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Tuesday, August 30, 2022

Jazz Lab 2 - John Graas

 

Cluster

Jazz Lab 2
John Graas
Decca Records DL 8478
1957

From the back cover: There has been throughout the history of jazz criticism a constant tendency, to which this writer is on less prone than any other, toward the pigeonholing of jazz performances into a neatly departmentalized set of categories. An intricately written and played work by six men may be described as a combo performance though it many in effect have fewer combo and more big-band qualities than many works by larger groups. A session recorded by musicians resident in California will be identified automatically as a sample of West Coast jazz, while the label "Kansas City Jazz" will be applied to a group in New York, simple because its members (who are probably natives of Philadelphia or Boston) once worked with Count Basie (from Red Bank, N.J) who once led a band not far from the banks of the Missouri River.

The time has come for this foolishness to stop; for us to acknowledge that there may be today, in an LP by an all-Swedish band, more of the sound of what we have tended to call West Coast jazz than is perceptible in many a session cut within a Cadillac's throw of Sunset and Vine. Jazz Lab 2 provides an excellent illustration of the breadth of conception and execution that can be sheltered under one geographical roof, for possibly more than any of its admirable predecessors in the Grass series it shows the extent to which John and his colleagues have drawn from every contemporary jazz source to distill a brew that defies definition beyond the application of admiring adjectives.

A glance at the backgrounds of the main contributors to Jazz Lab 2 serves in itself to illustrate the variety of origins skillfully assembled and utilized under Grass' guidance. John himself, born in Dubuque, Iowa Oct. 14, 1924, started out with the hot in his high school days, and while still in his middle teens won a national contest that led to performances under Koussevitsky at Tanglewood. In 1941-2 he played first horn with the Indianapolis Symphony and in '45-6 with the Cleveland Symphony; between the two engagements he gained his first dance band experience, playing with Claude Thornhill in 1942, when the French horn was an unprecedented novelty in orchestras of that type; and his first Army experience, leading his own band while in the service from '43-5.

Graas was back in the dance band field again with Tex Beneke in 1947-8, then did a couple of concert tours with Stan Kenton, and since 1950 has been a resident of California, working on TV shows, doing movie scores for several studios, and even occasionally touring with Liberace. The belated interest in modern jazz around Los Angeles which until a few years ago was considered an unregenerate Dixieland town, enabled him at last to experiment with his convictions concerning jazz. Despite (or possibly because of) his strict classical background, he had felt inhibited when symphony conductors insisted on their own methods of interpretations, leaving him no freedom for personal expression. He had long had the ambition to develop the interest in new jazz forms that had been stimulated by his first contacts with the medium, and felt that the same fluency of improvisation he had heard applied to trumpets and trombones could be put to effective use on the French horn. At that time there were only two French horn players with any jazz reputation at all, Graas on the west coast and Julius Watkins in the East. Since John embarked on his full-fledged efforts, around 1953, to establish himself as a composer, arranger and instrumentalist, the ideas that motivated him have been internationally accepted and the instrument through which he expressed them has craved an ever-growing niche for itself as a medium for jazz.

Jack Montrose, whose tenor sax decorates most of these performances,  is a Detroiter  who began as an amateur in a Chattanooga high school band. Earning ha BA at Lost Angeles State College, he later worked with Jerry Gray's dance band and with various combos led by west coasters. At 28, Jack is almost five years Bill Perkins' junior. Bill, a San Francisco by birth but raised in Chile and in Santa Barbara, California, started his name band career in 1950, after a long period of music studies under the GI Bill.

One of the two main rhythm sections on these sides comprises Paul More, from Meadville, Pa. (ex-Benny Carter, Zoot Sims, Stan Getz, Jerry Gray), and the superlative bassist and drummer heard for the past year or so in Miles Davis' group, Paul Chambers, 22 from Pittsburgh (winner of the Yearbook Of Jazz poll as the fellow-musicians' choice for the greatest new bass man) and 34-year-old Philadelphia Joe Jones. On most of the other numbers the pianist is a 35-year-old native New Yorker, Gerry Wiggins, who has toured with Benny Carter and worked a long spell as Lena Horne's accompanist, the bassist is Walter Buddy Clark, 28, formerly with Beneke, Les Brown and Peggy Lee. Larry Bunker, 28, from Long Beach, California, who has worked with Georgie Auld, Howard Rumsey, Gerry Mulligan and Peggy Lee, completes the team on drums. 

Be My Guest was recorded at an earlier session, featuring the baritone sax of 36-year-old Jimmy Giuffre from Dallas, now a successful leader with his own combo; Don Fagerquist, the ex-Les Brown trumpeter from Worcester, Mass., now a top Hollywood studio man; Dave Pell, also ex-Brown, a former Brooklynite who's a multidextrous combo leader, sideman, photographer and publicist; 30-year-old Claude Williamson, whom many consider the best California exponent of the Bud Powell piano style (a native of Brattleboro, VT., he played with Norvo, Barnet and June Christy); Howard Robert from Phoenix, AZ, a Los Angeleno since 1950; Curtis Counce, from Kansas City, who has toured with Shorty Rogers and Stan Kenton; the one and only Kenneth "Red"  Norvo, from Beardstown, IL., whose career has spanned three decades of jazz and who now lives in Los Angeles and leads his own combo; and "Bert Herbert," a 29-year-old native of Los Angeles, who has played alto with Rumsey, Rogers and many other West Coasters. – Notes by Leonard Feather (author of The Encyclopedia Yearbook Of Jazz)

Love Me Or Leave Me
Cluster
Mood
Three Line Blues
Chuggin'
Trio
Canon-Frair
Be My Guest

Rendezvous With Kenton - Stan Kenton

 

Two Shades Of Autumn

Rendezvous With Kenton
Stan Kenton
Back cover photo by Ken Whitmore
Recorded in October, 1957
Capitol Records T932

Personnel: 

Leader and Piano - Stan Kenton
Trumpets - Sam Noto, Phil Gilbert, Lee Katzman, Billy Catalano and Ed Leddy
Saxophones - Lennie Niehaus (Alto), Bill Robinson (Alto), Bill Perkins (Tenor), Wayne Dunstan (Tenor), and Steve Perlow (Baritone)
Trombones - Kent Larsen, Jim Amlotte, Don Reed, Archie Le Coque and Kenny Shroyer (Bass)
Drums - Jerry McKenzi
Bass - Red Kelly

From the back cover: The Stan Kenton band first blazed into musical prominence on Memorial Day, 1941, at the Rendezvous Ballroom in Balboa, California. Since then, Stand has traveled the high-road of musical success, winning spectacular acclaim all along the way. And now, that long road has brought him back to the Rendezvous and a home-base under his personal management - back to the sand and stars and the ocean murmur of Balboa.

More than sentiment prompted this memorable homecoming, Kenton, for his next album, wanted to find a recording area with a good natural big-hall sound. The Rendezvous was it, supplying just the right acoustics for the mood and manner of his contemporary jazz style. And in keeping with Stan's ambition to activate a vital new dancing spot on the West Coast, the Rendezvous again seemed the answer.

This album is an exciting preview of the kind of music that will be rolling out of Balboa in the months to come. It's the happy result of an "on location" recording date that saw Capitol's top engineers trucking up to the Rendezvous with tons of equipment, working with a fever and finesse matched only by the musicians themselves. On hand were all of the components of the first Kenton success – the fine, wide sound of the hall, stellar sidemen, and, of course, Stan himself.

The songs, all ballad standards except for two originals, have never been recorded by Stan previously, Joe Coccia, a brilliant new Kenton discovery, wrote Desiderata and Two Shades Of Autumn, and arranged all the other numbers. They are swingy and stimulating, blending the forthright buoyancy of the early Kenton hits with the adventurous jazz idioms which Stan has conceived, developed and refined during the seventeen years since his Balboa debut.

With The Wind And The Rain In Your Hair
Memories Of You
These Things You Left Me
Two Shades Of Autumn
They Didn't Believe Me
Walkin' By The River
High On A Windy Hill
Love Letters
I Get Along Without You Very well
Desiderata
This Is No Laughing Matter
I See Your Face Before Me

Sunday, August 28, 2022

Music From Super Man - 101 Stings

Superman Disco

Music From Superman
And Other Great Themes From Space
101 Strings 
Alshire S-5354

Superman (Main Title)
Can You Read My Mind (Love Theme)
Mission Rescue
Mercury (From The Planets)
Superman (Main Title) Disco
Celestial Dawn
Jupiter (From The Planets)

The Best Of The Willis Brothers

 

Ring Of Fire

The Best Of The Willis Brothers
Front Photo by Dan Quest
Album Produced by Don Pierce
Album Cover Design by Dan Quest Art Studio, Nashville
Starday SLP 466 STEREO
1970

From the back cover: It has not been a case of "overnight success" for the Willis Brothers. They started working on their "seniority" (as Minnie Pearl put it) at KMBC in Shawnee, Oklahoma and from there went to the "Brush Creek Folly" show on KMBC in Kansas City, Missouri. World War Two interrupted their career temporarily as it did so many of our boys,  but after four years on the payroll of Uncle Sam, Guy, Skeeter and Vic come back into the country music spotlight. Originally known as the Oklahoma Wranglers, the boys were the first group to back the late Hank Williams, and later became known as the original "Drifting Cowboys". They were also the first featured on the NBC-TV network show "Midwestern Hayride", from WLW, Cincinnati. Other credits to the fabulous Willis Brothers include two Columbia motion pictures and recordings for RCA Victor, Coral and Mercury. Starday Records and Don Pierce are proud to have them in the "family". Don once commented, "There are many recording stars, but there are only a few great Country Music entertainers. The Willis Brothers are both." What more can I say he is right.

There are a few more words that I can add concerning the Willis Brothers that have not already  been said, many times, so I will quote my friend, the immortal Johnny Cash by saying, "quit reading this liner note, and take the record home and play it!" – Dixie Deen

Give My Forty Acres
Ring Of Fire
Gonna Buy Me A Jukebox
Somebody Knows My Dog
Private Lee
Bob
There Goes My Farm
Buying Popcorn
Nashville Ace In The Hole
Six Foot Two By Four
Ode To Big Joe
Blues Stay Away From Me

Other Songs By Leiber & Stoller - Morris / Bolcom

 

Ready To Begin Again

Other Songs By Leiber & Stoller
Joan Morris, Mezzo-Soprano
William Bolcom, Piano
Engineering & Musical Supervision: Marc J. Aubort, Joanna Nickrenz (Elite Recordings, Inc.)
Mastering: Robert C. Ludwig (Masterdisk Corp.)
Cover Illustration / Cleo's View (1968) by Howard Kanovitz - Reproduced courtesy of the Wilhelm-Lembruck Museum, Duisburg, West Germany
Coordinator: Teresa Stern
Design & Art Direction: Paula Bisacca
Piano by Baldwin
Nonesuch H-71346
1978

From the back cover: Joan Morris (b. Portlan, Oregon) is well known as a specialist in a wide range of American popular and theater song from the mid-19th century to the present. Since 1973, Miss Morris has toured with her husband William Bolcom throughout the United States and Europe. She has recorded for Columbia, RCA, and Nonesuch.

William Bolcom (b. Seattle) has been instrumental in bringing serious attention to American vernacular music, and his own compositions are a fusion of classical and popular elements. As pianist, he is heard on Columbia, Jazzology, RCA, the School of Music label of the University of Michigan (where he has been professor of composition since 1973), and Nonesuch.

Let's Bring Back World War I
Longings For A simpler Time
I've Got Them Feeling Too Good Today Blues
I Ain't Here
Tango
Humphrey Bogart
I Remember
Black Denim Trousers And Motorcycle Boots
Ready To Begin Again
Is That All There Is?
Professor Hauptmann's Performing Dogs