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Friday, December 13, 2024

Rocky Fun And Fitness

 

Rocky Fun And Fitness

Rocky
Fun And Fitness
Written and Produced by John Braden
Kid Stuff Records KSB 1018
United Artists Group
1983

Gonna Fly Now - Rocky's Theme (Warm Up)
Go For It All (Windmill)
Stronger Every Day (Deep Knee Bends)
I Love My Bike (Bicycle)
Sit Up-Wrap (Sit-Ups)
Gonna Fly Now - Rocky's Theme (Reprise) (Cool Down)

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Hit Trip - Charlie Byrd

 

Man And A Woman

Hit Trip
Charlie Byrd
Produced by Teo Macero
Engineering: Frank Laico, Ray Moore
Cover Photo: Columbia Records Photo Studio - Sandy Speiser
Columbia Records CS 9627
1968

Charlie Byrd - Guitar
Joe Byrd - Bass
Bill Reichenbach - Drums
Mario Darpino - Flute (featured throughout)
Hal Posey - Fluegelhorn (featured on Shiny Stockings)

Love Is Blue (L'Amour est bleu) - Arranged and Conducted by Teo Marcero
Wait Until Dark (from "Wait Until Dark") - Arranged and Conducted by Tem Newsom
Talk To The Animals (from "Doctor Dolittle") - Arranged and Conducted by Teo Marcero
Live For Life (Vivre pour vivre) (from "Live for Life") - Arranged and Conducted by Teo Marcero
The Look Of Love (from "Casino Royale") - Arranged and Conducted by Teo Marcero
Shiny Stocking
Up, Up And Away
A Man And A Woman
Sunny
Barefoot In The Park (from "Barefoot In the Park") - Arranged and Conducted by Tom Newsome
If I Were A Rich Man (from "Fiddler On The Roof")

Held Over! Today's Great Movie Themes - Percy Faith

 

Midnight Cowboy

Held Over!
Today's Great Movie Themes
Percy Faith and His Orchestra
Arranged and Conducted by Percy Faith
Produced by Irving Townsend
Engineering: Jack Lattig
Photo: Brian Hennessey
Columbia Records CS 1019
1970

Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head - from the 20th Century-Fox Picture "Butch Cassidy And The Sundance Kid"
Midnight Cowboy - from the United Artists Motion Picture "Midnight Cowboy"
What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life - from the United Artists Motion Picture "The Happy Ending"
Patton Theme - from the 20th Century-Fox Picture "Patton"
Come Saturday Morning - from the Paramount Picture "The Sterile Cuckoo"
True Grit - from the Paramount Picture "True Grit"
Jean - from the 20th Century-Fox Picture "The Prime Of Miss Jean Brodie"
The Theme from "Z"
Airport Love Theme - from the Universal Picture "Airport"
Ballad Of Easy Rider - from the Columbia Motion Picture "Easy Rider"
Theme From Anne Of The Thousand Days - from the Universal Picture "Anne Of The Thousand Days"

Hard Days Night - Current Hits Volume 18

 

Current Hits Volume 18

Current Hits Volume 18
Producer: William Beasley
Assistant Producer: Ted Jarrett
Recorder and Compatible Mastering: Columbia Recording Studio, Nashville, Tenn.
Engineer: Tom Sparkman
Cover Design: McPherson Studio, Nashville, Tenn.
Hit Records - Record No. 418

A Hard Day's Night
Dang Me
People Say
Little Old Lady (From Pasadena)
Rag Doll
Where Did Our Love Go
C'mon And Swim
Girl From Impanema
Because
Walk - Don't Run 64
Steal Away
Can't You see That She's Mine

Sunday, December 8, 2024

The Sheriff - The Modern Jazz Quartet

 

Carnival

The Sheriff
The Modern Jazz Quartet
Recording Engineers: Tom Dowd & Phil Iehle
Cover: Stanislaw Zagorski
Supervision: Nesuhi Ertegun
Atlantic Records SD 1414
1964

John Lewis - Piano
Milt Jackson - Vibraharp
Percy Heath - Bass
Connie Kay - Drums

From the back cover: John Lewis is many men. I am not speaking of the various individuals who happen to share with hime these two somewhat common names, but rather of the different aspects of the musician who runs the Modern Jazz Quartet.

To the public that sees him only a concerts or festivals and occasionally in a night club, Lewis is an urbane gentle man who looks at the piano as if wondering why he is making it swing, and who approaches the microphone as if he were sure it was about to hit him.

To his personal friends Lewis is a sensitive and talkative fellow of endless interests, a connoisseur of food and wines, a much-traveled and genuinely cosmopolitan observer of the world scene.

To musicians who have played in his group or observed him at work through the years, John is tough taskmaster, a man committed, irrevocably dedicated to the job at hand, irritated easily by irresponsibility or lack of understanding, yet rarely willing to show a loss of patience.

The success of The Modern Jazz Quartet can be attributed in large measure to Lewis' maturity and to his unique faculty of adjustment.

His musicianship, of course, is a factor of equal importance. "When the MJQ was formed," he once said, "I found that because of my schooling and training the other members leaned on me for certain things. This was good, of course. It meant that I was an instrument to be used, and that's why I have certain responsibilities with the group. But it has also proven the value of training for the musician."

It was the Ellington of the Ko-Ko and Congo Brava period that made the deepest impression on Lewis in his formative years; not only because of the inherent qualities of the music, but because Ellington in the late 1930s and early '40s was a unique symbol of jazz accepted as a creative force, and of the achievement and dignity of the Negro within its framework. The pride and pleasure he found in Ellington's music has direct bearing on the cerebrations that went into the launching of the MJQ a decade or so later.

Dignity, incidentally, is a dangerous word to throw around in music. Ellington had it and has it; Lewis has had it as long as those of us have known him who saw him first in 1946, not long out of the Army, when he took over Theloniou Monk's chair in the Dizzy Gillespie orchestra.

Dignity, which need not be equated with pomp, circumstance or stuffed shirts, was the touch he added even to the romping Gillespie band when, presenting a new work at Carnegie Hall in 1947, he gave it the name Toccata For Trumpet And Orchestra. In those days it was considered pretentious, or at best slightly eccentric, to use such a title for a work played by a jazz group.

The same qualities he had brought to bear in the Gillespie band were evident when, in 1951, John and three other Gillespie alumni (Milt Jackson, Percy Heath and Kenny Clarke) held their first experimental Quartet session. To the younger jazz fan today it may be almost incredible, but until John Lewis established the MJQ there was practically no instance on record, in the entire history of jazz, that offered a small-combo performance of anything more than a string of 12, 16 or 21 bar choruses and the like. Changes of mood and tempo were rare; nothing ran over three or four minutes; the concept of a formalized composition in the classic sense, or of a full-blown suite, was unknown. Even the MJQ trod cautiously in its early, pre-Atlantic days, relying chiefly on standards and blues; but beginning with Atlantic and Contessa, the arrival of a new era in small group jazz became apparent. Only the long-forgotten John Kirby Sextet, which flourished in 1938-42, had gone to so much trouble to make a combo sound like a unit with an integrated personality, embedded in the exceptional ability of each member and in the power of the leader to weave those abilities together.

The past few years have seen an expansion so great in Lewis' musical interests that there have been constant rumors that MJQ will disband, that he has outgrown it and is more concerned with the special works commissioned for European concerts, the conducting of a larger ensemble, the need to concentrate on writing. But the MJQ and Lewis' other concerns never have been, and never need be, mutually exclusive. As he said in Down Beat five years ago: "I hope The Modern Jazz Quartet just goes on and on. There could even be a different piano player if there was a need; but at the present time there is no need."

Fortunately there is still no need. Lewis the pianist is undoubtedly the most underestimated of the several Lewises. Technically, though no Tatum or Newborn, he is thoroughly well equipped; improvisationally, his solos in the MJQ context are among the most meaningful single-note lines to be heard on record. His touch, ideas and phrasing are deeply rooted in the core of jazz; essentially, what he plays today in an up-tempo ad lib solo differs little from what he played as a sideman with the Lester Young and Charlie Parker combos 15 years ago.

This, to me, is one of the most admirable achievements of The Modern Jazz Quartet; that is has done so much to bring jazz ahead, to create and develop within a narrow form, yet at the same time it had not reduced the ability of its members to swing, to maintain firm and durable contact with indispensable traits that separate jazz from the rest of the body of modern music. – Leonard Feather

The Sheriff
In A Crowd
Bachianas Brasileiras
Mean To Me
Natural Affection
Donnie's Theme
Carnival

Saturday, December 7, 2024

4 To Go! - André Previn, Herb Ellis, Shelly Manne, Ray Brown

 

Intersection

4 To Go!
André Previn, Herb Ellis, Shelly Manne, Ray Brown
Produced by Irving Townsend
Cover Photos: J. Thompson
Columbia Records CS 8818
1963

From the back cover: The entire musical content of 4 To Go! can be characterized succinctly in a dozen words: André Previn, piano, Herb Ellis, guitar, Shelly Manne, drums; Ray Brown, bass.

The convocation in a Hollywood recording studio of this extraordinary aggregation came about as an indirect result of André's appearance on the Steve Allen TV show.

"I did a whole week on the show," André says, "and as you know, the atmosphere is very informal and you don't have to bring in arrangements or play anything. I had a lot of fun, and in particular I found it very exciting to play with Herb Ellis, who's a member of Donn Trenner's orchestra on the show.

"I talked to Irving Townsend about doing an album with Herb, and out of this came the idea of not just adding him to my regular trio, but of using a special all-star rhythm section. I wrote to Oscar Peterson asking him if he'd mind my using Ray Brown and received a very friendly letter saying of course I could. I'd known Ray personally for years, but strangely enough I'd never sat down down and played with him until the day we made this album.

"With Shelly, of course, it was a reunion; we've done any number of sessions together, and it was a kick to work with him again. In fact, not to be able to play one's best with these guys would be a sheer impossibility. My only reservation was that I felt I might be tempted just to sit back and listen to them."

Three of the four musicians being Hollywood residents, the date was set to take place during one of Ray's brief westward sojourns. According to a pre-arranged plan, each of the four entered the studio armed with one original composition; everything else was to be decided during the session. After a prelude of general conversation the meeting was called informally to order as André said, "Let's warm up on this" and proceeded to play Like Someone In Love. It felt so agreeable to all hands that they decided to try a "take" on it. The first one was fine, the second even better, and that was it.

The whole session went along smoothly, though not all the tunes were as easily or quickly mastered as the first: a couple of originals took considerably more time to perfect.

The standard tunes were chosen by mutual agreement; the aging (1926) Bye Bye Blackbird was agreed on only after six others had been rejected. The light percussive sound you hear during Ray's solo on this track is neither Shelly nor a guest bongo player; it's Herb tapping gently on his guitar.

Herb's original, Say It Again, a simple and engaging work on the 16-bar structure, provided an admirable framework for the quartet, committing André to some of his most convincingly funky moments of the session.

Ray brought his tune in without a title. They ran it down once and André said: "Let's keep this real simple and pretty – almost like a Claude Thornhill mood." They tried it again. "Yeah, that's the feeling!" said Shelly. Pencil in hand, Dory Langdon Previn sat in the control room scribbling determinedly. As the musicians listened to the playback of the first take, Ray was subjected to some light kidding about the potential popularity of his charming melody: "Everybody will record it. Eddie Fisher, Hillegarde... Dorothy Shay..."

It was no joke to Dory. Only a couple of hours later, when the album was completed, she submitted her title – I Know You So Well – and a completed set of admirably tailored lyrics, which she demonstrated to Ray's delight. A vocal version, I suspect, will not be slow in materializing.

The Shelly Manne composition, Intersection, is an intriguing and unusual work of which Shelly says: "I just heard it in my head one day, got out my tape machine and sang it. Sometimes if I try a thing out at the piano I start trying to change it and lose track of the original idea." It turned out to be in the key of E. This pleased André, who commented: "I like to play in keys other than the everyday standard jazz keys."

André own contribution was Don't Sing Along. It starts more or less like a standard blues, but played in 12/8 and with the chord pattern halved so that the main phrase is six instead of twelve bars long. The six measures constitute the "A" in an AABA format, B being a standard eight-bar release. Though the unconventional structure gives it a special character, the composition provided an ideal vehicle for the blues-oriented leanings of the soloists.

After the four originals and five standards had been completed, since there was time for one more tune, André said: "I've got a thing we might be able to do something with," and proceeded to play "You're Impossible. Nobody had any trouble at all picking up on this one without preparation or manuscript. It provided a fitting finale for one of the most relaxed, happy, friendly jazz dates I had attended in many months.

Later the four musicians, in individual conversations about the success of the date, all offered unbeknownst to one another the identical explanation: when there is mutual respect, mutual enjoyment and musical understanding, there will be much swinging and no tension.

This was what happened when Previn, Ellis, Manne and Brown had their summit meeting. There were other factors too, such as the touches of humor, complete lack of temperament, and a frequent tendency toward self-deprecation (At one point, while his own tune was being rehearsed, Shelly observed: "A little musical knowledge in a drummer is a dangerous thing.")

After it all was over and the tapes had been played back, André said": "It was even better than I'd hoped. You were all wonderful." And Shelly asked: "Whatever happened to sessions like this? What became of those days when you just went in the studio to have a good time, and swing and play some music you liked?"

"I guess," said Columbia album producer, Irving Townsend, "they just came back." – Leonard Feather

No Moon At All
Bye Bye Blackbird
Life Is A Ball
It's Easy To Remember
You're Impossible 
Oh, What A Beautiful Morin'
I Know You Oh So Well
Intersection
Like Someone In Love
Don't Sing Along

Jazz Music For The Birds And The Hep Cats - Russ Garcia & Marty Paich

 

Jazz Music For The Birds And The Hep Cats

Jazz Music For The Birds And The Hep Cats
Russ Garcia and Marty Paich
Cover reproduced with permission of copy-right owner, The Champion Paper and Fibre Company
Bethlehem Records BCP 6039
1958

Jimmy Giuffre - Baritone Sax
Bill Holman - Tenor Sax
Charlie Mariano - Alto Sax
Russ Cheever - Soprano Sax
Conte & Pete Condoli - Trumpet
Bob Enevoldson - Trombone
Max Bennet - Bass
Stan Levey - Drums
Marty Paich - Paino, Leader
Russ Garcia - Leader

Rocky Road
Floating
Wigville
Then The Lid Blew Off
Tempo De Sylva
Tomjean
Butter Duck
Mellow Bone
Livin' It Up
Tone Row
Stranger In The Rain
Kentucky Blue Grass

Class Of '25 - Fingers and Pee Wee

 

The Sheik Of Araby

Class Of '25 
Joe "Fingers" Carr & Pee Wee Hunt
Arranged by Lou Busch & Dave Cavanaugh
Capitol Records T935
1958

From the back cover: Fingers, with his ragtime piano, Pee Wee, wailing on his trombone, and all the other "Oh-Be-Joyful" boys are full of high good humor, dazzling vigor, and low-down, stomping drive as they recreate the musical sounds, rhythm and spirit of the Class Of '25.

The Sheik Of Araby
The One I Love Belongs To Somebody Else
Minnie The Mermaid
Louisville Lou 
That Certain Party
Yes Sir, That's My Baby
Jealous
Rose Of The Rio Grande
Tuck Me To Sleep In My Old 'Tucky Home
Five Foot Two, Eyes Of Blue
Hula Lou
I Love My Baby

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Golden Anniversary Album - The Whiffenpoofs Of Yale

 

Golden Anniversary Album

1909 - 1959 Golden Anniversary Album 
The Whiffenpoofs Of Yale
Cover Photo by A. Burton Street, New Haven, Conn.
Sheep courtesy of Stephen J. Pachl family 
Produced by Elliott H. Kone
Carillon Records LP100
1959

Allan G. "Mind Over Matter" Atherton
Douglas H. "Zeleft" Banker
Robinson W. "Pitchpipe" Buck
Marcus E. "Sic" Cunningham, Jr.
Randolph J.  "Popocatepetl" Ney
Paul G. "You'd Be So" Nyhus
David S. "Pitter" Patterson
Lawerence C. "Dia" Pierce
Richard S. "Rantin'n" Ravenscroft
Herbert C. "D" Rule, III
John B. "Exit" Stetson
Thomas B. "Great Gilder" Stevenson

From the back cover: The Whiffenpoofs of 1959 met on Yoctangee Island in Ontario, Canada for the traditional pre-season rehearsing. "Pitchpipe" Robinson Buck presented the groups with a new ending to Aj Lúcka Lúcka, and a working repertoire of thirty songs capable of pleasing any listener, from the most conservative "old blue" to any old discriminating musician. Thought the rest of the year the repertoire was steadily increased to keep the singing fresh and spontaneous. The group became noted for its unusually rich, full sound, evident particularly in such numbers as Strike Up The Band and Aj Lúcka Lúcka. In addition, the fine blend and precision that was achieved may be heard in Scarlet Ribbons, Talk To The Trees and Through A Long And Sleepless Night.

This album presents a representative selection of the songs sung by the 1959 Whiffenpoofs. Annie Laurie, Mavourneen, and The Old Songs have been sung and enjoyed by Whiffenpoofs dating back to 1909. Strike Up The Band, Tear It Down, and Toot Toot Tootsie are songs that have been established as part of the Whiff musical heritage during the last ten years.

The record also includes arrangement presented this year for the first time. Mountain Greenery and Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair were arranged by last year's "pitchpipe" August Kinzel for this year's group. The arrangements retain the charming simplicity of the folk songs despite their intricate harmony. This year's "pitchpipe" Robinson Buck, has given us the stirring Through A Long And Sleepless Night, and a wonderful arrangement of the Trolley Song which combines a clever background with the steady rhythm in the second tenor solo. "Mind Over M" Atherton went back to 1910 to find Aphrodite; his arrangement has a skillful interplay of solo voices, melody, and driving rhythm. The record closes, as traditionally does each concert, with the singing of the Whiffenpoof Song.

The Whiffenpoof "experience" is, of course, more than music; it includes girls, traveling, memorable engagements, assorted beverages, and alumni. In this vein the group will remember short but sweet trips to Philadelphia, Hartford, New York, and Boston, as well as journeys to the always pleasant women's colleges. This was the year of the Fiftieth Reunion when over 200 Whiffenpoofs convened on February 7th to celebrate the founding of the oldest singing group of its kind. It was also the year that comprehensive examinations came at the end of Spring vacation; the Whiffs turned Bermuda's Castle Harbour Hotel into a study hall, and spouted love sonnets, math formulae, and the names of obscure American patriots as they raced across the sand dunes on rented motor bikes.

This year the list of memorable engagements included appearances at the National Football Foundation Dinner, where the group and before President Eisenhower and General MacArthur, a Christmas party at the "21" Club where the chefs, as well as the patrons, were entertained, a dinner given by the Banker's Trust Company, where we mingled with the world of finance, and a dinner party given by the New York State Bar Association in honor of Governor Rockefeller.

Lest "we pass and be forgotten", the Whiffenpoofs of 1059 present this anniversary album; the culmination of many hours of hard work, many hours of fun, and a year of fine music.

Autumn Leaves
Mountain Greenery
Scarlet Ribbons
I'll Be Ready When You Are
Old Grey Bonnet
The Trolley Song
The Sunshine Girl
Mandy & Down In The Old Cherry Orchard
Tear It Down
Through A Long And Sleepless Night
Saloon
Toot Toot Tootsie
Strike Up The Band
Without A Song
Slide Trombone
Annie Laurie
Aj Lúcka Lúcka
I Talk To The Trees
The Lady Is A Tramp
The Old Songs Medley
You'll Have To Put A Nightie on Aphrodite (To Keep All The Married Men Home)
Black Is The Color Of My True Love's Hair
Daddy Is A Yale Man
The Whiffenpoof Song

Wednesday, December 4, 2024

The Rockin' Daddy - Kenneth Swanstrom

 

Louisiana Swamp (Swanstrom)

The Rockin' Daddy
Kenneth Swanstorm Jamboree
Photo: Hans Lileberg
Kountry Korral Records (Västerås, Sweden) KSP 502
1972

Kenneth Swanstrom - Piano & Vocal
Bass Guitar & Vocal - Mick Grimwade
Drums - Lars Fredrikson
Additional Guitar - Hans Fredrikson

Rockin' Daddy
Is Anybody Going To Sn Antone
Milk - Shake Mademoiselle
On The Banks Of The Old Ponchartrain
Dance, Baby, Dance
Louisiana Swamp
On The Road Again
Shotgun Boogie
What's The Reason
Mexicali Rose
Move It On Over