Stan Kenton Presents Gabe Baltazar
Stan Kenton Presents
Gabe Baltazar
Producer: Wayne Dunstan
Assistant Producer: Bill Cole
Mastering: Dave Ellsworth
Engineer: Hugh Davies
Cover Photograph: Courtney Harrington
Special thanks to Hy Lesnick, contractor
Recorded at Capitol Studios, Hollywood, California, January 9, 10, 11, 1979
Creative World Records CW 3005
1979
TRUMPETS - John Audino, Ray Triscari, Conte Condoli, John Madrid
TROMBONES - Lloyd Ulyate, Tommy Shepard, Gil Falco, George Roberts
REEDS - Bud Shank, Bill Green, Jack Nimitz, Bob Cooper, Bill Perkins, Phil Ayling
FRENCH HORNS - Vince DeRosa, Richard Perissi, Art Maebe, George Price
PIANO - Pete Jolly
BASS - Chuck Domonico
GUITAR - Tommy Tedesco
PERCUSSION - Dale Anderson
DRUMS - Steve Schaeffer, John Guerin, Earl Palmer
VIOLINS - Jimmy Getzoff, Concertmaster; Sid Sharp, Murray Adler, Alfred Lustgarten, Josef Schoenbrun, Bonnie Douglas, Jack Goodkin, Henry Roth
CELLOS - Ray Kelley, Igor Horoshevsky
VIOLAS - Virginia Majewski, Barbara Simons
HARP - Dorothy Remsen
Gabe was a joy to me all the years he was a member of my band. He is a master of his instrument, a great guy and a great artist. I am so proud to present him on the Creative World label.
Listen, and you'll see why it's all right to use the word "legendary" once in a while. – Stan Kenton
FRENCH HORNS - Vince DeRosa, Richard Perissi, Art Maebe, George Price
PIANO - Pete Jolly
BASS - Chuck Domonico
GUITAR - Tommy Tedesco
PERCUSSION - Dale Anderson
DRUMS - Steve Schaeffer, John Guerin, Earl Palmer
VIOLINS - Jimmy Getzoff, Concertmaster; Sid Sharp, Murray Adler, Alfred Lustgarten, Josef Schoenbrun, Bonnie Douglas, Jack Goodkin, Henry Roth
CELLOS - Ray Kelley, Igor Horoshevsky
VIOLAS - Virginia Majewski, Barbara Simons
HARP - Dorothy Remsen
From the back cover: To say a musician is "legendary" is to compound a cliche. But ask any jazz musician about Gabe Baltazar. He is a legend, partly because he is not heard very widely these days, partly because he is one of the finest alto saxophone players in the world. He is elusive, spending almost all his time in Hawaii, seldom touring, seldom recording. If you want to hear Gabe, provided you know of his estimable reputation through the jazz underground, you've got to go to the Islands.
Gabe was a joy to me all the years he was a member of my band. He is a master of his instrument, a great guy and a great artist. I am so proud to present him on the Creative World label.
Listen, and you'll see why it's all right to use the word "legendary" once in a while. – Stan Kenton
Gabe Baltazar – From his early years in picturesque Hilo, his birthplace, to his triumphal return following four years as lead alto with the Stan Kenton orchestra, Gabe Baltazar has personified jazz in the Hawaiian Islands. No Island musician nor few anywhere – has reached the International stature nor garnered the critical praise of this genius of the reeds.
But entertainment tastes change, and pure jazz artistry was somehow never accorded its due in Hawaii. Gabe was never really away from music he was Deputy Director of the world-famed Royal Hawaiian band, and his nights were devoted to jazz and working the big shows that came through Hawaii (Tony Bennett, Johnny Mathis, Liza Minelli, Glen Campbell, Marlene Dietrich) but only recently has his enormous talent re-emerged publicly.
When the Cavalier Restaurant in Waikiki decided to experiment with "new jazz", the Gabe Baltazar Quartet was booked for a two-week engagement. The group is now in its second year of a sizzling, standing-room-only-run. Jazz is finally "in" in Hawaii. And Gabe Baltazar, who had recorded a dozen albums with the Kenton band, who had appeared at the Monterey and Newport Jazz Festivals, who had performed both live and at recording sessions with Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Carter, Don Ellis, Cannonball Adderly and the greats of the past quarter century, is back.
This is Gabe's first solo album.
But entertainment tastes change, and pure jazz artistry was somehow never accorded its due in Hawaii. Gabe was never really away from music he was Deputy Director of the world-famed Royal Hawaiian band, and his nights were devoted to jazz and working the big shows that came through Hawaii (Tony Bennett, Johnny Mathis, Liza Minelli, Glen Campbell, Marlene Dietrich) but only recently has his enormous talent re-emerged publicly.
When the Cavalier Restaurant in Waikiki decided to experiment with "new jazz", the Gabe Baltazar Quartet was booked for a two-week engagement. The group is now in its second year of a sizzling, standing-room-only-run. Jazz is finally "in" in Hawaii. And Gabe Baltazar, who had recorded a dozen albums with the Kenton band, who had appeared at the Monterey and Newport Jazz Festivals, who had performed both live and at recording sessions with Dizzy Gillespie, Benny Carter, Don Ellis, Cannonball Adderly and the greats of the past quarter century, is back.
This is Gabe's first solo album.
When Johnny Comes Marching Home (Traditional) - Arranged by Don Menza
What's New (Composed by Haggart- Burke) - Arranged by Bill Holman
Gabe - Composed and Arranged by Angel Pena
A Time For Love (Composed by Mandel- Webster) Arranged by Angel Pena - String Arrangement by Chuck Hoover
Take The "A" Train (Composed by Billy Strayhorn) Arranged by Don Menza - Soloists: Conte Condoli & Bob Cooper
Love Song (Composed and Arranged by Don Menza
Spanish Boots - Composed and Arranged by Don Menza