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Paul Desmond: Whimsy At Monterey

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How many times did the Dave Brubeck Quartet perform “Take Five?” Hundreds? Maybe thousands. No one other than Brubeck, Paul Desmond, Eugene Wright and Joe Morello would know for certain, and it’s unlikely that any of them kept a scorecard. “Take Five” is the annuity that keeps on giving to the American Red Cross, Desmond’s legatee. Noel Silverman, the executor of Desmond’s estate, informed me this morning that royalties, mostly from “Take Five,” have given the Red Cross upwards of 7 million dollars since Desmond’s death in 1977.

DaveBrubeckQuartetMJF1966_11x17HiRes(c)RayAvery_CTSIMAGES

In listening to the quartet in person and on record and in doing research for my Desmond biography, I have heard dozens of their performances of his most enduring composition. Still, I had never heard a Desmond “Take Five” solo as unpredictable as the one he played at the Monterey Jazz Festival in 1966. Not wanting to be a repeater pencil—to borrow Lester Young’s phrase—Paul varied his “Take Five” solos to prevent boredom, to entertain himself, the band and the audience, or to get a laugh out of Brubeck. For thirty years or so, surprising Brubeck gave Desmond enormous satisfaction. In this audio clip from the MJF website, we can’t see Dave’s reaction, but it’s easy to imagine it.

For an illustrated collection of information about Brubeck’s and the quartet’s long history with the Monterey festival, see the MJF website.

Bill Evans, 1929-1980

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Bill Evans sepiaBill Evans died 35 years ago today at the age of 51. Long before everybody dug him, his producer, Orrin Keepnews, titled a 1958 album Everybody Digs Bill Evans. The cover had autographed endorsements from Miles Davis, George Shearing, Ahmad Jamal and Cannonball Adderley.

“Bill Evans has rare originality and taste,” Adderley wrote, “and the even rarer ability to make his conception of a number seem the definitive way to play it.” Adderley was perceptive and the album title was prophetic. Soon, Evans moved from acclaim by the jazz inner circle to the admiration of musicians everywhere and an audience that expanded throughout his regrettably short life. He had a profound effect on the development of the music. From Everybody Digs Bill Evans, we remember him with “Peace Piece.”

Conover Stamp News & When Paquito Met Willis

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The campaign for a US postage stamp to honor the late Voice of America Broadcaster Willis Conover has surmounted a bureaucratic hurdle. Maristella Fuestle of the Conover archive at the University of North Texas reports that the Citizens’ Stamp Advisory Committee of the Postal Service has agreed to consider the proposal. The committee makes stamp recommendations to Postmaster General Megan J. Brennan. The notification made no mention of a timetable.

In response to renewed interest in Conover’s role in the cultural diplomacy of the Cold War, clarinetist and saxophonist Paquito D’Rivera sent an excerpt and a 1984 photograph from his 2005 book My Sax Life. D’Rivera defected to the United States from Cuba in 1981.

Paq-Man & Willis Conover 84

This travel fever was a decisive factor behind the formation of the group Irakere, one of the most important Cuban bands ever. Irakere, which means forest or jungle in an African language, was the new name of our group, but it was nothing more than “old wine in a new bottle,” as the gringos say. We were, more or less, the same guys from the Musical Theater, the Army Band, and the Cuban Orchestra of Modern Music, the ones who had phoned each other for years to find out what Willis Conover was going to broadcast on his Voice of America radio program, The Jazz Hour.

Through Conover’s show, we got to know the music of Woody Shaw, Gabor Szabo, Roger Kellaway, Joe Henderson, Catalonian pianist Tete Montoliu, Don Ellis, David Samborn, the Thad Jones/Mel Lewis Big Band, and many, many other artists whose records were not available in Cuba.

In the year 1970, we were somehow able to travel to the Warsaw Jazz Jamboree with the Quinteto Cubano de Jazz, which made its live recording debut on the local label Polsky Nagrania, featuring Chucho’s piece entitled “Misa Negra,” a jazz suite on Afro-Cuban folkloric themes. That’s where we finally met the prestigious radio personality with the deep voice. Ten years later, after I had recently arrived in the United States, Conover graciously invited me to his famous program, transmitted from the V.O.A. studios in Washington, D.C., while I was in the nation’s capital for my first performance at Georgetown’s Blues Alley with my quintet.

What a great thrill it was to sit in that same studio and broadcast this music to Cuba while sitting next to the man who enlightened our lives so much during our years of deep isolation. I remember his first words before we began to record the program: “This is a musical program, and the best way to be political is by not talking about politics, all right?. . . sssh, we’re going on the air.”

The small studio seemed to light up when he played the first measures of Billy Strayhorn’s familiar standard “Take The A Train,” the show’s theme-song, as interpreted by Duke Ellington’s Orchestra, which I had heard so many times through the speakers of my Russian short-wave radio in Havana (and through so many Russian radios in Russia, North Korea, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Albania, Rumania, and Bulgaria). And then on cue, that deep voice that seemed to emerge from the depths of that captivating music, making an introduction I knew as well as my own name: “Music U.S.A., part one. . . This is Willis Conover speaking from the Voice of America’s Jazz Hour… Today we will present music by Cuban saxophonist-composer Paquito D’Rivera!”

For details about Conover’s career, the stamp proposal and efforts to see that he is posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, see my recent article in The Wall Street Journal.

Monday Recommendation: A Garner Classic Made Whole

Erroll Garner, The Complete Concert By The Sea (Columbia)

Erroll Garner Concert BTSGarner’s heroic 1955 concert will be released this week in its entirety for the first time. Half of it appeared on an 11-track LP that was a landmark in the pianist’s history of joyful music making and sold more than half a million copies. After his death in 1977, the rest of the performance remained hostage to a dispute between Columbia Records and his manager, Martha Glaser, who died in 2014. The 11 previously unreleased performances include a “Laura” whose introduction evokes the enigma of its movie namesake; an ingenious extended diminuendo ending to “Night And Day;” one of Garner’s classic keep-‘em-guessing introductions to what turns out to be “Caravan;” and a blazing “Bernie’s Tune.” Throughout, Garner is at the peak of his formidable game. Bassist Eddie Calhoun and drummer Denzil Best are impeccable in support. This is a basic repertoire item.

Weekend Extra: A Film About Chuck Israels

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Chuck IsraelsFollowing his five years as the bassist in the Bill Evans Trio, Chuck Israels worked with a variety of leaders, among them J.J. Johnson, Stan Getz, Herbie Hancock and Hampton Hawes. His repertory orchestra, The National Jazz Ensemble, and his writing for the Metropole Orchestra disclosed his range and depth as an arranger. He moved to Portland, Oregon in 2010 after nearly a quarter of a century of teaching music at the university level. It wasn’t long before Israels organized an octet of some of the best musicians in the Pacific Northwest’s rich pool of talent. Much of the band’s music is arranged by Israels based on recorded performances of Evans. In a 2012 review of the band in performance, I wrote:

Translating the music from Evans’ fingers through eighty fingers and eight brains requires more than technical ability in playing and writing, although it must have plenty of that. It demands an understanding of and feeling for the underlying impulses and emotions in the music. [The Audience] was feeling what the musicians felt in the profundity, beauty and joy of Evans’ music.

The Chuck Israels Jazz Orchestra’s repertoire still includes interpretations of Evans, but Israels also applies his methods to other music. A new film portrait by Elijah Hasan captures Israels’ insistence on meticulousness as the band prepares for performance. It also allows the viewer glimpses of his home life, even unto salad-making. I suggest that you schedule adequate time for this 36-minute film. If you can watch it full-screen, so much the better. If you are asked for a password, use: Swing

Chuck Israels: Rhythm and Romance from Elijah Hasan on Vimeo.

This album by Israels and his octet is devoted to the music of Bill Evans. His 1970s work with the National Jazz Ensemble is on this CD.

Recent Listening: Bobby Medina

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Bobby Medina Between WorldsBobby Medina, Between Worlds (Medina)

The trumpeter’s album includes much of the repertoire that he and his band played at the recent Ystad Sweden Jazz Festival—with dramatic differences. Orchestras with string sections at sessions in Buenos Aires and Seattle provide soaring accompaniments in arrangements by Medina, pianist Eric Verlinde, saxophonist-flutist Guto Lucena and Lucena’s fellow Brazilian Felipe Salles. To great effect, Salles’ setting of Tony Lujan’s “Forever My Love” alternates dreaminess and zest. Lucena’s arrangements of pieces by Antonio Carlos Jobim and Astor Piazolla capture the composers’ spirits. Medina does the Mexican standard “La Bikina” as a waltz that allows him to double on flugelhorn and accordion.

Soloists include musicians from North and South America. On Piazolla’s “Libertango,” Seattleite Verlinde shines in a piano solo that sets up a dashing chase sequence with Medina and guest trumpeter Gustavo Bergalli from Argentina. Lucena demonstrates the power on flute and soprano saxophone that also informed his playing at Ystad. As the principal soloist, Medina is impressive not only for his command of the trumpet and flugelhorn, but also for the blues feeling often at the heart of his solos whether he’s improvising on traditional Latin music or an attractive hybrid like his “Tullum.”

Monday Recommendation: Fred Hersch

Fred Hersch, Solo (Palmetto)

Hersch’s third Palmetto album since 2008 confirms that the pianist’s strength, subtlety andSolo F imagination are not only intact but have gained in acuity. There is nothing in this recital to indicate that seven years ago he faced a medical crisis that threatened his mental powers. Recorded in the intimate surrounding of a small church, Solo appears nearly 22 years following Hersch’s first fred-hersch-playingsolo album, part of the Maybeck series. His wide expressive range covers the harmonic ingenuity and resourcefulness of his “Pastorale,” dedicated to Robert Schumann, and the potency he pours into Thelonious Monk’s “In Walked Bud.” As at Maybeck in 1993, he applies his contrapuntal skill to the Monk classic, but with even greater energy and complexity. His variations on pieces by Jobim, Kern, Tizol, Joni Mitchell, and his own “Whirl,”—dedicated to the ballerina Suzanne Ferrell—are equally riveting.

The Willis Conover Archive Is Online

The music program at the University of North Texas has graduated hundreds of jazz artists who went on to successful careers as professionals. Woody Herman populated virtually an entire edition of his Thundering Herd of the 1970s with North Texas graduates, and they keep coming. Jimmy Giuffre, Herb Ellis, Billy Harper, Marvin Stamm, Bob Belden, Norah Jones, Dee Barton, Gene Roland, Marc Johnson, James Chirillo and Jim Snidero are a few of the musicians that UNT has sent into the jazz world. Now, UNT is making another kind of contribution to the preservation of jazz.

Under Maristella Feustle of the university’s library, there is anConover and Armstrong archive devoted to the late Willis Conover of the Voice of America (pictured with Louis Armstrong). Conover’s VOA programs sent jazz around the world. For a quarter of a century he was one of the nation’s most valuable cultural diplomats. As of today, parts of the Conover archive are online and open to the public, thanks to a grant from the Grammy Foundation. Ms. Feustle (pictured right) has posted audio of programs from several periods of Conover’s career,Maristella Fuestle including complete hours of his VOA broadcasts. In a message to Rifftides, she writes,

We got word at the end of March that the grant had been funded, in the
amount of $16,650 to digitize the 360 oldest reels in the Conover
collection, covering approximately 1955 through 1969. There are just
under 2100 reels total, so this is a good first step in tackling the
most urgent preservation needs. The contractor performing the digital
transfers is George Blood Audio, with whom we’ve worked on other
high-value, high-priority projects. There will be many more recordings
added to the UNT Digital Library as we receive the preservation
masters.

In the first batch of 10 reels digitized and posted on the UNT Library site are interviews with (and music by) Armstrong, Dave Brubeck, Art Tatum, Kai Winding and Johnny Hodges. There are also what seem to be previously unreleased recordings by Bill Evans at the Village Vanguard, an interview with producer George Avakian from one of Conover’s Music USA broadcasts, and a live performance of The Orchestra, which Conover co-led in Washington, DC, in the early 1950s. To see the list and listen to the tapes, go here.

For my recent Wall Street Journal article about Conover and a new effort to see that his work gets wider recognition, go here.

Monday Recommendation: Logan Strosahl

Logan Strosahl, Up Go We (Sunnyside)

Logan StrosahlThe unconventional structure of the title of Strosahl’s album smacks of post-Elizabethan England. Currents running through the music also evoke that time and place. The composer and saxophonist is a devotee of the orderly composer Henry Purcell (1659-1695) and of disorderly free improvisation. Both elements are apparent. “M.M. Ground,” concerned with post-Coltrane harmonic content, has a wild Strosahl alto saxophone solo leavened with Earl Bostic throat tones. His solo on the album’s only standard, “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes,” establishes his bona fides in the jazz tradition. The composer is a product of the advanced music programs of Seattle’s Roosevelt High School and the New England Conservatory. His septet of young New Yorkers has aspects of bebop ensembles, 1940s jump bands and the most adventurous contemporary classical music and jazz. The ensemble writing is exquisite. Up Go We is 40 minutes long. It rewards hours of listening.

Slim Gaillard (Oroony)

The story in yesterday’s Rifftides post about Jaki Byard quoted drummer Alan Dawson’s excursion into phrases originated by the late Slim Gaillard. It could be argued that Gaillard was the hippest and most influential of all the hipsters of the 1940s and 1950s. He remained active well into his and the century’s seventh decade. He was an accomplished pianist and guitarist, but the public knew Gaillard best for vocal performances incorporating quirky language that had something in common with English. This piece updates an earlier Rifftides post about one of bebop’s most endearing figures.

Slim GaillardIn a gathering of people even younger than I, when I mentioned Slim Gaillard three of them said in unison, “Who?”

“Flat Foot Floogie,” I explained, “Cement Mixer, Putti Putti,” “Matzoh ball Oroony,” and—just to make sure they understood—”Poppity Poppity Poppity Pop Go De Motorcycle.”

Their blank stares made me realize that there must be other folks in the 21st century in need of remedial cultural education. We’ll begin with an audiovisual aid.

That was Slim Gaillard on The Tonight Show. The music as he walked off was the theme during Steve Allen’s tenure as host of the program, so it was probably the mid-1950s. By then, Gaillard had behind him a couple of decades of success that began in the late ’30s with Slim and Slam, a duo of Gaillard and bassist Slam Stewart. Their big hits were “Flat Foot Floogie” and “Cement Mixer,” novelties executed with superb musicianship. Columbia’s The Groove Juice Special CD has 20 of their recordings. Later, Gaillard teamed with another bassist, Bam Brown. Their Laughing In Rhythm: The Best of the Verve Years has several tracks that include the great bop pianist Dodo Marmarosa and such other guests as Ben Webster, Dick Hyman, Ray Brown and Milt Jackson. Slim Gaillard at Birdland 1951 is a collection of performances when he was a regular at the New York club, with Art Blakey, Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, Terry Gibbs, Brew Moore and others sitting in.

Well aware of Gaillard’s musicianship, the fathers of bebop, Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, were happy to be guests on his recording session in Los Angeles on December 29, 1945. Gaillard is the pianist and raconteur, Jack McVea the tenor saxophonist, with Bam Brown on bass and Zutty Singleton playing drums in the blues titled “Slim’s Jam,” which is followed by the motorcycle epic.

Accurate information about Gaillard’s earliest years is hard to come by. This WikipediaSlim Gaillard old article seems to have what is available. If you would like to sample Gaillard’s extensive output of recordings, YouTube has dozens of them. Go here. In his later years, Gaillard sometimes worked as an actor in television shows including Marcus Welby M.D., Charlie’s Angels and Mission Impossible. He continued to appear in clubs in the US and Great Britain. He died in London in 1991 at age 75.

Jaki Byard And Musique du bois

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A Rifftides reader, composer Michael Robinson, responded to the Monday recommendation of the Jaki Byard Project’s Inch by Inch (see the July 24 post) with a reflection on a Jaki Byard 2 1:17:74Byard performance in a classic Phil Woods album. Mr. Robinson wrote:

One of the greatest jazz albums of all time is Musique du bois by Phil Woods, due in no small part to the appearance of Jaki Byard on piano, in addition to Alan Dawson on drums and Richard Davis on bass. Byard’s intrinsic contribution pertains both to his soloing and accompanying. Check out his performance on this phenomenal rendering of “Willow Weep For Me”:

I was privileged to be in the studio for the recording of Musique du bois, invited by producer Don Schlitten to write notes for the album. The notes were comprehensive, but when 32 Records reissued the music on a CD in 1997, the notes were gutted. Among the many sections left on the cutting room floor was the one that described the making of “Willow Weep For Me.” Therefore, as a public service in memory of a great day in RCA’s Studio B in Manhattan, here is that part of the story.

Woods’ head arrangement of “Willow Weep For Me” begins with the rhythm sectionPhil Woods 1:17:74 playing the introductory pattern used by Miles Davis for “All Blues.” The plan is to continue the figure through the alto solo, but Woods finds it too monotonous. Take one is cut short. There are superior solos on take two from Woods, Byard and Davis, but the leader is interested in supplemental harmonic ideas and goes to the piano to suggest some chords. The third take opens faster, with Davis adding vibrato and Dawson slapping the brushes on his snare drum just enough to impart a happy dance feeling. Woods responds with a sunny solo that is in sharp contrast to the rather brooding statement of the previous take. He introduces a Richard Davis 1:17:74phrase from “Drum Boogie,” chromaticizing it outrageously. Davis solos with an abandon that causes a sharp collective intake of breath in the control room. Byard has a brilliant solo full of Tatum fragments, and the piano sweeps under Woods as he re-enters for a final chorus packed with modulations, piping high notes and gut-rumbling low tones.

“Okay,” Woods tells the control room, “we’ll bring in a brass section to put a chord on the end.”

While the others are listening to “Willow,” Dawson is on the phone to the Aladdin Delicatessen:Alan Dawson 1:17:74“Cheese on rye…no sesame seeds in the rye.”

“Perhaps you’d prefer avacado seeds,” suggests an eavesdropper.

“Yes, with hot sauce,” Dawson grins, and he goes into a monologue full of such gustatory Slim Gaillardisms as mosquito knees, hippopotamus lips and reety pooties.

“Slim who?” some of you may be asking. Well, continuing in the spirit of public service, tomorrow’s Rifftides post will bring you up to date or—more accurately—back to date on Slim Gaillard.

As for Musique du bois, the 32 Records CD with truncated liner notes is still available. So too, it turns out, are copies of the LP with the full notes. Go here for information.

Monday Recommendation: The Jaki Byard Project

The Jaki Byard Project, Inch By Inch, Yard Byard (GM Recordings)

Jaki Byard ProjectAn album in tribute to a prodigious pianist—without a pianist; it must have seemed a good idea when flutist Jamie Baum conceived it. And it was. Ms. Baum, drummer George Schuller and guitarist Jerome Harris studied with Byard at the New England Conservatory. He died in 1999. Byard’s compositions and the inspiration of his genius as an arranger influenced their musical development. They recruited bassist Ugonna Okegwo and multiple reed artist Adam Kolker and founded The Jaki Byard Project. The group’s translation of a dozen Byard compositions into hip chamber pieces refracts facets of their mentor’s kaleidoscopic oeuvre, from the wryness of “Aluminum Baby” to the ruminations of “Ode to Charlie Parker.” All members play beautifully. Ms. Baum’s flute work and Kolker’s tenor saxophone, particularly on the Parker memorium, deserve special mention.

Guest Review. Jan Lundgren: A Retrospective

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Full disclosure: I wrote a section of the liner notes for a new compilation album by pianist Jan Lundgren. To assure critical objectivity, the senior Rifftides staff asked the veteran Swedish music journalist Jan Olsson to review the CD. Mr. Olsson’s review appears on the Swedish website DIG. We thank him and DIG for permission to post his work, and for his translation into English.

Jan Lundgren: A Retrospective (Fresh Sound)

Besides some CDs and LPs produced in Sweden and Japan, our own master pianist Jan Lundgren has recorded sixteen albums – nine of them under his own name – on the superb and very ambitious Spanish Fresh Sound label, today distributed all over the world. All but one were produced in Los Angeles by the legendary Dick Bank. The exception, Stockholm Get-Together from 1994, was produced by Jan himself.

Lundgren retrospectiveMr. Bank has now put together an excellent and varied Lundgren compilation. He has chosen twelve selections from ten of his own Fresh Sound productions, recorded between 1995 and 2003, and he presents them chronologically. He lets us listen to Jan entirely on his own, with his American trios and together with jazz celebrities like Bill Perkins, Conte Candoli, Herb Geller, Andy Martin and, last but not least, Arne Domnérus and Pete Jolly.

To mention any particular selections seems unnecessary since all original albums from which Mr. Bank has made his choices have already been reviewed. But the duo version of “Barney Goin´ Easy”, or “I´m Checkin´ Out Go´om Bye” as the Ellington/Strayhorn composition is also named, with Domnérus on clarinet is really something very special. It is drawn from Dompan!, the album that Arne himself considered his very best ever. The playful collaboration with Jolly is also something that will make you shout with joy— if you love high-quality piano jazz.

The bassists and drummers who enrich the album—in particular the radar pair of Chuck Berghofer and Joe La Barbera—are also well worth praising. And so is Jim Mooney, who is responsible for most of the excellent sound quality. He is a member of the same league as his east coast counterpart Rudy Van Gelder. Lots of roses, also, go to the man with the great ideas, a perpetual preserver of high quality and good taste, Mr. Dick Bank. He is like a manager in the highest Spanish soccer division who knows not only the exact capacity of every player but also how to bring it forth. But the most praise goes, of course, to Jan Lundgren, who today is on the same level as his great Swedish forerunners and sources of inspiration, Jan Johansson and Bengt Hallberg.

Finally: The CD booklet and liner notes to Dick Bank´s albums are always something very special with lots of high-quality and interesting information. This time the authors are Doug Ramsey, Dick Bank and— Jan Lundgren. If you don´t own most of Jan´s Fresh Sound albums already, I think that A Retrospective is, for every jazz piano fan, an almost necessary investigation.

Jan Olsson

Mr. Olsson has been one of Sweden’s most respected journalists for more than fifty years. HeJan Olssoin has contributed to Orkester Journalen and the Swedish-Danish magazine Jazz Stage. For a quarter of a century he was a regular host on Swedish Radio and on a number of television specials.

Desmond’s Later Years Revisited

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This week on his Night Lights on Indiana Public Media, David Brent Johnson is re-airing “After Brubeck: Paul Desmond 1968-1977.” The one-hour broadcast covers what the alto saxophonist was up to in the years following the dissolution of the Dave Brubeck Quartet until his death inP. Desmond head shot the spring of 1977. I was pleased that David asked me to appear with him to talk a bit about Paul and his music.

The program includes tracks from a variety of Desmond albums, among them his live quartet dates with guitarist Ed Bickert, his concert with the Modern Jazz Quartet and his appearance with the all-star band at Duke Ellington’s 70th birthday party at the White House. To hear the program, go here and click on “Listen Now” at the top of the page. The site also features a David Brent Johnson essay about Desmond.

Monday Recommendation: Music Of Gary McFarland

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The Gary McFarland Legacy Ensemble, Circulation: The Music of Gary McFarland (Planet Arts)

CirculationConcerned that recognition of Gary McFarland’s achievement was fading, drummer Michael Benedict created the ensemble named for McFarland and recorded 11 of his compositions. The mystery of McFarland’s death at 38 in 1971 remains unsolved. His composing and arranging made him a welcome presence in jazz in the 1960s. With slight academic training and a large natural talent, he produced work of freshness and appeal in collaborations with Stan Getz, Bill Evans, Gerry Mulligan, Steve Kuhn and John Lewis, and with his own groups. McFarland’s 1961 How To Succeed In Business Without Really Trying is one of the finest big band albums of that decade. In Circulation, pianist Bruce Barth’s arrangements of 11 McFarland compositions capture his spirit of innovation and openness and stimulate impressive soloing by Barth, vibraharpist Joe Locke, saxophonist Sharel Cassity, bassist Mike Lawrence and Benedict.

Just Because: Hampton Hawes With Scott LaFaro

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Scott LaFaro colorBefore Scott LaFaro joined the Bill Evans Trio in late 1959, the young bassist’s second west coast stint included work with Chet Baker, Barney Kessel, Victor Feldman, Cal Tjader, Stan Getz and Hampton Hawes, among others. In California, LaFaro’s tone, time and adventurous ideas put him—along with Gary Peacock and Charlie Haden—in the vanguard of a new generation of bassists who took the instrument a step beyond functional time-keeping and harmonic guidance. With Evans, he would contribute to the development of an interactive approach to the piano trio that helped steer jazz in new directions.

In a May, 1958, recording with pianist Hawes, LaFaro has an eight-bar solo on the bridge section of the penultimate chorus of “Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams,” but his swing, the richness of his sound and the fundamental rightness of his note choices are what make his performance here compelling. Harold Land is the tenor saxophonist, Frank Butler the drummer.

After 57 years, Hampton Hawes’ For Real is fresh and undated. It’s a basic repertoire item.

Weekend Listening Tip: Jazz Port Townsend All-Stars

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Here’s something to work into your weekend listening schedule. Each year at the Centrum Port Townsend Jazz Festival on Washington state’s Olympic Peninsula, Jim Wilke records concerts for broadcast on his Jazz Northwest. Next Sunday, he will air an all-star sextet of stars who taught this summer in the festival’s jazz workshops. This photo shows Chuck Deardorf, Terell Stafford and Steve Wilson.

Deardorf, Stafford, Wilson

Here is Mr. Wilke’s announcement:

The first in a series of radio shows from the 41st Jazz Port Townsend airs Sunday, August 16 at 2 PM Pacific Daylight Time. An all-star sextet drawn from the faculty of the Jazz Workshop opens the festival on the first of three nights of “Jazz In The Clubs” in several small venues in downtown Port Townsend. After a week of sharing their knowledge with students, they’re ready to swing with their peers. In this group, we’ll hear musicians from New York, L.A., Seattle and Portland…Terell Stafford on trumpet, Steve Wilson on alto, Eric Reed is the pianist, Dan Balmer on guitar, Chuck Deardorf is on bass, Matt Wilson is at the drums. They play both standards and jazz classics, but in some non-standard arrangements.

Jazz Northwest is recorded and produced exclusively for 88.5 KPLU and kplu.org. The program is available as a streaming podcast after the broadcast. Programs are archived at jazznw.org.

Tolstoy And Svensson

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Victoria-Tolstoy-Mattias-Svensson-@-Hos-Morten-20150802-Photo-Markus-Fägersten-6I hadn’t planned on posting more about the Ystad Sweden Jazz Festival, but it turns out that there is video of several artists, some of whose concerts I missed. Viktoria Tolstoy, one of Sweden’s best-known singers, teamed up with the veteran bassist Mattias Svensson for a concert in the courtyard of the Hos Morten Café. I was there and enjoyed it but did not previously write about it.

If you are not familiar with Ms. Tolstoy and wonder about her last name, she is the great-great-granddaughter of Russian writer Leo Tolstoy and the daughter of musicologist Erik Kjellberg. Ms. Tolstoy and Svensson took side trips for pieces by Peter Gabriel and Michael Jackson, but most of their repertoire was standard songs, including one of Irving Berlin’s.

Dahn-Ola Olsson, who supplied the Tolstoy-Svensson video to YouTube, also shot segments of other Ystad Festival events. Some are fragments. A few capture complete performances, including one by Dave Holland and Kenny Barron. You can see them on Olsson’s YouTube channel.

Weekend Extra: Johnny Hodges

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HodgesThanks to Michael Cuscuna and Mosaic Records for the reminder that yesterday, Johnny Hodges (1906-1970) would have celebrated his 109th birthday. Hodges’ alto saxophone (and in his early career the soprano sax) were so closely associated with Duke Ellington’s orchestra, it is easy to assume that’s where he started. In fact, he left his native Boston in 1924 and worked regularly in New York with his mentor Sidney Bechet, Willie “The Lion” Smith, Lloyd Scott, Chick Webb and Luckey Roberts—among others—before he joined Ellington in the spring of 1928. He became one of the band’s principal soloists and remained so the rest of his life except for four years in the 1950s when he led his own band before he returned to Ellington.

In 1936, the Ellington band recorded one of the composer’s loveliest and least known ballads, “Black Butterfly,” with solos by baritone saxophonist Harry Carney and trombonist Lawrence Brown. The song resurfaced in the late 1960s with Hodges as the featured soloist. Let’s listen to the originally issued take of “Black Butterfly,” then watch the video of Hodges and the Ellington band playing it in Berlin in 1969, the year before Hodges’ death.

“Black Butterfly” is included in this essential Mosaic collection of Ellington’s Brunswick and Columbia recordings from the 1930s.

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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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