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Rifftides

Doug Ramsey on Jazz and other matters...

Monday Recommendation: A Duke Ellington Book

Steven Brower & Mercedes Ellington: Duke Ellington: An American Composer and Icon (Rizzoli). 224 pages. $35.48

Ellington Book CoverThe scores of photos, illustrations and reproductions of documents make this book a valuable supplement to the growing stack of Ellington biographies: Bennett’s watercolor painting of Ellington, the 10-piece 1920s band looking bemusedly at the camera, Ellington peering over the feathered headdresses of Cotton Club chorus girls, President Eisenhower’s note of appreciation, Duke playing a piano duet with actor Jimmy Stewart. Some material is seen for the first time. In the essays, Mercedes Ellington’s remembrance of her relationship with her grandfather illuminates the fragmented nature of his personal life. Co-author Brower contributes an invaluable 16-page timeline that traces the high points of Ellington’s life and career. Quincy Jones, Tony Bennett, Dan Morgenstern, Jon Batiste and Dave Brubeck discuss what Ellington means to them. Lack of IDs for many photos is a flaw that should be fixed before the next print run.

This Year’s Jazz Heroes

The Jazz Journalists Association has announced its 2016 roster of “Jazz Heroes.” JJA president Howard Mandel describes them as, “activists of positive influence—in collaborations with grassroots groups and supporters in 23 U.S. communities.”

The numbers in the photograph correspond to those in the roster below it.

2016 Jazz Heroes
1. Albuquerque NM: Tom Guralnick
2. Atlanta: Joe Gransden
3. Baltimore MD: Todd Marcus
4. Bay Area (SF-CA): Elena Serrano
5. Boston: Yedidyah Syd Smart (l) & Leonard L. Brown (r)
6. Capital Region (NY): Leslie Callen Hyland
7. Detroit: Marion T. Hayden
8. Chicago: Bradley Parker-Sparrow & Joanie Pallatto
9. Fayetteville AK: Robert Ginsburg
10. Los Angeles: Edythe L. Bronston
11. Fort Bragg CA: Douglas Moody
12. Miami: Maggie Pelleyá
13. New Orleans: Germaine P. Bazzle
14. New York City: Rio Sakairi
15. Philadelphia: Don Gardner
16. Pittsburgh: Geri Allen
17. Phoenix: Herb & Lorene Ely
18. Portland OR: Bobby Torres
19. Seattle: Laurie de Koch
20. St. Louis: Dennis Owsley
21. Syracuse NY: Frank Malfitano
22. Tallahassee FL: Clarence L. Seay
23. Washington DC: Brian Hamilton (l) & Dick Smith (r)

For detailed descriptions of the Jazz Heroes’ contributions to their communities, go the JJA website.

Congratulations to the 2016 Jazz Heroes.

Results of the JJA’s 2016 musician awards will be on the website in May.

Billie Holiday, No Foolin’

Billie H. Head shotIt’s April First. We have no Rifftides April Fool jokes, tricks, cartoons or gag shots. We have Billie Holiday. This is a 1937 recording with Buck Clayton, trumpet; Buster Bailey, clarinet; Lester Young, tenor saxophone; Teddy Wilson, piano; Freddie Green, guitar; Walter Page, bass; and Jo Jones, drums. Ms. Holiday sings about the saddest kind of fooling.

Twenty-one years later, Art Ford featured Billie Holiday on his Jazz Party television program. She revisited “Foolin’ Myself” and two other songs indelibly associated with her. This was July 10, 1958, a year—almost to the day—before she died.

Mal Waldron, Ms. Holiday’s last music director, was at the piano. The other players were her old pal Buck Clayton, trumpet; Tyree Glenn, trombone; Hank D’Amico, clarinet; Georgie Auld, tenor saxophone; Mary Osborne, guitar; Vinnie Burke, bass; and Osie Johnson, drums.

Vacation Report And A Limerick

We spent our brief vacation in Santa Barbara, California, visiting our son. We slept, walked, hung out with friends and ate well. One of the walks was to the end of Stearns Wharf, a pier that extends nearly 2,000 feet into the Bay.
Sterns Wharf Pelican 1
The wharf is a major attraction for tourists and pelicans. The tourists visit it to see the view and eat tacos, ice cream, chocolate apples and other health food. The pelicans gather in hopes that the fishermen who cast into the bay from the end of the wharf will throw them a fish.

Sterns Wharf Pelican 2

This is the ultimate pelican limerick:

A wonderful bird is the pelican,
His bill will hold more than his belican,
He can take in his beak
Enough food for a week
But I’m damned if I see how the helican!

Ogden Nash is thought by many to have written the limerick. Others say that the author was Edward Lear. Wikipedia credits it to the American poet and humorist Dixon Lanier Merritt. Merritt was an editor at the Nashville Tennessean in the early twentieth century. He was also president of the American Press Humor Association. Current members of the Press Humor Assocation are too busy reporting on the presidential campaign to bother with limericks.

Monday Recommendation: 2015 Mack Avenue Superband

Mack Avenue Superband 2015 (Mack Avenue)

2015 SuperbandBeginning in 2012, the Detroit Jazz Festival has teamed players of varied backgrounds in all-star bands. At the 2015 festival, thorough preparation resulted not in a typical festival jam session, but a program of new music by participants who played with zeal and combined into a genuine unit. The sophisticated vibraharpist Gary Burton and the smooth-jazz tenor saxophonist Kirk Whalum may seem unlikely colleagues, but this album shows that combining them with hard-core, hard-bop members of younger jazz generations was a fine idea. Trumpeter Freddie Hendrix and pianist Christian Sands inject youthful surges of adrenalin that the veteran drummer Carl Allen and bassist Christian McBride match. In an impressive example of her mature style, soprano saxophonist Tia Fuller’s solo on her composition “Decisive Steps” stirs the festival audience to full-cry response. Hendrix nearly matches her passion, and Allen explodes with drum power on the out-chorus.

David Baker, 1931-2016

D. Gillespie, D. BakerNo vacation can deflect the march of time. I am sad to learn of the death yesterday at 84 of the trombonist, cellist, composer and music educator David Baker. He is pictured here, on the right, with Dizzy Gillespie. Baker founded Indiana University’s Jazz Studies program and taught at IU for decades. Dozens of his students went on to distinguished jazz careers. He was a trombonist with the Stan Kenton, Maynard Ferguson and Quincy Jones bands and then with George Russell’s quintet. Baker had to give up the instrument after his jaw was injured in a car crash. Eventually, he switched to cello but achieved his greatest renown and acclaim as a teacher and theorist. His instruction books include the influential Jazz Improvisation: A Comprehensive Method of Study for All Players (1969).

For a full obituary, see The Indiana Star.

Baker’s solo with Russell on the blues called “Honesty” (1961) gives an idea of the compositional approach he often applied to the construction of a solo, including in this case a wry use of the cycle of fifths. From the album Ezzthetics, the band is Russell, piano; Baker, trombone; Don Ellis, trumpet; Eric Dolphy, alto saxophone; Steve Swallow, bass; and Joe Hunt, drums.

Dave Baker, RIP

Other Places: A Herb Geller Jazz Profile

Herb GellerI’m still on vacation, but I took time to check out Steve Cerra’s Jazz Profiles blog. Today, Steve republishes Gene Lees’ 2005 JazzLetter piece on the late alto saxophonist Herb Geller. It includes Geller’s reminiscences about the young Stan Getz, one of his early mentors, and about his lifelong admiration for Benny Carter. To read it, go here.

Here is Geller in 1992 at the Vienne Jazz Festival in France with Oliver Jones, piano; Pierre Boussfaguet, bass; and Alvin Queen, drums. The tune is “Birdland Stomp.”

Happy Easter. Rifftides will be back soon.

It’s Spring

The temperature doesn’t feel like spring, but tell that to the backyard apricot tree. See what it did overnight.
Apricot Blooms 2

Soon, the orchards around here will all be in full bloom. I hate to leave them behind, but the family is going to take a few days’ vacation and so is Rifftides. In the meantime, if you go to the right-hand column and scroll down to Archives, you can browse through years of posts. You can also enter a name or a subject in the Search The Site box at the very top of the right column and see what pops up.

The calendar says it has been spring for a couple of days, so we leave you with a spring song.

Kristin Korb, voice and double bass; Mike Wofford, piano; Jeff Hamilton, drums—from the 2001 album Where You’ll Find Me.

Thad & Mel: The Tradition Continues

Thad-and-MelYou may recall that a couple of weeks ago the Rifftides Monday Recommendation was an  album of recently discovered recordings by the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis Jazz Orchestra. This evening, the PBS News Hour closed with correspondent Jeffrey Brown’s report on the continuing story of the band and the venerable New York City club where it was born. Anchor Judy Woodruff introduces the story following a message from a News Hour funder that supports independent non-commercial television news—an effort the Rifftides staff wholeheartedly endorses.

Bill Frisell: It Happened With Corea

3 FrisellContinuing this week’s string of birthday observances that began with Quincy Jones and Charles Lloyd, we turn to Bill Frisell. The guitarist was born on this date in 1951. Frisell’s stylistic versatility allows him to operate with ease and authenticity in genres from folk to free jazz. One might not expect Frisell and the pianist Chick Corea to be natural collaborators, and in the first moments of their duet on “It Could Happen To You,” they themselves may not be convinced. But two superb improvisers work it out nicely.

Happy 65th birthday, Bill Frisell.

May The Leprechauns Be Near You & The Wind At Your Back

Green River BostonWhether or not the river runs green where you live, this is the special day when the whole world is Irish. We bring you two versions of what may well be the most loved of all Irish songs. The first is a concert performance by Renee Flemming, the second a piano solo by Bill Evans from his Time Remembered album.

imagesHappy St. Patrick’s Day.

When Lloyd Met Shoemake

Yesterday’s post about Charles Lloyd’s birthday brought this communiqué from vibraharpist and pianist Charlie Shoemake.

Thought you and your readers might get a chuckle out of this 1957 photo of Charles Lloyd and Charlie Shoemake appearing at the Lighthouse in a college jazz festival. The other players were George Stearns on bass and Don Joham on drums, two talented youngsters who eventually left music. The photo is now life-sized on the wall of the Lighthouse.

C. Lloyd, C. Shoemake, et al     L to R: Stearns, Lloyd, Shoemake, Howard Rumsey, Joham

You know, back in 1957 Los Angeles was teeming with clubs where young up- and-coming musicians could play. Such a place was the Red Feather in South L.A. I was part of a house rhythm section that played there every night of the week. Charles Lloyd, who was a student at USC then, came often to sit in. One night he told us that the Lighthouse was having a college jazz festival and since he didn’t have anybody at USC who could play, asked if we would we play with him and represent USC. We did. Besides us, that festival had Charlie Haden, Les McCann, Mike Wofford, Johnny Guerin, Donald Sleet, and many more young players who went on to make their names in the jazz world. The L.A jazz scene back then—like the rest of the world, I guess—was VERY different.

By the way, the photo was taken by none other than the great drummer Stan Levey, who was then a member of the Lighthouse All-Stars. (Years later, Stan and his wife Angela became two of Sandi’s and my closest friends).

To my knowledge, Shoemake and Lloyd have never recorded together. Shoemake and Sandi—Mrs. Shoemake—have. Here they are, with Bill Holman conducting at the recording session for the 1991 Shoemake-Holman album Strollin’ .

At 78, Charles Lloyd Is At A New Peak

This is a busy week for birthdays. We can’t observe them all, but yesterday Quincy Jones’s 83rd was a must, and today is saxophonist and flutist Charles Lloyd’s 78th. More or lessC. Lloyd by Sheldon coincidentally with his recent Portland Jazz Festival appearance, Lloyd released a new album, I Long To See You. It is not by the Lloyd quartet whose performance in Portland was a triumph, but with his other group, the band he calls The Marvels. Drummer Eric Harland appeared with Lloyd in Portland. The other Marvels in the all-star quintet are guitarist Bill Frisell, pedal steel guitarist Greg Leisz and bassist Reuben Rogers. The album includes guest appearances by Willie Nelson and Nora Jones. We celebrate Lloyd’s birthday with the album version of “You Are So Beautiful,” which was a highlight of the Portland concert. The piece seems to have become a fixture on Lloyd’s current tune list. Ms. Jones is the vocalist.

Happy birthday, Charles Lloyd. For the Rifftides review of his Portland concert, go here.

Quincy Jones’s Birthday

quincy jones head shotQuincy Jones turns 83 today. His story has had many chapters since his early days in Seattle and his apprenticeship in Lionel Hampton’s trumpet section. Jones went on to lead an important big band, score motion pictures, become one of the most successful producers in pop music and be named an NEA Jazz Master. As I wrote a few years ago in reviewing a box set of some of the Jones band’s greatest recordings from his years with Mercury Records,

The inventiveness, sparkle and audacity of Jones’ arrangements in the 1950s and early ‘60s gave his music freshness that was notable when he was in his twenties. These works of his youth are still among the most vital big band recordings of an era in which Count Basie, Woody Herman, Duke Ellington and Stan Kenton were going strong. Jones’ inventive scoring of his compositions, including “Stockholm Sweetnin’,” “The Midnight Sun Will Never Set” and “Hard Sock Dance,” is matched by his settings of standard songs, and pieces by contemporaries like Horace Silver, Benny Golson, Ernie Wilkins, Bobby Timmons and Bill Potts.

As for execution, Jones put together a band whose various versions had some of the best players of the day, among them Clark Terry, Zoot Sims, Freddie Hubbard, Phil Woods, Budd Johnson, Åke Persson, Buddy Catlett, Urbie Green, Julius Watkins, Les Spann and Patti Bown. Stranded in Europe by the failure of “Free And Easy,” a stage production they were a part of, his musicians sacrificed to stay together and tour the continent, reflecting their loyalty to Jones, his music and each other. When the band is at its best in these five CDs—which is most of the time— it is easy to hear what inspired that spirit.

If you have forgotten how the spirit manifested itself, here is a reminder, the band in Europe in 1960 with one of Jones’s most celebrated compositions, “The Midnight Sun Will Never Set. The alto saxophone soloist is Phil Woods.

As for the who’s-who quality of the band, here’s the personnel list:

Saxophones: Budd Johnson, Porter Kilbert, Phil Woods, Sahib Shihab, Jerome Richardson
Trumpets: Benny Bailey, Leonard Johnson, Floyd Standifer, Clark Terry
Trombones: Jimmy Cleveland, Quentin Jackson, Melba Liston, Ake Persson
French Horn, Julius Watkins
Guitar and Flute, Les Spann
Piano, Patti Bown
Bass, Buddy Catlett
Drums, Joe Harris

Happy birthday, Q.

Ernestine Anderson, 1928-2016

Ernestine AndersonErnestine Anderson died on Thursday at the age of 87 at a retirement home in Seattle. The singer’s career of more than six decades began in that city when she was a teenager. She went on to be featured with the big bands of Johnny Otis and Lionel Hampton, record the classic album Hot Cargo and receive Grammy nominations and rave reviews for recordings she made after a comeback in the 1970s. For an extensive account of Ms. Anderson’s life, see Paul deBarros’s article in The Seattle Times. His piece contains video of a 1978 performance in Germany.

Eight years ago, as she was approaching her 80th birthday, I wrote of an Anderson concert—“Looking frail, she made her way slowly and uncertainly on stage, sat on a chair, took a while to get ready, and gave one of the great concerts of her life.” To read the entire account, go here.

Jim Wilke is replacing his scheduled Jazz Northwest broadcast on Sunday with a tribute to Ms. Anderson. The program airs at 2 PM PDT and streams at kplu.org. Jazz Northwest is recorded and produced by Jim Wilke exclusively for 88.5 KPLU and kplu.org. After broadcast, it may be streamed at jazznw.org.

“Steen,” as she was known to many of her friends, objected to the title Hot Cargo that the producers gave her Swedish album It’s Time For Ernestine when it was reissued in the United States in 1958. Title considerations aside, it was one of the triumphs of her career. Here’s a track.

Ernestine Anderson, RIP.

Weekend Extra: Vintage Larry Young

L. Young Into Somethin'For your weekend listening pleasure, let’s follow up on the previous post’s review of organist Larry Young’s album of recently discovered Paris recordings. Here is “Paris Eyes” (a coincidental title) from Young’s Blue Note album Into Somethin’. Young, organ; Sam Rivers tenor saxophone; Grant Green, guitar; Elvin Jones, drums. Beautifully recorded in 1964 by Rudy Van Gelder.

From an earlier album, on Prestige, here’s Young with Thornel Schwartz,rudy-van-gelder guitar; Bill Leslie, tenor saxophone; and Jimmie Smith, drums. Young shows what he could do with—or for—a Great American Songbook classic. This was also recorded by Van Gelder (pictured).

Have a good weekend.

Recent Listening: Larry Young In Paris

Larry Young In Paris: The ORTF Recordings (Resonance)

“There it sits,” I once wrote of the Hammond B3 organ in notes for a Don Patterson album.* “There it looms. A weapon. No, an arsenal of tubes, transistors, capacitors, resistors. A machine of infinite volume, an engine of amplification, a sonic hammer of Thor capable of driving entire populations mad and deaf.”

Tongue removed from cheek, I went on to point out that Patterson was an exception to the of rule assault by B3. Among the lessons he learned from Jimmy Smith—the reigning jazz organist of the second half of the twentieth century—was restraint. Smith himself did not often repress his aggressive leanings, but he was capable of quietness and sensitivity, and Patterson absorbed those aspects of his playing.

Larry Young In ParisLarry Young took the organ even further than Patterson beyond the conventions that Smith established for the instrument. Attentive to changes in music inspired by John Coltrane, Young absorbed harmonic practices of Coltrane’s pianist McCoy Tyner and applied them to the organ, using intervals of fourths and other Tyner chordal devices. Those dovetailed with what he learned in Newark as a piano student of Olga Von Till, who had studied in Budapest with Béla Bartók and Ernő Dohnányi, giants of twentieth century classical music. Young combined harmonic sophistication, highly developed keyboard technique and smoothness of touch with the joy of headlong swing.

With the guidance and cooperation of France’s Office de Radiodiffusion-Télévision Francaise (ORTF), producer Zev Feldman found recordings of radio broadcasts that Young made in Paris in 1964 and 1965. Young’s Paris sojourn was before his celebrated Blue Note albums, before his brief time with Miles Davis, and before recordings with drummer Tony Williams’s Lifetime. Those associations brought the organist a burst of celebrity before his death at 38 in 1978. The ORTF recordings present Young as a member of tenor saxophonist Nathan Davis’s quintet, bringing those twoLarry Young facing left together with trumpeter Woody Shaw and drummer Billy Brooks, all Newarkians in their early twenties reunited in Paris. Other tracks in the two-CD set combine the quintet with French musicians organized by pianist Jack Devíal. Those octet performances include two long blues tracks, “La valse grise” and “Discothèque” that disclose how accomplished Young, Shaw and Davis were at this early stage of their careers. They also find the French tenor saxophonist Jean-Claude Fohrenbach in impressive form.

Throughout, Shaw blazes through his solos with energy, high-register control and harmonic acumen that belie his age; he was 19 when the earliest of these tracks were recorded. In a twenty-minute excursion through Shaw’s “Zoltan,” the unity among the Newark pals forecasts the achievement of the album Unity, recorded in Newark less than a year later by Young and Shaw with saxophonist Joe Henderson and drummer Elvin Jones. The Resonance album’s concluding track, “Larry’s Blues,” demonstrates that Young the pianist was father to Young the organist in terms of touch, harmonic acuity and the gliding phrasing that made him a unique presence on the instrument, as he remains to this day.

*The Patterson album is These Are Soulful Days, Muse 5032

Midweek Special: Farmer, Hall Swallow, Perkins—Just Because

Art Farmer Quartet

Art Farmer, flugehorn; Jim Hall, guitar; Steve Swallow, bass; and Walter Perkins, drums, play Sergio Mihanovich’s “Sometime Ago,” on Ralph J. Gleason’s public television series Jazz Casual, ca. 1963.

They recorded it on this timeless album.

Monday Recommendation: Laurence Hobgood

Laurence Hobgood, Honor Thy Fathers

Hobgood Honor Thy FathersIt’s not that Laurence Hobgood was buried during his 18 years as Kurt Elling’s musical director. Indeed, he was one of the most admired supporting pianists in modern music. But last year—evidently with Elling’s encouragement—Hobgood parted ways with the singer and launched his solo career. This album showcases the extent of his mastery. With bassist John Patitucci and drummer Kendrick Scott, Hobgood plays original compositions that include tributes to Bill Evans and Charlie Haden. He works a transformation in 7/4 time of Nat Cole’s “Straighten Up and FlyHobgood cameo Right”, takes Stevie Wonder’s leisurely “If It’s Magic” at a brisk clip and makes the standard “Give Me the Simple Life” a three-way conversation with Patitucci and Scott. Hobgood dedicates the album to his own late father and to musical father figures Evans and Oscar Peterson.

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Doug Ramsey

Doug is a recipient of the lifetime achievement award of the Jazz Journalists Association. He lives in the Pacific Northwest, where he settled following a career in print and broadcast journalism in cities including New York, New Orleans, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, San Antonio, … [MORE]

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