.


Jackie McLean joined Hank for his HI VOLTAGE session on October 9,1967, which also featured Blue Mitchell, John Hicks on piano, Cranshaw and Higgins. A month later, Hank made a live Wynton Kelly quartet recording for Vee Jay records (November 12,1967) with Cecil McBee on bass and drummer Jimmy Cobb.


In 1967, in addition to recording those 5 albums, Hank made his first trip out of the US. Beginning in March, for seven weeks, he performed live at Ronnie Scott's in London, which led to a series of engagements in Europe. In November Hank was back in New York, recording with Wynton Kelly. This music eventually came out on the Vee Jay label. On January 19, 1968, he traveled to Englewood Cliffs to record his REACH OUT album with Woody Shaw, George Benson, Lamont Johnson, Cranshaw and Higgins. In 1968 he played the Chat Qui Peche in Paris. The following year (July 12,1969) he recorded THE FLIP in Paris for Blue Note, with Slide Hampton, Dizzy Reece, pianist Vince Benedetti, French bassist Alby Cullaz and Philly Joe. Hank and Philly Joe also played on two Archie Shepp albums that were recorded on August 12 and 14. The last session included Grachan Moncur III. Mobley continued to tour as a soloist in Munich, Rome, and Eastern Europe before returning to New York in mid-1970.


On July 31,1970 Hank did his last session at Rudy Van Gelder's (THINKING OF HOME), with Woody Shaw, Cedar, guitarist Eddie Diehl, bassist Mickey Bass and drummer Leroy Williams.


During the 70s Hank led a band at Slug's night club and played elsewhere
with Walton and Higgins, often adding baritone saxophonist Charles Davis and trumpeter Bill Hardman. This same band, minus Bill Hardman's trumpet and including Sam Jones on bass, recorded BREAKTHROUGH! for Cobblestone (later released on Muse), under the co-leadership of Mobley and Walton. Shortly after this record date, Hank left New York for a sojourn in Chicago.


In Chicago, Mobley led a quintet which featured drummer Wilbur Campbell, pianist Muhal Richard Abrams and trumpeter Frank Gordon.


After he left Chicago, he spent a year in East Orange, New Jersey before settling in Philadelphia. His activities were restricted by ill health but he performed occasionally during the remaining years of his life. He passed away on May 30, 1986, leaving a legacy of remarkable music. He will be remembered as a soft-spoken saxophonist and composer who let his music do most of the talking and who, in the words of the late great Dexter Gordon, was s-o-o-o-o hip.”

Holiday Interviews on JazzProfiles

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.



Since its inception in 2008, the editorial staff of JazzProfiles has been fortunate to have some notable Jazz musicians, authors and critics participate in interviews for these pages.

The messages in the following quotations from the author William Zinsser and the musician Lee Konitz underscore how each of these Jazz conversations were conducted.

“Get people talking. Learn to ask questions that will elicit answers about what is most interesting or vivid in their lives. Nothing so animates writing as someone telling what he thinks or what he does — in his own words.

His own words will always be better than your words, even if you are the most elegant stylist in the land. They carry the inflection of his speaking voice and the idiosyncrasies of how he puts a sentence together. They contain the regionalisms of his conversation and the lingo of his trade. They convey his enthusiasms. This is a person talking to the reader directly, not through the filter of a writer. As soon as a writer steps in, everyone else's experience becomes secondhand.

Therefore, learn how to conduct an interview.”

- From “Writing About People: The Interview” in William Zinsser's On Writing Well

“I keep thinking that it doesn't matter what tunes you play. The process is the same, and if it works then it's like a new piece, you know. And it is a fact that the better you know the song the more chances you might dare take. And so that's why Bird played a dozen tunes all his life, basically, and most of the people that were improvising — Tristano played the same dozen tunes all his life. And you know, it's amazing what depth he got. He wouldn't have gotten that otherwise, I don't think, in that particular way.

I think it's something similar to Monet painting the lily pond at all times of the day, catching the reflection of the light. I just feel with each situation I'm in, different rhythm sections or whatever, that "I'll Remember April" becomes just something else. And it is a very preferable point — that's the main thing. Everybody who knows that material knows that material pretty well—the listeners and the musicians. So they know, you can just nakedly reveal if anything's happening or not; there's no subterfuge. And that aspect of it is appealing to me, I think.”

- Lee Konitz, alto saxophone

Reasoning by analogy can be perilous, but to expand a bit on the points made by Messrs Zinsser and Konitz and perhaps better connect them to the following piece, I have more or less used the same mix of questions in my previous interviews with Jazz musicians and writers including Mike Abene, John Altman, Mike Barone, Colin Bailey, Howard Mandel, Doug Ramsey, Ted Gioia, Bill Kirchner and Gary Giddins.

This is primarily because I think the most important thing is the interview with the Jazz musician and/or writer itself.

To put it another way, “it doesn’t matter what tunes you play,” what is important is that the questions asked become a vehicle for the Jazz musician and/or author to share their special vision about the music and its makers.

Metaphorically, the interview questions become the theme and chords over which the Jazz interviewee improvises in the form of the musings, reflections and explanations.

In a sense, interview questions become a point of departure to help them express “what is most interesting or vivid in their lives” on the subject of Jazz.

Between now and the end of the year, JazzProfiles will be reposting a number of these the Jazz conversations.

This will afford you the opportunity to read them again or for the first time and the editorial staff with a break to take some time off at the holidays.

Best wishes to one and all for an enjoyable and safe holiday season filled with love, peace and good health and thank you for your continuing support of our efforts on behalf of Jazz and its makers.

A Conversation About Jazz with Howard Mandel

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© -  Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


“Get people talking. Learn to ask questions that will elicit answers about what is most interesting or vivid in their lives. Nothing so animates writing as someone telling what he thinks or what he does — in his own words.

His own words will always be better than your words, even if you are the most elegant stylist in the land. They carry the inflection of his speaking voice and the idiosyncrasies of how he puts a sentence together. They contain the regionalisms of his conversation and the lingo of his trade. They convey his enthusiasms. This is a person talking to the reader directly, not through the filter of a writer. As soon as a writer steps in, everyone else's experience becomes secondhand.

Therefore, learn how to conduct an interview.”
- From “Writing About People: The Interview” in
William Zinnsser’s On Writing Well

“I keep thinking that it doesn't matter what tunes you play. The process is the same, and if it works then it's like a new piece, you know. And it is a fact that the better you know the song the more chances you might dare take. And so that's why Bird played a dozen tunes all his life, basically, and most of the people that were improvising — Tristano played the same dozen tunes all his life. And you know, it's amazing what depth he got. He wouldn't have gotten that otherwise, I don't think, in that particular way.

I think it's something similar to Monet painting the lily pond at all times of the day, catching the reflection of the light. I just feel with each situation I'm in, different rhythm sections or whatever, that "I'll Remember April" becomes just something else. And it is a very preferable point — that's the main thing. Everybody who knows that material knows that material pretty well—the listeners and the musicians. So they know, you can just nakedly reveal if anything's happening or not; there's no subterfuge. And that aspect of it is appealing to me, I think.”
- Lee Konitz, alto saxophone

Reasoning by analogy can be perilous, but to expand a bit on the points made by Messrs Zinsser and Konitz and perhaps better connect them to the following piece, I have more or less used the same mix of questions in my previous interviews with Jazz writers including Doug Ramsey, Ted Gioia and Gary Giddins.

This is primarily because I think the most important thing is the interview with the Jazz writer itself.

To put it another way, “it doesn’t matter what tunes you play,” what is important is that the questions asked become a vehicle for the Jazz writer to share his or her special vision about the music and its makers.

Metaphorically, the interview questions become the theme and chords over which the Jazz writer improvises in the form of the musings, reflections and explanations.

In a sense, interview questions become a point of departure to help the Jazz writer express “what is most interesting or vivid in their lives” on the subject of Jazz.

Howard Mandel is the President of the Jazz Journalist Association and in that capacity, he has done a great deal to perpetuate the music’s written traditions, as well as, to support current expressions of it.

Associations provide a platform for education, information and awareness among its members and Howard has been at the forefront of helping Jazz Journalists gain these benefits through membership in the Jazz Journalist Association.

I have been a fan of Howard’s writing for many years and have always found it to be a source of insights and observations that greatly enhanced my appreciation of Jazz.

I thought it would be fun and informative to have him express his views on Jazz by way of the following interview [or, if you will, improvisation].

How and when did music first come into your life?
When I was very little I liked getting sounds out of my grandmother's piano. My parents had me take piano lessons starting when I was eight, I think, and I liked it, especially when I got a teacher who taught me how to construct chords, transcribed, etc. I had recorder lessons in grammar school that led me to want to play flute and sax, which I started doing in high school and college. In college I also studied electronic music in a Moog studio as an elective. Music was always around me, on radio at least but not only, and I've always been attentive to it. Why don't people use their ears as well as they use their eyes? It seemed to me at a young age like music is of the natural, good things to have in one's life.

Did you play an instrument?

– As above: piano, flute, alto sax, Moog synthesizer. I continue to dabble with these kinds of instruments (including Korg monotrons and Little Bits synth modules) and also like to pick up indigenous instruments when I travel. I have several wood flutes and a simply silver one that I like to play, ocarainas from Russia, the Dead Sea and Mexico, a balafon from Senegal, a Cuban marimbula, a Chinese sho, various hand drums and percussion instruments, as well as cheesy music toys. I fiddle with music apps on my ipad and smart phone, and consider the both the tape recorder and software programs like Hindeburg (which I use for my NPR productions) as music composition tools (so arguably, "instruments").

What are your earliest recollections of Jazz?

I remember, again at a very young age, hearing a sax solo on the radio in my dad's car and thinking I could anticipate where it was going to go, harmonically. Then I was excited by "jazz" such as Henry Mancini's "Theme for Peter Gunn" and Ramsey Lewis's "In Crowd." Also I was hung up on playing "The Girl from Ipanema." That was all jazz to me – plus a compilation record my parents had with Doris Day singing "Sentimental Journey" (with Les Brown), and Count Basie's "One O'Clock Jump."

Many conversations about Jazz invariably turn to “impressions” and “favorites.” Why do you think this is the case?

Most people don't need to understand musical fundamentals or specifics in order to feel they've gotten something – an impression, a mood, excitement or perhaps a sense of awe – from hearing jazz. It speaks directly, without need of specialized knowledge. And people take their music very personally. They want to share their favorites – those favorites are precious to them.

Okay, so let’s turn to “impressions; who were the Jazz musicians who first impressed you and why?”

After hearing Mancini's orchestra live, I got into flute for some reason, and became interested in Herbie Mann, Jeremy Steig, Rahsaan Roland Kirk and Eric Dolphy. I also was turned on by Miles Davis' quartet with Red Garland, Paul Chambers and Philly Joe Jones; from there to Herbie Hancock et al on Maiden Voyage. Then I dove into the Blue Note '60s catalog, ESP disks (Sun Ra, Giuseppi Logan Quartet with Don Pullen and Milford Graves), Monk, Mingus. I started listening to blues too, starting with the Junior Wells-Buddy Guy masterpiece Hoodoo Man Blues, around 1967. Being in Chicago, I was unconsiously steeped in blues, loving early on Speckled Red's solo album The Dirty Dozens as well as radio hit r&b from Aretha Franklin and Motown.

Staying with your impressions for a while, what comes to mind when I mention the following Jazz musicians:

- Louis Armstrong– a beautiful patriarch of this music. I didn't get him when I first started listening, except for his appearances in Betty Boop (Max Fleischer) cartoons. But the more I listen and have learned about the music's history, the more I've enjoy him as a trumpeter, soloist, bandleader, and responsible public figure – especially his '20s playing, his '30s entertaining, his personal and political stances from the '50s on, his writing and sense of himself as a media figure and media user.

- Duke Ellington– I respect Ellington enormously, think he was an enduring composer of mid 20th century American music and enjoy listening especially to the Jungle Band period, "Braggin' in Brass," the Webster-Blanton band, his piano duets with Billy Strayhorn ("Tonk"), his unusual collaborations with Coltrane, Mingus and Roach. I heard Ellington with his Orchestra when I was in high school, and enjoyed it but it wasn't an epiphany for me. I have not immersed myself deeply enough into Ellington's oeuvre, but then it's vast. When I do listen to recordings I often find some surprise that grab me, and not necessarily his standards. Studio sessions from Chicago in the mid '60s were one such, also the great Ellingtonian Nutcracker.

- Dizzy Gillespie– dynamic musician, somehow too smart for commercial success. I like his big band, emphasis on Cuban elements, hand-in-glove work with Charlie Parker and his own soloing. No other trumpeter can solo as Dizzy did, he greatly expanded the instrument's range, speed, moodiness (no pun intended) and obviously influenced Miles (to do his own thing, inevitably contrasting with DG's), Clifford Brown and Freddie Hubbard, among my favorites. Can I mention Henry "Red" Allen here?

- Stan Kenton– To me, Kenton is an advanced case of Paul Whiteman trying to make jazz a lady. Some of Kenton's music holds up as fascinating if experimental; he hired lots of good musicians over the years, too. But I don't listen to him for pleasure. He strikes me as grandiose, excessive, didactic and not very rhythmically interesting.

- Shorty Rogers– Quick witted player with an attractive, burnished but somewhat muted sound. I haven't delved into his work deeply, know some from Kenton band, have heard some under his own leadership. I hear that subdued tone as being a West Coast mark, thinking of Chet Baker who I don't care for and Don Cherry, whose melody-making on trumpet is one of my favorite things.

- Gerry Mulligan– Sure knew his way around his horn – opened up possibilities for it as a reasonable solo instrument, it seems to me, beyond what Harry Carney did of course. (I haven't spent time comparing Mulligan to Serge Chaloff). I'm not very interested in his pianoless quartets, preferring Ornette's pianoless quartets and his direction overall. I admire Mulligan's Birth of the Cool charts, but haven't listened deeply to his later work. It's on my "check out" stack, since I read and reviewed Sanford Josephson's biography of him.

- Horace Silver– Good melodicst/songwriter, memorable hooks, nice light touch on the keys, nothing objectionable but there are other keyboardists and composers of his era who interest me more.

- Miles Davis-Gil Evans collaborations– Great stuff. My favorite of the albums is Miles Ahead, but Porgy is terrific and Sketches of Spain, too. I wish they'd done more together during MD's electric decades – but whenever Gil had any influence, Miles seems to especially shine.

- Mel Torme– My mother was in high school with him. What he does is not my cup of tea. For male jazz vocalists I start with Armstrong and Astaire, have to concede that Sinatra was masterful, then Nat Cole, and after that I listen to blues singers (the Chess guys Howlin' Wolf, Muddy, Chuck Berry; the Delta singer-guitarists; the Chicago generation of Junior Wells, Otis Rush, Magic Sam; soul singers including Sam Cooke, Otis Redding, Al Green).

- Maria Schneider– beautiful orchestrations, great depth and clarity in her writing, which makes room also for fine soloists – though to me they seldom step out from her arrangements to grab me as themselves. I think she is writing as a classical composer does, that level of attention and pursuit of original, personal rather than conventional or generic material – that's good. Sometimes I want to hear more distinctive and memorable themes become central to her concept, but mostly I enjoy what I hear from her orchestra. She sets a high bar for composers of contemporary instrumental music.


What made you decide to become a Jazz writer?

I felt jazz gave me something to write about that few other people seemed to be interested in, but that I was hearing and thought was important, fascinating, powerful. I got good feedback from editors, readers and musicians, and liked the people I met in the audience as well as onstage, and those who were, like me, trying to observe and absorb the music as genuinely relevant, meaningful activity. I felt like I was learning something from everyone I interviewed, and my writing improved as I was taking my subject matter seriously. I wrote a little about rock, which I listened to avidly in the '60s and into the '70s but couldn't get as committed to the aesthetic or industry as I was to jazz; I wrote about books, but had my own reading list that didn't necessarily jibe with editors' interests; I could have written more about movies or theater, but I was busy writing about jazz.

Is there a form of writing about Jazz that you prefer: insert notes, articles, books …?

I like to write dispatches from the field – reports of personal experience that mix hard fact and my responses to particular musical events within their contexts. Writing liner notes is not easy, and I like to write them for albums which I believe will have enduring listenership, because then the notes live a long time in conjunction with the music. Writing news stories was something I learned a lot from, reaching sources, taking notes, securing facts. Record reviews were and remain an important training exercise – it's difficult to be honest, descriptive, fair and do compelling writing in that form. Articles are good – I write "articles" for my blog as often as for paying publications these days, similar to when I've had regular columns in magazines. Books are hard to write, and the market being so terrible, the economics work against a long haul project. Still, writing books my ideal, I will not deny it.

If you could write a next book about Jazz on any subject, what or who would be the focus of such a book?

I'm planning a book on the effects of an annual artistic residency in Chicago that's being attempted by a noted saxophonist-composer. I'm not so interested in the effects upon this saxophonist-composer himself as I am in who is affected by their contacts with him, whether ideas he presents make an impression locally, how we can see or infer that, and whether the cost of projects like artists-in-residence are worth it, besides how they're born.

You’ve accomplished many wonderful things in your life both personally and professionally. Why is it that Jazz has continued to play a role in your life?

Jazz just makes sense to me as a way of being – creative, improvisational, spontaneous, expressive, collaborative, connected to artistic ideas and community entertainment at once, being a meritocracy, reflecting its culture and context immediately, being a music that changes and is wide open to anything while having an admirable history that still carries a lot of weight (though it may be ignored as un-commercial), representing ideals for social change I believe in. I like that it can be attempted by anyone, everywhere, and that a lot of techniques, values and strategies are applicable to other art forms, like writing.

Switching to the subject of “favorites:”

What are some of your favorites books about Jazz?

Blues People by Amiri Baraka (Leroi Jones), Really the Blues by Mezz Mezzrow with Bernard Wolfe, Beneath the Underdog by Charles Mingus with Nat Hentoff, Free Jazz by Ekkard Jost, A Power Stronger than Itself: The AACM and American Experimental Music buy George Lewis; Jazzmen edited by Fredrick Ramsey; Hear Me Talkin' To You, oral histories compiled and edited by Nat Shapiro and Nat Hentoff.

- What are some of your favorite Jazz recordings?

Solo Monk, Armstrong and Earl Hines, Complete Blue Note Herbie Nichols, Out to Lunch, Complete Communion and Symphony for Improvisers, Cherry-Coltrane The Avant Garde, Coltrane-Dolphy Impressions, Maiden Voyage, On The Corner, Now He Sings Now He Sobs, In A Silent Way, Jelly Roll Morton piano solos and Red Hot Peppers, Andrew Hill's Judgement, Unit Structures, Science Fiction, Air About Mountains, Inside Betty Carter, pretty much anything by Fats Waller (esp the piano solos), Into the Cool, Sonny Rollins Brass/Trio, Captain Marvel, Spaces (Coryell/McLaughlin/Corea), James P. Johnson '40s piano solos, Native Dancer, Speak No Evil, Brilliant Corners, Money Jungle, Tony Williams Lifetime Emergency!, Bobby Hutcherson's Components, Rollins' Easy Living, Opus de Jazz (Frank Wess w/Milt Jackson), Basie on Decca, early Ellington on RCA, Roscoe Mitchell's Sound, Joseph Jarman's Song For, Muhal Richard Abrams' Levels and Degrees of Light, Kalaparusha Maurice McIntyre's Humility in the Light of the Creator, Anthony Braxton's Three Compositions of the New Jazz, Lester Bowie Numbers One and Two, the Art Ensemble of Chicago's Full Force, Wes Montgomery Smokin' at the Half Note, World Saxophone Quartet Revue, Red Norvo trio with Tal Farlow and Mingus, Conquistador (with Unit Structures and Air Above Mountains, all Cecil Taylor), Archie Shepp's The Magic of Juju, Professor Longhair New Orleans Piano.

- Who are your favorite big band arrangers?

Gil Evans, going back to Thornhill and up through his Sweet Basil band; Nelson Riddle (the Sinatra stuff); Charles Mingus (for Mingus, Mingus, Mingus, Mingus and Cubia and Jazz Fusion); Sun Ra, Chico O'Farrill, Carla Bley, George Russell Ted Nash and Walter Blandings, John Fedchock, Jacob Garchik– Ellington, can we call him an arranger for the Jungle Band book? Basie as a head-arranger part excellence? And can we consider Lawrence Douglas "Butch" Morris an arranger, or a spontaneous composer?

- Who are your favorite Jazz vocalists?

Betty Carter, Billie Holiday, Dinah Washington, Bobby McFerrin, Joe Derise, Fred Astaire, Louis Armstrong, Dee Alexander, Cecil McLorin Salvant, Eddie Jefferson, Cassandra Wilson.And did I say Betty Carter?

- Who among current Jazz musicians do you enjoy listening to?

Very very many. Henry Threadgill, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Myra Melford, Taylor Ho Bynum, Mars Williams, James Carter, Oliver Lake, Reggie Workman, Andrew Cyrille, Marty Ehrlich, Liberty Ellman, Greg "Organ Monk" Lewis, Darcy James Argue, Karl Berger, David Murray, Kenny Barron, Tyshawn Sorey, Roscoe Mitchell, Mary Halvorson, Tomas Fujuwara, Ron Miles, Edward Wilkerson, Cecil Taylor, Muhal Richard Abrams, Tomeka Reid, Nicole Mitchell, Jack DeJohnette, Jamaaladeen Tacuma, Ravi Coltrane, Geri Allen, Erwin Helfer, Jim Baker, Nasheet Waits, Frank Kimbrough, Jason Adasiewicz, Harris Eisenstadt, Randy Weston, Eddie Palmieri, Roy Haynes, Ed Wilkerson, Chris Washburne, Adam Rudolph, Amina Figarova and Bart Platteau, Josh Berman, Ark Ovrutski, Duduka DeFonseca, Romero Lumbambo, Nilson Matta, Billy Lester, Michel Edelin, Ben Goldberg, Richard Bona, Taylor Ho Bynum, Anthony Braxton, Wadada Leo Smith, Ari Brown, Jamie Baum, Craig Taborn, Marshall Allen, Billy Branch.

Of all your writings about Jazz over the years, which ones are you most proud of?

I'm proud of both my books – Miles Ornette Cecil – Jazz Beyond Jazz perhaps even more than Future Jazz, because I bit off a larger over-arching topic – what's "avant garde," really? -- and presented material I think no one else has about Ornette and Cecil, especially, with Miles' story providing context. I am proud of articles I've done for The Wire in the past few years about Karl Berger/Ingrid Sertso and the Creative Music Studio, Roscoe Mitchell, Steve Coleman, John Coltrane, Charles Gayle, among others (also Ornette and Cecil –  some of which was repurposed in Miles Ornette Cecil). I'm proud of many of the DownBeat articles I've written, also those from the '70s in the Chicago Daily News and the Reader and in the '80s and '90s in Guitar World, Musician, the Washington Post, Tower Pulse!, Ear, Music and Sound Output, including stories about Sonny Criss, John McLaughlin, Gonzalo Rubalcaba, Charlie Haden and Keith Jarrett, Asleep at the Wheel, Gatemouth Brown, David Murray with James Blood Ulmer, Don Cherry, the New Orleans Jazz Festival, first Varadero Jazz Festival (in Cuba), the first Club Med festival in Dakar. Also chapters about Jazz in and out of Africa for the Oxford Companion to Jazz, and the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Jazz and Blues I edited as well as contributed to for Flametree Press, published in the US by Billboard Books. I'm proud of a lot of the reviewing I did for the Village Voice, and for regular columns I've contributed to papers and mags including City Arts-New York, New York Press, Finland's Rytmi, Japan's Jazz Life and Swing Journal and The Wire.

What are you thoughts about blogs and websites devoted to Jazz?

As president of the Jazz Journalists Association, I try to keep a close eye on what's happening with jazz on the internet, as the internet has replaced so much of what we used to have as platforms for the dissemination of news and views of jazz. I think blogs are invaluable – but since they seem incapable of attracting income, they are endangered, and there's a burnout factor as well as little training available to bloggers just starting out – and there's a lot to learn. If we could get together on this, jazz bloggers might be a powerful force.
Websites are more problematic – also requiring immense attention to sustain and also incapable of attracting necessary $$. Musicians' websites serve an obvious purpose, but cannot be considered hubs of straightforward and wide-reaching info on jazz. Aggregations of musicians' websites, such as JazzCorner, serve a purpose too, as do online projects like Jazz Near You and Jazz on the Tube. But to my knowledge no one has yet struck on a business plan that can make jazz websites profitable – and hence viable for the long run.
If you could host a fictional “Jazz dinner,” who would you invite and why?

Louis Armstrong, Gil Evans and Betty Carter would have interesting things to say with no bs or huge egos getting in the way of smart, fun, interactive talk.

If you could put on an imaginary 3-Day Jazz Festival in NYC, how would you structure it and who would you invite to perform?

I'd spend some time researching the most engaging and ambitious artists from outside the NYC area as well as the very strong generation of players in their 30s and 40s based NYC. I'd bring together people from New Orleans, Chicago, the Bay Area, southern California, Boston, Philadelphia, the Catskills and let them mix together in sociable and creative sessions in a multi-space building for three days prior to the fest's official open, then I'd want to have the ensembles that came from those days (pre-existing ensembles too, if that's what the players want) in open afternoon rehearsals, leading to performances at night – in clubs in the Village, for easy walkability and intimacy of venue. On the last night of the fest, I'd encourage the musicians to switch partners, roam around the venues, meet the audiences or just listen.

If you were asked to host a television show entitled – “The Subject is Jazz” – would you like to interview on the first, few episodes?

First I'd want to interview Wynton Marsalis and Ann Meier Baker, director of Music and Opera for the NEA, inquiring about their visions and activities for rejuvenating jazz throughout the USA. Next I'd interview leaders of jazz support groups in US cities – for instance, Jazz Institute of Chicago director Lauren Deutsch, director of Seattles' Earshot Jazz John Gilbreath, and perhaps Willard Jenkins of the Washington DC Jazz Festival, about the kinds of support they deem crucial for continuation and improvement of grass rooms jazz presenting in a non-profit framework. Then I'd convene a panel of jazz club owners to discuss the challenges and pressures they face – say Steven Bensusan from the Blue Note, and principals of the Dakota in St. Paul, and the Blue Whale in Santa Monica. I've done something along these lines, moderating the JJA's "Talking Jazz" webinars. There are nearly two dozen of them, all archived and accessible for free on YouTube.

What writing projects about Jazz have you recently finished; are there any that you are currently working on?

I'm finishing up helping Oliver Lake structure his memoirs, and have liner notes to write for a German tenor saxophonist named Max Hacker (he's quite good; it's a live trio recording). I mentioned above the book that I'm in early stages of drafting about the artist-in-Chicago residency. I've just done a lengthy interview with Bob Koester of Delmark Records and Chicago's Jazz Record mart – that will be a half-hour video documentary produced for the Hyde Park Jazz Festival. And I've some other projects are bubbling up. I want to expand on my fiction writing – I'm polishing and shopping my crime novel and am working on some short stories, too.

You have done a lot of writing over the years on the subject of Jazz. Have you given any thought to “collecting” these and leaving them with a college or university library for future reference?

Future Jazz was a collection of my articles that I selected, revised and shaped into book form. I'd like to compile and publish "The Uncollected Mandel" which would cover a lot of non-jazz music such as my writing about contemporary composers, electronic music and figures from "world music" as well as jazz topics that didn't get into Future Jazz or Miles Ornette Cecil. I intend to digitize my recorded interviews, many of which survive (I hope) on cassettes. Already some of my papers are deposited at the University of Chicago library, and maybe the rest of my raw materials will eventually end up there.

Gary Giddins: A Conversation About Jazz

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.



“… if Bix, Bird, and Cecil were all jazz, then this was a world without end. I had to hear everything by the artists I loved, especially Armstrong and Ellington. The lack of repetition was addictive, invigorating. I loved the fact that I might hear a few bars of, say, trumpet and know “that’s Clifford Brown,” long before I understood why I knew it….”  

“Criticism is as personal a field as singing and, beyond the fact that a lot of practitioners in both fields aren’t particularly good at it, the reasons readers respond favorably to one and not to another are just as personal…. Most of us become critics because we venerate critics. We try and measure up….”

“A writer writes about what he or she knows, wants to know, and wants you to know. I thought I had something to say about jazz and that through jazz, I could speak to every issue that interested me….”  
- Gary Giddins

There is no one on the subject of Jazz than I would rather read than Gary Giddins.

His Jazz writings are unsurpassed, they are matchless.

Reading Giddins on Jazz is like sitting down to three scoops of your favorite ice cream with a liberal topping of chocolate sauce – you never want it to end.

It has been said that God sprinkles a few artistic geniuses into each generation to inspire the rest of us.

For me, Gary Giddins has always been one such inspiration.

I asked Gary if he would consent to a JazzProfiles interview.

As you will no doubt note when you read through the following “conversation,” he more than generously responded to my request.

You can review Gary’s many awards and achievements by visiting him at www.garygiddins.com/. I have re-posted two, earlier JazzProfiles features about Gary and his work to the blog's sidebar.


- How and when did music first come into your life?

My parents bought me a plastic phonograph when I was three — they were amused that I could identify the songs on my mother’s 78s or my aunt’s 45s by the labels and print, before I could read. On a few occasions, my father and I walked to Coney Island and I’d cut a plastic record in a phone-like booth. Eventually, he bought our first hi-fi (monaural, of course) and a few LPs, mostly Sinatra-generation pop, but also the Reader's Digest classical music box-sets and that really did it: I was over the moon playing my way through them.

- Did you play an instrument?
        
Piano, accordion, clarinet, bongos, guitar, alto sax, each under a separate tutor who took my parents’ dough and stared at me balefully, wondering why we bothered to go through the motions. My instrument was turntable. I didn’t want to be Sonny Rollins or Pablo Casals; I just wanted to listen to them. On the other hand, learning the rudiments of an instrument gives you useful insights into the labors they demand.

- What are your earliest recollections of Jazz?
        
I’ve written about this, and refer anyone interested to Weather Bird, pp. xiii – xx, and pp. 208-210.
        
- Conversations about Jazz invariably turn to “impressions” and “favorites.” So let’s turn to “impressions;” who were the Jazz musicians who first impressed you and why?”

Louis Armstrong changed everything. The longer answer is in Weather Bird, but a short one is this: after years of listening to 1950s rock and roll, a limited library of 19th century and early 20th century classics, folk music, and blues, the one piece that absolutely owned my Jewish soul was the [Johann Sebastian Bach] B Minor Mass, and Armstrong’s 1928 recordings replicated that kind of power, a discovery that simply blew my mind. At the same time, Ray Charles, whom I adored, made a record called Genius + Soul = Jazz and that perked my curiosity about that mysterious word. Others in the first years (1963-65) were Ellington (Masterpieces, In a Mellow Tone), Dizzy (Jambo Caribe, Something Old Something New), Miles (In Europe, Walkin’), Monk (Criss Cross, Thelonious Alone) Brubeck (At Carnegie Hall) Sonny (Work Time, Our Man in Jazz), Coltrane (Ballads, Live at the Vanguard), Getz / Gilberto, Bill Evans (Waltz for Debby), Hawkins (RCA Vintage anthology and At the Opera House with Roy), Mingus (Pre-Bird Mingus, The Clown), Billie Holiday (Columbia, Commodore sets), Pee Wee Russell (New Groove), Fats Waller (the RCA Vintage sets), Eric Dolphy (Out There), and Ornette (Ornette!) There were many more, though oddly I didn’t get into bop and the big bands until a little later. Bud Powell’s “Cherokee,” on a Verve collection, was life altering, as were the Parker Dials and Savoys and Verves (in order of encounter: Bird Symbols, The Charlie Parker Story, The Essential Charlie Parker), Tatum (This is Piano), Horace Silver (Song for My Father, Sarah (+ 2, No Count Sarah), Basie and Pres (The Lester Young Memorial Album, Lester’s Keynotes), the Django set on Capitol, Gil Evans (Out of the Cool), Barney Kessel (Workin’ Out) and on and on, as I grew determined to see everyone listed in Feather’s 1960 Jazz Encyclopedia still alive, and hear all those who weren’t. The cumulative effect and answer to your question lay in the wondrous variety and individualism they represented: if Bix, Bird, and Cecil were all jazz, then this was a world without end. I had to hear everything by the artists I loved, especially Armstrong and Ellington. The lack of repetition was addictive, invigorating. I loved the fact that I might hear a few bars of, say, trumpet and know “that’s Clifford Brown,” long before I understood why I knew it.   

- For reasons which you explain in the introduction to Visions of Jazz: The First Century, you did not include a number of “major figures…personal favorites … and popularizers” in the book. Continuing with your impressions for a while longer, what comes to mind when I mention the following Jazz musicians who were excluded from Visions of Jazz?

- Benny Carter
        
One of the wisest, most brilliant men I’ve had the honor to know. The first time I saw him play, in the 1970s, I understood the awe in which older critics and musicians held him. Before then, I had not heard most of his key recordings. His playing is beyond time, no matter the context. The other day I listened to his records with Julia Lee; to paraphrase something Benny once said about Ben Webster, you instantly know who it is and who he is. Working with him in the American Jazz Orchestra and seeing him every Labor Day weekend at the Gibson Jazz Party in Colorado over more than two decades was a kind of graduate school. I’ve written a lot about Benny, if not nearly enough; see Weather Bird.
        
- Ben Webster
        
He and Bud Powell were the two guys on my Feather list I never got to see so I took his death to heart. I had tried to find him when I studied in France in 1967, but no luck, though that was the summer I became friends with Ted Curson and Nick Brignola, the most important “studying” I did that summer. Ben was the most schizoid jazz player: supreme romantic, ferocious aggressor. Is there a better improv than “Cotton Tail?” Not that I knew of. Is there a more sublime encounter than Ben and Tatum? He’s one of the musicians I wrote about early on (Booker Ervin was another), including long liner notes, so by the time I started writing the column and books, I neglected him along with too many others. Never enough time or words. Mea bloody culpa! But I listen to him all the time.

- Jack Teagarden
        
I like everything about Teagarden, the rippling trombone triplets, the insouciant voice (even Bing sounded taut by comparison), the bemusement (just look at him looking at Chuck Berry in Jazz on a Summer’s Day), the interplay with Pops and later with Bobby Hackett, and the perfect—as in P.E.R.F.E.C.T.—rendition of “St. James Infirmary” at the 1947 Town Hall concert. (Though Don Goldie, the trumpet player in his later band, wore me the hell out.) A 1977 essay on Big T, “The Best Trombone Player in the World,” is in Riding on a Blue Note.  

- Mary Lou Williams
        
Another spirit beyond time. Her first solo piece, “Nite Life,” was one of the first historicist jazz recordings in that, as, Jaki Byard would do decades later, she isolates and unites stylistic components of early piano, from Eubie to James P. to Hines. She was a marvelous composer and a genuinely great orchestrator, but it’s her piano I relish most, the free-floating harmonies and assertive time. She helped to revive the New York scene in the early ‘70s, when she convinced Barney Josephson to install a piano at the Cookery and then “embraced” Cecil Taylor—not a complete success musically but a true cultural occasion at the time. Mary asked me to deliver the eulogy at her funeral service at St. Patrick’s, a tremendous honor. I’ve written a lot about her, little of it in my books, though I compensated a bit by expanding a section on her in the trade edition of Jazz, the textbook I wrote with Scott DeVeaux. Carol Bash is now completing a long-awaited film about Mary.

- Tadd Dameron
        
If I could hear him now, I’d feel no pain. One of the tragically under-realized talents in jazz, the rare swing figure who understood bop before the boppers did. Blending Wardell and Eager and Navarro was pure genius; and the melodies and voicings unmistakably his own. Fountainbleau has transcendent moments. He helped posthumously to spur jazz historicism in the ‘70s and ‘80s, and it’s ironic and sad to me that I wrote more about Dameronia than Dameron.


- Mildred Bailey
        
A complex dazzling woman who, like Billie, had to completely reinvent herself. In return for helping to launch Bing’s career, when she was still an unknown working speakeasies, he arranged for Whiteman to hire her: the first woman ever to tour as a band vocalist. The combination of Mildred, Red Norvo, and the arranger Eddie Sauter is damn near sublime. She had a high girlish voice, insinuating style, occasionally arch phrasing, unwavering pitch; her taste in accompanists was beyond cavil. There is quite a bit about her in Weather Bird, but someone should write a biography. Her granddaughter Julia Rinker has been mounting a one-woman campaign to restore Mildred to the pantheon, where she ought to be. The Mosaic box is a treasure.

- Lennie Tristano
        
The early recordings are quick, surprising and provocative, a brief for free improvisation if not free rhythm, which he later attempted to cage. “Wow” is a genuine wow and “I Can’t Get Started” with Billy Bauer takes harmonic substitutions to the point of re-composition. But the Atlantics exemplify his gifts. The 1955 “You Got to My Head” is one of the great piano improvisations and “Line Up” and the later “Becoming” are endlessly mesmerizing. Just as you can hear vestigial elements of Hines in Nat Cole, you can hear vestiges of Nat in Tristano. I find myself rediscovering him, ignoring him, then finding him again, a relationship I have with several writers and with opera, but not much in jazz.

- Serge Chaloff
        
By all accounts a madman, but the two Capitols, Boston Blow Up and Blue Serge, are among the outstanding postwar albums. With due respect to Carney and Mulligan, no one explored the range of the baritone more completely and effectively than Serge, especially on ballads, of which his “Body and Soul” and “Thanks for the Memory” are incomparable masterworks.

- Django Reinhardt
        
Everyone loves Django; impossible not to — the later stuff with Hubert Rostaing as well as the classic Quintette and everything he did with visiting Americans, especially Eddie South, who never played better than he did with Django, Rex Stewart, Benny Carter, Hawk (“Out of Nowhere” is one of his very great solos, and has Benny on trumpet for lagniappe). “St. Louis Blues,” “Improvisation,” and his delirious adaptations of Bach’s D minor concerto, with South and Grappelli, are pure pleasure, and then there are his those lovely original tunes. I listen to Django a lot, but I seem to have written about him mostly en passim or by indirection, as in an essay on James Carter’s smart homage to him. (See miserable excuse under Ben Webster above.)

– Ted Heath
        
The supreme British bandleader, tremendously popular in his day, and at his best a stubborn defender of the jazz faith — though now sadly forgotten. I hadn’t played him in a while when something rekindled my interest, so I went to an old-vinyl store called Footlights and bought more than a dozen LPs, listened with much pleasure, made copious notes for an essay, and then get derailed by something else and never wrote it. You can see him and get a sense of how hip he was in the excellent 1949 Michael Powell bomb-defusing-thriller-meets-the-lost-weekend film The Small Back Room (based, incidentally, on a very good Nigel Balchin novel), when Kenny Baker and Johnny Gray were in the band and Tadd Dameron was one of his arrangers. I don’t believe Tadd wrote the music in the film, but it definitely reflects his influence. Heath, along with Louis Armstrong, recorded and had an international hit with “The Faithful Hussar,” the song that (a year later) Christiane Kubrick sang at the end of Paths of Glory.


- Dave Brubeck
        
Like countless other boomers, I found in Dave an early and irresistible conduit to jazz. I grew bored with his post Desmond, post Mulligan, post (for a very short time) Braxton band, and felt guilty about it because he was a wonderful and generous man. The first time I spoke to him, I wanted to interview him for a piece I was writing for Esquire about upcoming jazz talent. He was on tour and his office gave me the number of his hotel in Vancouver. We got into an animated conversation, when suddenly he said, “Where are you?” I said, “New York.” He said, “This is costing you a fortune, let me call you back.” He did and we spoke for an hour. When I worked on a documentary about Pops, he and Iola drove to New York to shoot an interview in the Armstrong house, though we would have been happy to do it anywhere at their convenience. (They loved Pops.) A couple of years ago, I interviewed him on stage at the Kennedy Center, and he was as forthright and funny as ever, and seemed genuinely moved when I told him afterward how much I liked his recent solo piano CD, which is all but antithetical to the usual stomping Brubeck style. I’m happy with the Brubeck essay in Weather Bird, and with one on The Real Ambassadors in my book Natural Selection. Billy Taylor once told me, “Dave doesn’t get the credit he deserves as an innovator.” He was right. Nor does he get enough credit for The Real Ambassadors, which along with Ellington’s Jump For Joy, is the closest we have to a Broadway jazz musical. Of course, neither of them got close to Broadway and they exist solely as recordings. But someday, a smart producer will see the possibilities!       

- Why were there such rapid developments in Jazz from 1946-1965? Did the speed of this revolution in the music sow the seeds for its own destruction?
        
What destruction? Every movement sows seeds of destruction and rebirth. It isn’t the fault of jazz  that people can’t or don’t want to keep up with it. That’s all to the glory of jazz. Besides, the further we get from 1965, or any other departure point, the more unified the development of jazz appears.

- Mike Zwerin has written that Jazz went to Europe to live [in many ways, literally] in the 1960s. Did you agree with this assessment?

Yes and no. It went to live there for about four years, the height of the rock juggernaut when jazz artists who knew better tried to fit it in by wearing bad haircuts, sporting funny clothes, and buying shares in Fender Rhodes. The middle ’60 were splendid years: in the space of four days in 1966, you could (and I did) hear Bill Evans at Town Hall, and Titans of the Tenor at Philharmonic Hall, not to mention the serious action at the Vanguard and Gate and Half Note. It crashed in the early ‘70s, but by 1972, the long exile was terminating and each week brought remarkable new talent from around the country—all those acronyms: AACM, BAG, AEC, WSQ—along with the triumphant returns of everyone from Ted Curson to Red Rodney, Red Norvo to George Russell, Helen Humes to Betty Carter, Dexter and Moody and McLean and Benny Carter and Don Cherry etc. Cecil came back from the academy, Mingus and Rollins ended sabbaticals, Al reunited with Zoot, Sarah re-launched herself, Phil Woods Americanized his rhythm machine. Even Don Byas came by for a snort. By 1975, jazz returned to New York to stay. Mike remained in Europe, and he made the International Herald Tribune worth reading.  

- In Rhythm-a-ning: Jazz Tradition and Innovation you wrote: "My intuition tells me that innovation isn't this generation's fate...the neoclassicists have a task no less valuable than innovation: sustenance. [M]usicians such as Marsalis are needed to restore order, replenish melody, revitalize the beat, loot the tradition for whatever works, and expand the audience. That way we'll be all the hungrier for the next incursion of genuine avant-gardists..." (161) Is this still your assessment of developments in Jazz circa, 1970-2000?

Sort of, but the phrase “the next incursion of genuine avant-gardists” now strikes me as facetious at best and perhaps just plain stupid; and, in any case, it’s okay with me — tradition isn’t the enemy of novelty or vice versa. In recent weeks, I heard a magnificent concert by Josh Redman with his superb quartet (including Brad Mehldau) and strings; and an energizing bass recital by Charnett Moffett. Three of the best albums I heard in this period are Marc Carey’s For the Love of Abbey, a pianistic exploration of Abbey Lincoln’s compositions; Bob Dorough’s lavishly produced hommage à moi Duets (likely the best album ever released by a nonagenarian); and Chucho Valdés’s stirring Border-Free. Each is obviously steeped in traditions (Valdés call his band the Afro-Cuban Messengers), yet each is startling, fresh, innovative, and audaciously, shamelessly in thrall to melody. It’s a wise music that knows its father.


- Gene Lees observed: “Writers about jazz are often notable for an ill-concealed jealousy and a sullen conviction that they alone know anything about the subject, that it is or should be their exclusive domain.” What are your views about Gene’s statement?

If I say “Gene Lees is an idiot,” do I prove his point? I don’t think so. To my left is a wall of jazz lit, about 1200 volumes, many of which I relish. Martin Williams and Dan Morgenstern made me want to listen to music I had never heard of and later made me want to write about it. Jealousy? I loved the rhythmic elation of Baraka’s writing about the avant-garde and Ira Gitler’s bebop wit, Don DeMichael’s meticulous praise, Whitney Balliett’s watercolor prose, Ralph Ellison’s musical patriotism, Max Harrison’s Olympian acuteness. I read avidly the Chicagoans like John Litweiler and Larry Kart, and the measured sanity of John McDonough alongside the measured insanity of Stanley Dance, who nonetheless documented with enormous skill the musicians he loved. I was mentored by Albert Murray’s swinging so-and-so and so-and-so locutions. When I started writing, I was delighted to be part of a generation of critics I could learn and steal from, including JR Taylor, Stanley Crouch, Bob Blumenthal, and Francis Davis. And I love attending a concert or hearing a record and later reading Nate Chinen nail it in the Times or Will Friedwald in the Journal or Doug Ramsey online. The other day I read a genuinely original and moving piece about Bill Evans and jazz racialism by Eugene Holley Jr; I read illuminating stuff all the time by Bill Milkowski, David Adler, and others. Greg Thomas brought solid jazz coverage back to the Daily News and no one should fail to subscribe to the East Stroudsburg University’s The Note for Phil Woods’s column and the interviews. Howard Mandel succeeded in creating the Jazz Journalists Association because most of us respect each other. The existence in any literary field of fools does not undermine the presence of those who write with passion, humility, discernment.

     Having said that, there are plenty of critics I find useless for reasons that invariably have more to do with me than them. I found Gene Lees’s narcissism insufferable and his self-serving, conspicuously unsourced faux-biographies of Woody Herman and Johnny Mercer offensive. I often found Benny Green’s orotund eloquence pompously insincere. I owe a tremendous debt to Andre Hodier, whose early books I read and reread with Talmudic devotion; but the more I learned about music and myself, the less meaningful his work became to me. Critics aren’t simply vendors of opinion; as I emphasized repeatedly when I taught criticism at Columbia, opinions are the least interesting aspect of criticism, which must needs represent a larger gestalt, a way of seeing and understanding the world. It’s true that many critics are paranoid. Not long ago, I saw a not-very-bright film critic praise a great film critic, after noting that he didn’t always agree with him. Of course you don’t always agree with him; if you did, you would be him.

Criticism is as personal a field as singing and, beyond the fact that a lot of practitioners in both fields aren’t particularly good at it, the reasons readers respond favorably to one and not to another are just as personal. The first time I read an issue of Down Beat, when I knew absolutely nothing about jazz, I intuited that I could trust reviews that were signed Dan Morgenstern, and not reviews by two fellows named Harvey. I respected and admired Robert Palmer, but his take on music was so foreign from mine that even when we agreed we disagreed. But I’d bet the ranch that neither of us was jealous of the other. Most of us become critics because we venerate critics. We try and measure up.  


- Staying with your thoughts about another comment by Gene, he realized very early on in his career that he “…could never be a Jazz critic,” and yet, you’ve written Jazz criticism for almost your entire writing career. Why this preference on your part?

I wanted to write from the time I was eight, and write criticism from the time (six and seven years later) I discovered Dwight Macdonald and Edmund Wilson. I fully expected to be a literary critic. Long after jazz and Mr. Armstrong happened to me, I figured my ignorance of musicology cashiered any ambition in that area. But there was something liberating about what Martin Williams used to call his “amateur status.” And so when I’d read some clown opining that Sonny Rollins lacked imagination, or that Charlie Rouse was boring, or that Garner was as predictable as canned soup, or that Ellington’s Far East Suite represented a decline, or the late Billie is merely neurotic, or that Jabbo Smith was a superior musician to Louis Armstrong, whose artistry allegedly went downhill after 1928 (I am making none of this up), I felt compelled to offer my two cents. A writer writes about what he or she knows, wants to know, and wants you to know. I thought I had something to say about jazz and that through jazz, I could speak to every issue that interested me.  

- Although you write about many topics related to the broad category of entertainment, what made you decide to become primarily a Jazz writer and is there a form of writing about Jazz that you prefer: reviews, insert notes, articles, books …?

I’ve answered the first part. As to form, I prefer the medium-track essay, 1500 to 2500 words. I never wanted to write brief newspaper accounts and when I tried, I wasn’t any good at it. The Voice gave me a page and let me fill it as I pleased for 31 years. It was the best job in the world on many accounts, not least that it afforded me short rest periods when I felt stale and longer ones when I worked on books. For most of those years, I worked with the brilliant Bob Christgau, who among many other things taught me the discipline of backing up my ideas. Before the Weather Bird column, the one format that allowed me to write at that length was liner notes, but I soon grew to hate writing them; I always felt I was whoring or compromising to sell a product, and I pretty much cut them out by the early 1980s, except for occasional historical reissues or favors to musician-friends. And it infuriates me that record companies not only own them in perpetuity but feel free to edit and even revise them without asking permission.  Since 2003, when I left the Voice, I’ve worked almost exclusively on books (also sold one unproduced screen treatment), a luxury I never thought I’d have, made possible by my work as Director of the Leon Levy Center for Biography at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. I am very lucky, and know it.

- Riding on a Blue Note: Jazz and American Pop[1981] isyour first published book. What is the main theme of this work; how and why did this book come about?

At first, it had no theme. An editor asked me to consider publishing a collection of my essays. When I finished it, the editor said it was fine and took a pregnancy leave. The book then went to her colleague who hated it and demanded I return the paltry advance. Sheldon Meyer at Oxford had been asking me to do a book and we hadn’t come up with anything, so I asked my agent to send him the manuscript (originally called System of Ribbons, another Ellington phrase; my agent told me that a title with the word “system” sounds like an engineering manual). He bought it that week. What Bob taught me about newspaper writing, Sheldon taught me about book writing and over the course of 20-plus years, I did six books for him. Sheldon said I should delete two essays, one because it was the only one not centered on a particular individual. That was when I began to see the book as a book, with a unified approach and theme. We organized the pieces into four sections and underscored the jazz and pop theme. When I asked him why he wanted to cut the second piece, he said, “Because it isn’t worthy of you.” Right again. For Visions of Jazz, I wrote a better chapter on that same figure.
 
- As stated in the introduction to Visions of Jazz, “In Rhythm-a-ning: Jazz Tradition and Innovation,[published in1985], I posed the question as it related to jazz: ‘Few educated Americans can name even five jazz musicians under the age of forty.” What Jazz musicians under the age of forty do you listen to?

As a civilian, I’m no longer quite as conscious of age, but I think Jason Moran, Ambrose Akinmusire, Darius Jones, Aaron Parks, Christian Sands, Esperanza Spaulding, Miguel Zenon, Eric Harland, Robert Glasper, Nathaniel Facey, Ryan Truesdell, Aaron Diehl, Christian Scott, Mary Halvorson, and Gerald Cleaver all make the cut.

- After Celebrating Bird in 1987 and Satchmo in 1988, why did you turn your attention to Bing Crosby as the focus for your next biography [Bing Crosby: A Pocketful of Dreams, 2001]? Why not a Dizzy Gillespie companion volume to your work on Charlie Parker; a book about Miles Davis; a biography about Gerry Mulligan – each of whom were significant shapers of the music?

You write about what you find intriguing, and I have written extensively about Dizzy, Gerry, and Miles. In any case, Dizzy had just completed an as-told-to and Jerome Klinkowitz was working on Gerry, and everyone was doing Miles. I did agree to write Stan Getz’s autobiography, but he died the week we negotiated the contract. The two short books you mention are extended biographical essays that served as a kind of apprenticeship for a serious biography, and I had no intention of doing another one. I wanted to tackle a serious biography on Ellington. However, while I was working up a proposal, the Ellington papers were embargoed at the Smithsonian for “inventory,” which left me hanging. Paul Bresnick, with whom I did Satchmo, had repeatedly asked me to consider Crosby and I said no. In the absence of the Ellington project, I began looking at Bing. I always loved his jazz sides and had covered his Uris Theater engagement in 1976 (see Riding on a Blue Note). I was astonished to find that there had not been a serious book about him since two that came out in the late 1940s. The more I researched, the more fascinated I became with the themes of fame, persona, and the doppelganger effect: the person that the public creates as opposed to the person behind closed doors. I also found that I admired his pop work in the 1930s and 1940s more than I expected, along with his more obscure movies. Then there was his virtually forgotten contribution to modern technology, from popularizing the carbon microphone to the financing of tape to his decisive role in changing radio into a prerecorded rather than live medium. Finally, I was moved by his integrity regarding Civil Rights, especially in his relationship to Louis. Suddenly he seemed a perfect subject for me. Of course, it was supposed to be a 300-page book, requiring at best three years to write. After nine years, I published the first volume, 700 pages ending in 1940; I’m now closing in on volume two.

- In Weather Bird: Jazz at the Dawn of Its Second Century [2004]you raise this question in one of its essays - “How Come JazzAin’t Dead?” How come it ain’t?  
        
You’ll have to read the essay to find out. Not much has changed.

- What books are you currently working on?
        
Bing Crosby: Swinging on a Star. A revised edition of Celebrating Bird will be published by the University of Minnesota Press this fall and Scott DeVeaux and I are preparing a new edition of Jazz.


Switching to the subject of “favorites:”

- What are some of your favorites books about Jazz?

Everything by Martin [Williams], especially The Jazz Tradition, Where’s the Melody, Jazz Masters in Transition, and Jazz Panorama, which he edited. Dan [Morgenstern]’s Living with Jazz and his amazing liner essays that remain to be collected. Louis Armstrong’s Satchmo: My Life in New Orleans, Marshall Stearns’s unjustly forgotten Story of Jazz and Jazz Dance, Sidney Finkelstein’s Jazz: A People’s Music. Bernie Wolfe’s Mezz Mezzrow book Really the Blues, and, among the novels, Dorothy Baker’s Young Man with a Horn, Henry Steig’s Send Me Down, Michael Ondaatje’s Coming Through Slaughter, Nicholas Christopher’s Tiger Rag, and the glowing jazz tidbits that run throughout John Harvey’s Charlie Resnick detective novels. Albert Murray’s Stomping the Blues and Blue Devils of Nada, Gunther Schuller’s Early Jazz, Hampton Hawes and Don Asher’s Raise Up off Me, Art and Laurie Pepper’s Straight Life, Amiri Baraka’s Black Music, Laurie Wright’s King Oliver, Walter Allen’s Hendersonia, Ira Gitler’s Jazz Masters of the ‘40s and Swing to Bop, Whitney Balliett’s American Musicians, Jean Lion’s Bix, Harry Sampson’s Swingin’ on the Ether Waves, Geoffrey Ward’s Jazz, John Szwed’s Space in the Place, Anita O’Day’s High Times Hard Times, Stanley Crouch’s Considering Genius, Scott DeVeaux’s The Birth of Bebop, Jack Chambers’s Miles, Don Marquis’s In Search of Buddy Bolden, William Russell’s Oh Mister Jelly, Laurent de Wilde’s Monk, Rex Stewart’s Jazz Masters of the ‘30s and Boy Meets Horn, Jelly Roll Morton and Alan Lomax’s Mister Jelly Roll, Nat Shapiro and Nat Hentoff’s Hear Me Talkin’ to Ya, Ted Gioia’s West Coast Jazz, Ekkehard Jost’s Free Jazz, Duke Ellington’s Music is My Mistress, Joe Goldberg’s Jazz Masters of the 50s, Bobby Reisner’s Bird, A. B. Spellman’s Four Lives in the Bebop Business, Will Friedwald’s Biographical Guide to Singers, Stanley Dance’s World of series, The John Coltrane Reference edited by Lewis Porter, the 16-volume Italian discography Duke Ellington on Records, the Brian Rust discographies, Jan Evensmo’s Solography booklets, David Schiff’s The Ellington Century, Carl Woideck’s Charlie Parker, Doug Ramsey’s Take Five, the Leonard Feather encyclopedias and From Satchmo to Miles, Max Harrison’s Essential Jazz Records, Valerie Wilmer’s As Serious as Your Life, the collected Otis Ferguson, Milt Hinton’s Bass Lines, Jimmy Heath’s I Walked with Giants, Terry Gibbs's Good Vibes.and . . .  I had better stop. There’s a lot of great stuff out there.

- What are some of your favorite Jazz recordings?
        
Surely you jest. I’ve written a dozen books in an attempt to answer that.

- Who are your favorite big band arrangers?

Ellington, Ellington, Ellington, Ellington, Ellington. Also Strayhorn, Gil Evans, Don Redman, Fletcher Henderson, Bill Challis, Mary Lou Williams, Eddie Sauter, Benny Carter, Sy Oliver (all the Lunceford writers), George Russell, Count Basie (all the Basie writers), Al Cohn, Gerry Mulligan, Bill Holman, Artie Shaw (all the Shaw writers), Gerald Wilson, Bob Brookmeyer, Thad Jones, Nelson Riddle, Ralph Burns, Gil Fuller, Tadd Dameron, Dizzy Gillespie, John Lewis, Neal Hefti, Johnny Richards, Chico O’Farrill, Frank Foster, Jimmy Heath, Gary McFarland, Horace Silver, Muhal Richard Abrams, Charles Mingus (all the Mingus writers, particularly Sy Johnson), David Murray, James Newton, Bob Belden, Uri Caine, Butch Morris, for starters.    

- Who are your favorite Jazz vocalists?

Armstrong, Crosby, Billie Holiday, Sarah Vaughan, Ella Fitzgerald, Jimmy Rushing, Dinah Washington, Rosemary Clooney, Ethel Waters, Mildred Bailey, Frank Sinatra, Nat “King” Cole, Ray Charles, Abbey Lincoln, Helen Forrest, Bessie Smith, Big Joe Turner, Jimmy Witherspoon, Connie Boswell (and the Boswell Sisters), Fats Waller, Cab Calloway, Lee Wiley, Harry and Donald Mills (and the Mills Brothers), Bill Kenny (and the Ink Spots), Joe Williams, Jackie Wilson, Chuck Berry, B. B. King, Tony Williams (and the Platters), Louis Jordan, Maxine Sullivan, Jack Teagarden, Ivy Anderson, Billy Eckstine, Tony Bennett, Doris Day, Jo Stafford, Bob Dorough, Johnny Hartman, Bobby Bland, Anita O’Day, Lambert, Hendricks, and Ross, Betty Carter, Peggy Lee, Aretha Franklin, Etta James, Etta Jones, Julia Lee, Helen Humes, Kay Starr, Carmen McRae, Helen Merrill, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Cassandra Wilson, Mary Cleere Haran, Dianne Reeves, Jane Harvey, Fats Domino, and Herb Jeffries for starters.

- Who are some of your favorite Jazz instrumentalists?
        
Can’t do it.


- Of all your writings about Jazz over the years, which one/s are you most fond of and why?
        
I like all my books: the best are probably Bing Crosby: Pocketful of Dreams and Visions of Jazz, though I suspect my best essay writing is in Weather Bird and Natural Selection. I have personal affection for Faces in the Crowd because it was written over a four-year period beginning shortly before our daughter was born, an extraordinarily happy time and I think the book reflects that. Celebrating Bird and Satchmo were well received and fun to do, and fun to revise! (You don’t often get that second chance.) Warning Shadows: Home Alone with Classic Cinema is my first book entirely about film, though quite a bit on jazz crept into it. Jazz, the book written with Scott, is the intro we wish we had had when we started listening.   

- What are your thoughts about blogs and websites devoted to Jazz?
        
Bravo to all! But I confess I read very little that doesn’t have pages I can turn and scribble on. Until The New York Daily News penny-pinchers caught up with him, I enjoyed Greg Thomas’ online and print weekly jazz feature stories on jazz artists and events in New York City.

- If you could host a fictional “Jazz dinner,” who would you invite and why?
        
Although I’d kill for a 30-minute interview with King Oliver, my dinner parties would include only the most entertaining and convivial artists I’ve had the pleasure of knowing, now gone and sorely missed: they would include (with their spouses and significant others): Roy Eldridge, John Lewis, Rosemary Clooney, Dizzy Gillespie, James Moody, Ted Curson, Mel Lewis, Sarah Vaughan, Gerry Mulligan, Benny Carter, Gil Evans, Tommy Flanagan, Jaki Byard, Martin Williams, Lester Bowie, Julius Hemphill, Steve McCall, Mary Cleere Haran, Pops and Bing (they make the cut as I met each of them once), and my indispensable assistant of 14 years Elora Charles. I’d add Artie Shaw, but no one else would get a word in edgewise.       

- Whose music do you listen to when you want to be alone with the music, so to speak; not to analyze it for the purposes of writing about it, but allowing it to reach directly into your emotions?
        
It varies, and any month would bring a different answer. Last week I listened to a lot of Wardell, Hampton Hawes, Sonny Clarke, and 1950s Duke. Then there was a day of Cecil Taylor. Last night: Tommy Flanagan. I doubt a week goes by that I don’t listen to Tatum, Nat Cole, Sonny Rollins, Clifford Brown. Armstrong is a constant tonic. So is Bud Powell. Revising the Bird book had me digging through obscure live performances I hadn’t played in years. I often jog to Ray Charles. The Joshua Redman concert had me returning to his early work. The great thing about leaving journalism is that I listen only to what I want to hear, which includes a lot of classical music as well. One thing I can tell you with certainty: when I’m alone with the music and my wife, we listen mostly to vinyl. I am so glad I did not unload my vinyl!   

- I realize that your interests are wide-ranging, but could you please conclude this “interview” by talking a bit about what excites you as you look out over the current jazz scene?
        
The incredible number of gifted, dedicated musicians (including the children of several close friends), who want nothing more than to master and play jazz, utterly resolved and unshaken by warnings from people like me that the work opportunities may be limited."     


A Jazz Conversation with Doug Ramsey

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© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


I’ll try to keep this introduction brief so that my mumblings don’t detract too much from what follows.
Peter Keepnews succinctly stated: “Those of us who have tried writing about Jazz know what a daunting challenge it can be to do it well. Expressing an opinion about a given musician or recording is easy; explaining what exactly it is that makes that musician or recording worth caring about is not.”
Doug Ramsey has been brilliantly “explaining” the merits of the work of Jazz musicians and the qualities of Jazz recordings for over fifty years.
Doug’s writings about Jazz are so artfully done that opening an LP or a CD and finding that the descriptive notes have been written by him is the metaphoric equivalent of finding a real diamond at the bottom of a box of Crackerjacks.
Ray Avery once said of his colleague, William Claxton, that “some of us take photographs of Jazz musicians, but Bill is an artist.”
Those of us who write about Jazz feel the same way about Doug.
 How and when did music first come into your life?
I don’t remember it’s not being in my life. The first that I recall making music was as part of a chorus in, I think, the second grade. I took piano lessons, without notable success, from age 10 to 12 or so
 Did you play an instrument?
My next instrument, starting at 13, was the trumpet. To be more precise, it was a 12-dollar cornet that belonged to the junior high school band. Eventually, I saved enough from a paper route to buy a used Olds Special, an excellent horn that I still have but rarely play. Much later, Clark Terry got me a factory deal on a CT model Olds flugelhorn. For several years I’ve had the Bobby Shew Yamaha trumpet and the Shew model Yamaha flugelhorn. Lessons with Bobby during my L.A. years were invaluable. I’ve never stopped playing, despite many requests. The black and white picture shows me sitting in illegally at a club called the Crown Bar in the late 1950s when I was in the Marine Corps, stationed in Iwakuni, Japan.
The tenor player in the striped shirt is Sergeant Paul Elizondo, who went on to lead a big band famous in San Antonio, Texas, and become a popular Bexar County commissioner. The drummer was a corporal named, I think, Sears. The pianist and bassist had the gig at the club. Although the base at Iwakuni was headquarters of the First Marine Air Wing, my commanding officer was an Air Force colonel 450 miles north at Far East Network headquarters in Tokyo, an ideal arrangement. My job was to run the Iwakuni radio station of FEN, staffed by Marine, Army and Air Force enlisted men and a handful of Japanese civilian employees.
The commander of the air wing was Lt. General Carson Abel Roberts.
One night when I was sitting in legally at the officers club on base, General Roberts introduced himself as a fellow player who as a youngster had known Bix Beiderbecke. On that thread, an unlikely friendship developed between the war hero three-star general and the greenish first lieutenant. If I had been under his command, that would have been unlikely. We were on a first-name basis; he called me Doug and I called him General. Sitting-in in town couldn’t have been too serious a violation of regulations; one night, General Roberts showed up at the Crown with his cornet and asked if he could play “Green Eyes,” which he did—a bit shakily but with the right changes.
It is my good fortune that there are outstanding musicians in my current hometown, Yakima, Washington, who allow me to play with them. We actually had a paying gig not long ago. Fifty bucks apiece. The way things are going, I know a few guys in L.A. and New York who would jump at that. World-class players come here frequently to play at The Seasons Performance Hall. A couple of Seasons Fall Festivals ago, Marvin Stamm invited me to play a duet with him. Actually, he informed me that I would play a duet with him. Bill Mays wrote a splendid arrangement of Freddie Hubbard’s “Up Jumped Spring” for trumpet, flugelhorn, violin, two cellos and rhythm section (Mays, Martin Wind and Matt Jorgensen). It was fun. No one in the audience threw anything.    
What are your earliest recollections of jazz?
My parents’ small collection of 78s was a mish-mash that included, among other things, records by Frankie Carle, the Andrews Sisters, Rafael Mendez, Eddy Arnold and Louis Armstrong. They had a record changer hooked up to the big Philco console radio in the living room. I played Mendez’s “La Virgen de la Macarena” a lot and wore Armstrong’s “Mahogany Hall Stomp” practically white. I’m not sure that I knew what Armstrong did was called jazz. I was perhaps 10 years old.
 Many conversations about jazz invariably turn to “impressions” and “favorites.” Why do you think this is the case?
As for favorites, most non-musicians and casual listeners develop them early on and maintain them as their standard for the rest of their lives. Here’s how Woody Herman put it when we talked following a dance job in San Antonio in 1974:
“Most of them stop listening as soon as they leave high school. That’s their last really firm connection with music. In that period of their lives, it’s all-important, and from the time of their first responsibility on, it becomes background to everything else, which is very natural and correct, I guess. But then they still want to tell me how the band isn’t making it now and it was so great then. And that really aggravates me. It’s about the only thing that does.”
One customer had asked that night for “Johnson Rag.” Another said to Woody, “Don’t you have any Russ Morgan pieces?”
“And they get some very terse replies,” Woody said, “like ‘No’ or ‘He quit the business’ or ‘I’ll play that when I get to the big band in the sky.’ It becomes a kind of standup routine. Certainly anyone has a right to ask for anything, but I can’t for the life of me think why I have to do those tunes.”
The quotes are from the Herman chapter in my book Jazz Matters: Reflections on the Music and Some of its Makers.
Okay, so let’s turn to “impressions; who were the jazz musicians who first impressed you and why?”
Armstrong, of course. The next jazz player I’m conscious of admiring was Muggsy Spanier. He led in a curious way to Charlie Parker. When I was 15 or so, I was in a booth at Belmont Radio & Music in my hometown, Wenatchee, Washington, the Apple Capitol of the World and the Buckle of the Power Belt of the Northwest, listening to Spanier’s Commodore recording of “Sugar.” The son of the store’s owner was the tenor saxophonist Don Lanphere, who not long before had recorded “Stop,” “Go” and those other Prestige 78s with Fats Navarro, Al Haig, Tommy Potter and Max Roach. Don was home for a while, getting well and helping his dad. He opened the door, handed me a record with a yellow label and said, “Here, listen to this.” It was Parker on Dial; “Yardbird Suite” on one side, “Moose the Mooche” on the other. That introduction by Don affected my listening habits, expanded my horizons. At about the same time, I worked up the courage to introduce myself to the pianist Jack Brownlow, Wenatchee’s other great jazz musician, who helped Lanphere develop. I had heard him at high school dances and could sense, even in that context, that he was something special. He asked if I was a musician and invited me to his house to play. It was a disaster. I knew nothing about improvising and proved it. Still, he took me on, gave me ear training, played me recordings of all the right people and explained what they were doing. Among other revelations, he made me aware that Nat Cole was a great pianist—and why. Those listening lessons went beyond jazz. At Jack’s house I first heard Stravinsky, Villa Lobos and Shostakovich. One indelible evening at Lanphere’s, Don introduced me to the Boston Symphony/Charles Munch recording of Ravel’s “Daphnis and Chloe.” I could go on and on about what I owe Jack and Don. They developed the musical portion of my brain.
Staying with your impressions for a while, what comes to mind when I mention the following jazz musicians?
Louis Armstrong.
I’ve been listening to him for more than six decades. I’m hearing new things and rediscovering things that astound me. I recently put up on Rifftides his “Summertime” from the Porgy and Bess album with Ella Fitzgerald. His expression of the melody of that song is an apotheosis of pure music. His introduction to “West End Blues,” which I have heard 4,372 times, still devastates me. When Dizzy said, “No him, no me,” he wasn’t kidding. I’ll take it further; no Armstrong, no jazz as we know it.


Du Duke Ellington


A A magician. An alchemist. There’s a story that some of the most gifted Hollywood film composers were asked to listen to several complex pieces of music and analyze the chords. They nailed them, down to the last e-minor half-diminished 13th with a 9th on top (I made that up). There was an exception, the Ellington example. These composers with ears like sonar could not agree on what the harmonies were made of. Duke kept his band together through low-key leadership and management that are studied in business schools, and—no small matter—through the proceeds of his song royalties. With the indispensable help of Billy Strayhorn, he made his orchestra and its members extensions of himself.  They, in turn, helped to shape him. It is not possible to imagine outside the crucible of Ellington’s band, for example, the Johnny Hodges everyone knows, or Ellington without the inspiration and challenge of writing for his great individualists, Hodges, Cootie Williams, Ben Webster, Harry Carney, Rex Stewart, Paul Gonsalves and all the others.


Dizzy Gillespie
Bird called him “the other half of my heartbeat,” but to a large extent Dizzy was also the brain of the bebop movement. For him, teaching was a calling. James Moody, Jimmy Heath, Ray Brown, Mike Longo and countless others have recounted Dizzy’s patiently giving them insights into harmonies and structures central to the music. On the heart side of the equation, he was the embodiment of rhythm in all of its power, simplicity and complexity. He recognized the catalytic importance of Chano Pozo, and Afro-Cuban jazz became a part of the jazz mainstream. Let’s see, there must be something else. Oh, yes, he was the most gifted and influential trumpet soloist of his generation and a few generations since. No him, no Fats Navarro, Kenny Dorham, Conte Candoli, Miles Davis, Art Farmer, Idrees Sulieman, Lee Morgan, Freddie Hubbard, Brian Lynch, Ryan Kisor. Feel free to complete the list. It may take a while. When you have time, listen to his solo on “Night in Tunisia” (RCA Victor, 1946). All of those guys did.
In 1962, I was working at KYW-TV in Cleveland, before those call letters moved to Philadelphia. Dizzy was the guest host for a week on The Mike Douglas Show, which was produced at KYW. He had the quintet with Moody, the 19-year-old Kenny Barron, Chris White and Rudy Collins. On the show, they played “Chega de Saudade,” the first time I had heard a bossa nova played with that intensity. They were playing that week at the Theatrical Restaurant downtown on Short Mary (I love that street name; had to work it in.) One night after the gig, Dizzy and I got to talking and he invited me to his hotel room to continue the conversation. We shared a bottle of red wine, had a serious discussion about music, acted silly and developed a warm acquaintance that lasted until he died.  
Stan Kenton
He had a great ear for emergent talent among players and arrangers and a dedication to massive sound. The two qualities often conflicted but, as in the Contemporary Concepts period, at their best his bands produced stimulating music of great importance. Kenton was a better pianist than he is generally given credit for, and some of his arrangements from the 1940s and 50s are superb.   
 Shorty Rogers
 He was a brilliant arranger and composer who synthesized the spirit of the big band era and the innovations of the Birth of the Cool band into a highly personal style. Those early 1950s Giants recordings with Art Pepper, Hampton Hawes, Shelly Manne and all hold up as well as anything from the period, regardless of coastal origin. His work on the East Coast-West Coast Scene album he shared with Al Cohn, particularly “Elaine’s Lullaby,” is masterly. Rogers’ trumpet and flugelhorn playing was idiosyncratic, beguiling. His Atlantic and Pacific Jazz quintet albums are classics. “Martians Go Home” should have won a special award for economy and humor in the use of “Rhythm” changes.
Gerry Mulligan
His writing made the Kenton band swing regardless of its leader’s inclination. His charts for his own big band were brilliant, but he stretched himself so thin that he didn’t do enough writing for it. His pianoless quartet had a brief existence but is inspiring musicians more than half a century later. Mulligan was the baritone saxophonist who could sit in—and fit in—with anyone. His sextet with Bob Brookmeyer, Art Farmer, Jim Hall and Bill Crow was a great band, and Night Lights is a masterpiece. He was restless in his curiosity and search for knowledge. He was a stimulating dinner companion. I miss him a great deal.
Horace Silver
I’ll refer to what I wrote not long ago on Rifftides about putting on the Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers album as background music to begin the day.
I chose it because I wanted something that had solos I could sing, hum and whistle along with as I fixed breakfast. Every note of Horace Silver’s second Blue Note album, the first by the Jazz Messengers, has been embedded in my brain since shortly after it was released in 1955. My record collection then consisted of 10 or 12 LPs. This was one of them. I played it so often that Silver’s, Kenny Dorham’s and Hank Mobley’s solos and Art Blakey’s drum choruses became part of my mind’s musical furniture. Silver, Blakey and bassist Doug Watkins comprised a rhythm section that was the standard for what came to be called, for better or for worse, hard bop. Dorham and Mobley, with their deep knowledge of chord-based improvisation, constructed some of their most memorable solos. Silver’s compositions—and one by Mobley—are classics.
Horace’s own bands that followed—with Art Farmer, Clifford Jordan, Blue Mitchell, Junior Cook, Joe Henderson, the Brecker Brothers and Ryan Kisor, among others—comprise an important chapter in the history of the music. I am sorry to hear that he has been ailing.
Miles Davis-Gil Evans collaborations
Recently I contributed an historical essay to Bob Belden’s pending Miles Español project (http://vimeo.com/14698280). Working on it brought home again that the pervasive influence of the Davis-Evans Sketches of Spain has reached virtually all precincts of music, as Belden’s video and CD show. From his arrangements for the Birth of the Cool band through Miles Ahead, Porgy and Bess, Sketches of Spain and Quiet Nights, Gil’s understanding of Miles’ temperament, inclinations and leanings made it a perfect partnership. I wish that it had lasted longer, but what they gave us will endure.   
Mel Tormé
 A great singer. He sometimes went overboard in the melisma department, but his intonation, swing, diction and lyric interpretation were flawless. His collaborations with the Marty Paich Dek-tette, particularly Mel Torme Swings Shubert Alley, and his duets with George Shearing belong in the vocal hall of fame. Is there a vocal hall of fame?
Maria Schneider
 She learned—absorbed—from Gil Evans and Bob Brookmeyer and developed a recognizable style. Now, she herself is an influence. Like most category-based criticism, assessments that she has gone beyond or outside jazz are meaningless. Forget labels; she writes wonderful music. If you’ve ever watched her work in front of her big band, you know that she is an inspiring leader. Sky Blue was terrific. I look forward to her next album.
What made you decide to become a jazz writer?
I’m not sure that I decided. It happened. In the eighth grade, a teacher told me that I should be a reporter. I considered law and architecture, but ultimately majored in journalism. The junior year at the University of Washington School of Journalism was total immersion in the newspaper process. We put out a daily paper. Music was one of the beats the editors handed me. I wrote frequently about jazz. I’ve never stopped, although three years in the Marine Corps slowed my output. My career has been in newspapers, broadcast news as an anchor, correspondent and news director; then as an educator of professional journalists. I have had a parallel career or sub-career as a writer about jazz and free press issues and as a novelist; one novel so far.
Is there a form of writing about jazz that you prefer: insert notes, articles, books …?
 No.
If you could write a next book about jazz on any subject, what or who would be the focus of such a book?
 I’m working on a book that will be, essentially, a collection of liner notes, which, done right, is a form of journalism. I’ve written a few hundred sets of notes. Some of them hold up.
You’ve accomplished many wonderful things in your life both personally and professionally. Why is it that jazz has continued to play a role in your life?
 Because it goes to the core of what I value: individuality, freedom of expression, human interaction, beauty.
Switching to the subject of “favorites:”
Why must we have favorites? Why not evaluate every book, film, composition, solo, or painting on its merits, without ranking it? For that matter, why must we have favorite musicians, actors or newscasters? (Gene Lees ‘ unisex term for them was “anchorthings.” Boy, do I miss him). That thought leads to popularity contests or, as the magazines call them, readers polls and critics polls. If publicity about winning poll results in more work, record sales and income for deserving musicians, perhaps polls are worth something, but I don’t trust them much; I get too many e-mail messages from musicians and their publicists pleading for votes. I have voted in many critics polls, but I’ve become increasingly skeptical of them.
I’ve come to dislike the very word “favorite,” but I can’t come up with a suitable synonym.
What are some of your favorites books about jazz?
There you go again. All of Whitney Balliett’s books, all of Martin Williams’, Gene Lees’ and Nat Hentoff’s. Gunther Schuller’s Early Jazz and The Swing Era. I’ve been waiting for years—make that decades—to Schuller’s book on bebop. Both of Louis Armstrong’s autobiographies. Dan Morgenstern, Ira Gitler, Gary Giddins, Andre Hodeir, Ted Gioia, Stanley Dance, Joachim Berendt, Francis Davis, Albert Murray, Larry Kart, Royal Stokes, Stafford Chamberlain, Jeroen de Valk, Ashley Kahn, Bill Crow’s books of anecdotes, Mike Zwerin. Wait a minute, this is a trap, you know. Sure as the devil, I’m leaving out 10 or 15 valuable writers about jazz.   
 What are some of your favorite jazz recordings?
Talk about traps! I’ll name 10, with the understanding that I could name 50 or 100. If you asked me tomorrow, it could be 10 others. Not in rank order:
Bill Evans: Portrait in Jazz
Duke Ellington: And His Mother Called Him Bill
Louis Armstrong: The Hot Fives and Hot Sevens
John Coltrane: Blue Trane
Dave Brubeck Quartet: Jazz at College of the Pacific, Vol. 2
The Sarah Vaughan 1950 Columbia’s with George Treadwell and his All Stars: Miles Davis, Benny Green, Budd Johnson, Tony Scott, Jimmy Jones, Freddie Green (or Mundell Lowe) and Billy Taylor.
The Curtis Counce Quintet albums on Contemporary, with Harold Land, Jack Sheldon, Carl Perkins and Frank Butler
“Flamingo” from Charles Mingus’s Tijuana Moods, with its perfect Clarence Shaw trumpet solo
Chick Corea, Now He Speaks, Now He Sobs
Ravel, Daphnis and Chloe (Munch, Boston Symphony)
You’ll notice that there is nothing recent on that list. Maybe it takes favorites a few years to develop.
Who are your favorite big band arrangers?
 (Not in order) Eddie Sauter, Fletcher Henderson, Bill Holman, Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn, Gil Evans, Mike Abene, Jim Knapp, Frank Foster, Bob Brookmeyer, Darcy James Argue, Don Redman, Duke Pearson, Gerry Mulligan, Maria Schneider, Benny Carter, Ralph Burns, Slide Hampton, Bill Kirchner, Quincy Jones, Johnny Mandel, Sy Oliver, Gerald Wilson, Melba Liston, Neil Hefti, Oliver Nelson. This could go on a while. May I stop now?
Who are your favorite Jazz vocalists?
Louis Armstrong, Sarah Vaughan, Billie Holiday, Anita O’Day, Carmen McRae, Jimmy Rushing, Helen Merrill, Nat Cole, Carol Sloane, Bill Henderson, Peggy Lee, Joe Williams, Ray Charles, Jack Teagarden, Teddi King, the young Ethel Waters, Mark Murphy, Meredith d’Ambrosio, Karrin Allyson, Fats Waller, Nancy Marano, Jeri Southern, Jimmy Rowles, Mildred Bailey, Chet Baker, Rebecca Kilgore, Johnny Hartman, Carol Fredette, John Pizzarelli, Nancy King, Daryl Sherman, Mel Tormé, Maxine Sullivan, Ray Nance, Blossom Dearie; Lambert, Hendricks and Ross. That’s the short list.
Who among current jazz musicians do you enjoy listening to?
An incomplete list: Ambrose Akinmusire, Bill Charlap, Steve Wilson, Kirk Knuffke, Bill Mays, Sonny Rollins, Diana Krall, Kenny Barron, Miguel Zenón, Jessica Williams, Wadada Leo Smith, Ed Partyka, Branford Marsalis-Joey Calderazzo duo, Gretchen Parlato, Matthew Shipp, Matt Wilson, J.D. Allen, Alexander String Quartet, Dubravka Tomsic and everybody on Bob Belden’s Miles Español project.  
 Of all your writings about jazz over the years, which ones are you most proud of?
 Recently, the notes for the MJQ Mosaic box and that Miles Español piece, but overall, probably the Desmond biography and the non-jazz novel Poodie James, because so much of my blood, sweat and being went into them.
What are you thoughts about blogs and websites devoted to jazz?
 It is clear that there are no rules for blogging. My conviction is that the standards of accuracy, fairness, thoroughness and reliability that go into any responsible writing must apply to blogging. Opinion should be plainly identified as opinion, if only by context and usage. The medium offers wide possibilities for sound, photographs, video, even a certain degree of interactivity. Many jazz blogs just sit there looking like pages out of an academic journal or a thesis.    
If you could host a fictional “jazz dinner,” who would you invite, and why?
 Good conversationalists. Most jazz musicians are good conversationalists.
If you could put on an imaginary three-day jazz festival in Yakima, WA, how would you structure it and who would you invite to perform?
 Fortunately for Yakima, it has The Seasons Performance Hall, which in addition to its regular schedule has a week-long festival in the fall. The festival has included James Moody, Jessica Williams, Bill Charlap, the Brubeck Brothers Quartet, Tom Harrell, Ernestine Anderson, Tierney Sutton, Marvin Stamm, Karrin Allyson, Jerry Gonzalez and the Fort Apache Band, Eric Alexander, David Fathead Newman and the Bill Mays Trio with Martin Wind and Matt Wilson. The Seasons Fall Festival also incorporates classical elements. Maintaining quality hasn’t been easy because of the economic morass we’re in, and in recent regular bookings The Seasons has resorted to lesser music in an attempt to pay the bills, a familiar story in the arts these days. As a pro bono adviser to this nonprofit hall, I advise them to hang in there and aim for the standard of quality implied in that list of names. As for structure, The Seasons Fall Festival has always been linear. It does not put artists in competition with one another, a la Montreal, New Orleans and other festivals that have morphed into huge parties. You wonder how much they have to do with music.
If you were asked to host a television show entitled – The Subject is Jazz–  who would you like to interview on the first few episodes?
Sorry, Steve, Gilbert Seldes and WNBC-TV took that title half a century ago. We’ll have to choose another. How about The Steve Cerra Show? I would ask Sonny Rollins, George Wein, Branford Marsalis, Bill Mays, Dave Brubeck, Dee Dee Bridgewater, Miguel Zenón, Benny Golson, Marian McPartland, Cedar Walton, Gerald Clayton, Darcy James Argue and Matthew Shipp. That’s the first 13 weeks. Do you think we’ll be renewed?
 What writing projects about jazz have you recently finished? Are there any that you are currently working on?
I put up a new Rifftides post this morning. I recently wrote the Mosaic MJQ notes just mentioned, and a lengthy historical analysis of the musical connections among Spain, Africa, the Caribbean and New Orleans for the Miles Español project. There is another jazz book in the works, but it has a long way to go. A second novel that I started some time ago keeps calling to me from the depths of the computer, where it has been imprisoned.  
You have done a lot of writing over the years on the subject of jazz. Have you given any thought to “collecting” these and leaving them with a college or university library for future reference?
Jazz Matters: Reflections on the Music and Some of its Makers is a collection. So, more or less, is the next book. That’s one way of making the work available beyond the moment. No university has been pounding on my door but all reasonable offers will be considered.

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