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Saturday, June 3, 2023

Ella In Hamburg - Ella Fitzgerald

 

A Hard Day's Night

Ella In Hamburg
Ella Fitzgerald
Accompanied by Tommy Flanagan Trio
Tommy Flanagan, Piano / Keeter Betts, Bass & Gus Johnson, Drums
Recorded March 25, 1965 at Musikhalle, Hamburg, Germany
Recorded under the personal supervision of Norman Granz
Director of Engineering: Val Valentin
Verve V-4069
1965

From the back cover: Ella Fitzgerald has sung many concerts in Hamburg. It is a regular stop on her European tour schedule. The people of Hamburg have a very special affection for Ella and she for them. That empathy was spelled out most clearly by a distinguished German writer, Werner Burkhardt, who wrote the liner notes for the European edition of this album and who was in the audience when this concert recording was made. His reactions to the performance are quoted in part here: "....Ella and we, her Hamburg audience, are on familiar terms. We know each are old friends and have no need for formalities. It takes time for us to achieve this feeling for an artist, but once we do it lasts a long time.

"Ella In Hamburg – those who took part will never forget it. How wonderful that those who were not fortunate enough to be in Hamburg then can now enjoy it." – Notes by Jack Maher

From Billboard - November 27, 1965: The world digs Ella. No matter where she performs, the response is uniformly enthusiastic because the singing is always excellent. It's evidenced here in this live performance in Hamburg. Miss Fitzgerald sings up a storm and the audience responds accordingly. One of the standout sides is "A Hard Day's Night."

Walk Right In
That Old Black Magic
Body And Soul
Here's That Rainy Day
And The Angels Sing
A Hard Day's Night
Ellington Medley: Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me / Mood Indigo / It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
The Boy From Ipanema
Don't Rain On My Parade
Angel Eyes
Smooth Sailing
Old McDonald Had A Farm

Friday, June 2, 2023

How Glad I Am - Nancy Wilson

 

The Grass Is Greener

How Glad I Am
Nancy Wilson
Produced by David Cavanaugh
Cover Photo: Capitol Photo Studio - George Jerman
Capitol Records ST 2155
1964

(You Don't Know) How Glad I Am
The Grass Is Greener
The Boy From Ipanema
The Show Goes On
Don't Rain On My Parade
Never Less Than Yesterday
I Wanna Be With You
It's Time For Me
People
West Coast Blues
Quiet Nights

Hi-Fi Keyboards - Billy Maxted

 

Hell's Bells

Billy Maxted Plays
Hi-Fi Keyboards
Cadence Records CLP 1005
1955

From the back cover: There was a time when a lot of people thought that John Charles Tomas was a male trio. The reason I happen to mention that at this time is because I have just heard this unusual set of recordings by Billy Maxted, who easily could be misspent for Billy, Max and Ted.

Where John, Charles and Thomas combined to make one fine baritone voice, Billy Maxted has divided himself, a multiple recording wizardry to provide us with a visual keyboard orchestra. Simultaneously and separately you may hear a piano, a celeste, a keyboard glockenspiel and a piano tricked up with tacks, pawn tickets and pages from the October 15 issue of Billboard.

The project, it seems, was dreamed up by Ted LeVan, Billy's neighbor who also is known as one of the best recording engineers in the business. Ted has his cellar rigged for encoring and one night the Maxteds came calling. Billy seated himself at the console and Ted Started the tape machine rolling. Billy hopped from one keyboard to the other, while Ted Dubbed one "Take" on top of the other. They messed around with the piano strings, and even cut a player piano roll which was incorporated in the master tape.

The boys thought it was all great sport, and they decided to play the tape for an old friend, Artie Bleyer – for laughs maybe. Archie, who is the proprietor of Cadence Records, and who has quite an ear for things the general public will like, took the enterprise quite seriously. He believed that the boys had come up with something he could sell. To the veteran recording man, this had all too the most desired ingredients": hi-fi sound, original instrumentation,novely, nostalgic songs – and a great keyboard stylist to bring the thing off. 

The next step was to add a rhythm section, and one more sound track was added to the triple-ply tape already cut by billy. This time, Ted put earphones on two more top-flight jazz mean: drummer Don Lamond and bassist Eddie Safranksi, and they added their sounds to Billy's. 

All of which I'm sure you'll find interesting as you listen to these recordings; but even more than the way they were arrived at, I believe you'll be taken by what you actually hear: a collection of familiar old tunes and intriguing Maxted arrangements of several special instrumental items – all listenable and danceable, great to hum or whistle along with – breezy and natural-like.

Billy demonstrated on this disk that he's a pretty versatile performer, but he has made the bulk of his reputation as a practitioner of Jazz. He has been in the Jazz big time since 1937, when he broke in with the Red Nichols band. Then he played with Ben Pollac, and in 1940, he replaced Eddie Slack as pianist with the Will Bradley band. It was for this organization that he composed that immortal opus, "Fry Me Cookie, With A Can Of Lard."

After the war. Billy specialized for a time in arranging, and although he is indeed with the Dixieland school, he turned out relatively "modern" scores for the Claude Thornhill and the Benny Goodman bands. In 1948, he joined the house band at Nick's, the celebrated shrine of Dixieland in Greenwich Village, and has been there ever since. As this is written, Billy has just taken over the leadership off the band there for the first time. During his seven-year tenure at the sport, he had worked under the "Baton" of such master of the art as Phil Napoleon, Pee Wee Irwin, Bobby Hackett, Billy Butterfield and Yank Lawson. Which, incidentally, all goes to show that the trumpet player is usually the leader of the band at Nick's.

Billy has found time to write a few spark\ling tunes. Pee Wee Hunt is somewhat partial to his output and has recorded such amsted originals as "Petunia Patch" (which Billy also plays here) and "Cow Bell Brut." and, while h has been featured in a lot of great recordings under the aegis of the various maestri motioned about, this is Billy Maxted's first album in which he is the boss and the whole show. Certainly, it won't be the last – Notes by Bill Simon

Casey Jones Boogie
Chattanooga Chase
Petunia Patch
Hell's Bells
Pedal Pusher
Mohawk Rugcutter
Boston Tea Party

Medley No. 1
Put Your Arms Around Me Honey / I Used To Love You But It's All Over / My Little Girl / Take Me Out To The Ball Game

Medley No. 2
There's A Tavern In The Town / There'll By A Hot Time In The Old Town Tonight / Ta Ra Boom Di Ay / When The Saints Go Marching In

Medley No. 3
The Band Played On / After The Ball Was Over / The Bowery / Bicycle Built For Two

Medley No. 4
By The Light Of The Silvery Moon / I'm Forever Blowing Bubbles / Oh You Beautiful Doll / Shine On Harvest Moon

Medley No. 5
Peggy O'Neil / Man On The Flying Trapeze / Sweet Rosie O'Grady / Sidewalks Of New York

Medley No. 6 
Five Foot Two - Eyes Of Blue / When You Wore A Tulip / Bill Bailey / Hail, Hail The Gang's All Here

Piano Jazz - Volume 1

The Dirty Dozen No. 1 & 2

Piano Jazz 
Volume 1
Barrel House and Boogie Woogie
Featuring Pine Top Smith, Montana Taylor, Romeo Nelson, Cow Cow Davenport and Speckled Red (Rufus Perryman)
Brunswick BL 54014
1954

From the back cover: The Language Of Jazz has always been as lusty and colorful as the music itself. While some of the words of jazz have managed to remind the private property of its musicians, many have found their way into the mainstream not only of America's, but the entire world's everyday speech and writing. And why not? How wonderful those words and expression are! Think of "funky" – and "gut bucket" – and "dig," "groove," "crazy," "solid," "cool." And "barrel house" and "boogie woof" too.

Approached semantically, "boogie boogie" and "barrel house" are far from obscure eighteen in meaning or origin. "One Top Smith, whose most famous recordings are heard here, is generally credited with the invention of the name for the distinctive piano style of which he was a master. It was, as a matter of fact, on these records made in Chicago in 1928 that the words were first believed to have been publicity used.

But the sound of the words boogie boogie somehow manages to convey something of the sound of the music too. Actually, boogie boogie is probably an outgrowth of a kind of free style blues pino laying that flourished throughout the South until relatively recently. Its most striking characteristic is the steady, insinuating repetitive bass usually played eight beat to the measure or "eight to the bar' while the right hand freely improves, playing against the bass and creating intricate counter-rhythms. 

Barrel house, on the other hand, is a much more general term used more often to convey a feeling rather than to describe a specific style of playing. According to the late New Orleans trumpeter, Bunk Johnson, "a barrel house was a piano in a hall... When I was a kid, I'd go into a barrel house and play 'long with them piano players 'til early in the mornin'z. We used to play nothin' but the blues."

To others, however , barrel house signifies the kind of occasion or circumstance where "the drinks come right out of the barrel." Applied to jazz it is a low-down, m rough-and-ready, no holds barred kind of expressiveness – a lusty, rowdy and honest music. The term then, is an all-inclusive on, able to take in a great variety of musical material – including boogie woogie.

Barrel house and boogie woogie playing ws for many years the exclusive property of a band of little-known, musically self-educated itinerant pianist-entertainers. These 20th Century minstrels could be heard in the obscure dives and honky tonks of the South, at rent parties in St. Lous, Memphis, Chicago, Kansas City and Detroit, and at neighborhood and small town dances. They could also be heard on a few re]rods made exclusively for Negro audiences in the South and those larger cities of the North with large Negro populations.

Five of the most exciting of those "Breakdown" pianist-blues singers are represented in this collection. We know almost nothing about the lives of some of them, but despite their obscurity, they live on and will be remembered because of these performances. These records offer indisputable evidence of the enduring qualities of the music hey created and live by.

Clarence "Pine Top" Smith is probably the most famous of the pianist you will hear on this record. Born in Troy, Alabama in 1904, he first came to attention in Pittsburgh, Pa. where his unique stile of playing in Negro theaters and night clubs earned him more than a slight measure of popularity. A comedian, singer and dancer as well as a pianist, Smith was a natural showman and had not trouble at all in finding work.

It was in Chicago, however that he came to the attention of recording direct Mayo Williams who quickly set about putting Pine Top's music on records. The four selection heard here, all original Smith compositions, were recorded at the Brunswick studios in Chicago in 1928. Less than six moths later, Smith died, the victim of a stay bullet fired in a barroom brawl. These four sides, representing the best of Pine Top's recorded output are magnificent demonstrations of his earthy folk humor, his sensitive approach to the blues and his driving eight to the bar attack.

The late Charles "Cow Cow" Davenport, who died penniless and almost completely forgotten in 1955 was perhaps best known for his compositions Cow Cow Boogie, Cow Cow Blues, I'll Be Glad When You're Dead You Rascal You and Momma Don't Allow No Piano Playing In Here. The latter tune has a them was a basis of fact in Davenport's youth. As he told it, his father sent him to Selma University when he was sixteen. "Selma was a place where they turned out practically all the preachers in Alabama," related Cow Cow. "That's what Pa wanted me to be – a preacher. Now, I couldn't read music in those days, but I could fund out a few rags. But Pa would say, 'Play all the reels you want, but I don't want all them rages played in here.""

At twenty-three Cow Cow got his first gob in vaudeville, in a theater in Augusta, Georgia that also featured ta blues singer named Bessie Smith. Soon after he teamed up with Dora Carr with whom he subsequently recored and toured the country. The records heard here were made in Chicago in 1928, when Cow Cow was at the height of his popularity. Vaudeville, however was on th way out a the gook a job in 1929 with the Vocalion record Company as a composer. A few years later he ventured forth into show business again with a unit called Cow-cow's Chicago Steppers. When that failed, Cow Cow retired from show business, and although he attempted to make a come-back in the '40s, it was in vain.

One of the main features of Daveport's playing as the walking bass, which he claims to have inv ended. On both his Two Cow Blues and State Street Ice, the latter with talking by Ivy Smith, Davenport gives ample evidence of his mastery of the blues and boogie woogie idioms.

About the three other pianist presented here, we known almost nothing. Like so many other folk artist of early jazz, their lives have gone undocumented, and only their record remain. The two solos by Montana Taylor ere made for Vocalion in Chicago in 1929 and are vigorous example of this unknown musician's considerable talents. Speckled Red, whose real name is Rufus Berryman, is only slightly less a mysterious figure that Taylor. Dirty Dozen No. 1 and Dirty Dozen No. 2, made in 1929 and 1930, respectively are compositions built around an old folk custom regulating the way in which bitter insults were exchanged. Wilkins Street Stomp, on the other hand, is a driving, slightly eccentric blues – a fine display of Perryman's energetic, unorthodox boogie piano.

Romeo Nelson is also a shadowy figure and the only thing we seem to know for sure was that he lived in Chicago and made just a few records for Vocalion late in 1929. The sensational aspects of  his keyboard style are demonstrated in Head Rag Hop on which Nelson talks as well as played. Indeed, fe pianist can boast of the ckind of overwhelming exuberance that Nelson manages to convey on this recording. – Notes by Nat Shapiro

Detroit Rocks - Montana Taylor - Piano Solo
Indiana Avenue Stomp - Montana Taylor - Piano Solo
The Dirty Dozen No. 1 - Speckled Red - Piano with Singing
The Dirty Dozen No. 2 - Speckled Red - Piano with Singing
Wilkins Street Stomp - Speckled Red - Piano Solo
Head Rag Hop - Romeo Nelson - Piano Solo with Talking
Pinetop's Boogie Woogie - Pine Top Smith - Piano Solo with Talking
Pinetop's Blues - Pine Top Smith - Blues Singing with Piano
Jump Steady Blues - Pine Top Smith - Piano Solo with Talking
I'm Sober Now - Pine Top Smith - Talking and Singing with Piano
Cow Cow Blues - Cow Cow Davenport - Piano Solo
State Street Jive - Cow Cow Davenport - Piano Solo with Talking by Ivy Smith

Wednesday, May 31, 2023

Groovy Grubworm - Harlow Wilcox

 

Wipe Out

Groovy Grubworm And Other Golden Guitar Greats
Harlow Wilcox & The Oakies
Produced at C&B Studio, Norman, Oklahoma
Engineer: Carl Warren
Plantation Records PLP 7

Groovy Grubworm
Wipe Out
Walk, Don't Run
The Gold Eagle
Raunchy
Sad Is The Lonely
Golden Guitar Flower
Mexico
Wheels
Guitar Boogie
Honky Tonk
Moose Trot

Sunday, May 28, 2023

Rhaburn Combo In New York

 

Boogaloo A La Chuck

Rhaburn Combo In New York
Album Producers: Compton Fairweather, Henry Young & Robert Hulse
CES SLP 67806

Percival Drummond - Vocal & Tumbos
Ceil Gillette - Organ
Herman Bennett - Guitar & Drums
Pablo Clarke - Tenor Sax
Gerald Rhaburn - Vocal & Drums
Alfredo Nelson - Alto Sax
Rudolph  Gladden - Guitar
Carlton Usher - Bass
Roy Cutkelvin - Percussion

From the back cover: The Rhaburn Boys are back... For those of you who were not fortunate enough to accompany them on their most successful tour of the Greatest City in the world, we bring you a souvenir of their efforts. From the night they performed for a full house at the Manhattan Center, and throughout all their other appearance in the Metropolis, the Combo has lived up to its greatest expectations, evidenced buy this, their third album.

The musical selections were as varied as the style in which they performed, whether it was their mainstay, the Calypso, or the Boogaloo... the present craze of the U.S.A.

The Lord Rhaburn Combo is certainly the most famous and successful aggregation our country has produced. They have been popular for more than eight years now, in person and on record. For two consecutive years (1965 & 1966) they have been victorious in the Battle Of The Bands contest held annually in Belize City.

The two original composition on Side B is further testimony of their ability, In Marcelita, pay particular attention to the polished musicianship .. listen to those saxophones. In Chuck's Boogaloo, "Chuck" Gladden sets the pace.

New York Calypso - vocals by Rhaburn
Merengue 
Cuando Calienta El Sol - Vocal by Drummond
Rain Sometimes - Bolero 
Muchacha Tan Bonita - Cha Cha
Nothing Takes The Place Of You - Vocal by Drummond
La Cumbia
Marcelita - Jerk
Don't Fight It - Vocal by Drummond
Winchester Cathedral - Boogaloo
Lara's Theme - Bolero