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Friday, April 5, 2024

Living Guitars Play Songs Made Famous By The Rolling Stones

 

Brown Sugar

Paint It Black

Living Guitars Play The Songs Made Famous By The Rolling Stones
Arranged and Conducted by Al Caiola
Produced by Ethel Gabriel
Recorded in RCA's Studio C, New York City
Recording Engineer: Bob Simpson
RCA Camden Stereo CAS-2521
1971

Brown Sugar
Paint It Black
Heart Of Stone
(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction
Ruby Tuesday
Wild Horses
Lady Jane
You Can't Always Get What You Want
I Just Want To Make Love To You

Gentle PURR-cussion - Terry Snyder

 

Ebb Tide

Gentle PURR-cussion
Terry Synder and His All Stars
United Artists Records Deluxe 3500 Series WWR 3521
1962

C'est Ci Bon
Yellow Road
Little Darling
Claire De Lune
The Lamp Is Low
I Don't Know Why
My Favorite Song
Anniversary Song
Stranger In Paradise
All She Wants To Do Is Dance
Turkish Taffy
Ebb Tide

Wade In The Water - Gulf Coast Jazz

 

Wade In The Water

Wade In The Water
Gulf Coast Jazz
Uncredited
Cover Photo: Bruce Zemby
Famous Hi-Fidelity F-510
Famous Enterprises, New Hampshire

Wade In The Water
Lil David
I Got Shoes
When The Saints Go Marchin' In
Nigeria
Reminiscence
Sinners, Don't Let This Harvest Go
Nobody Knows The Trouble I've Seen
This Little Light Of Mine
Salassi

Thursday, April 4, 2024

County & Western - Modern Sound

Five Hundred Miles Away From Home

Country & Western Award Winners
Producer: William Beasley
Recorder & Compatible Mastering: Columbia Recording Studios, Nashville, Tenn.
Cover Design: McPherson Studio, Nashville, Tenn.
Modern Sound MS 524

Five Hundred Miles From Home
The Matador
Ring Of Fire
Mama Sang A Song
Still
The End Of The World
Petticoat Junction
Detroit City
Going Thru The Motions
Let's Go All The Way

Journey To Capricorn - Stan Kenton

 

Celebration Suite

Journey To Capricorn
Stan Kenton
Recorded August 16, 17 & 18 at United Western Studios, Hollywood, California
Executive Producer: Stan Kenton
Producer: Bob Curnow
Production Supervision: Bill Putnam
Engineer: Jerry Barnes
Assistants: Gordon Shryock & Gary Boren
Remix: Jerry Barnes, Bill Stilfield & Julio Aiello
Mastering: Stan Ricker at JVC Cutting Center, Hollywood, California
Art Direction Yasuko Shannon
Cover Art: Dennis Millard
Personal Management: The Cameron Organization, Inc.
Creative World ST 1077
1976

Reeds: Terry Layne, Roy Reynolds, Dave Sov, Greg Metcalf, Alam Yankee (Bill Fritz on Celebration Suite)
Trumpets: Jay Sollenberger, Dave Kennedy, Steve Campos, Joe Casano, Tim Hagans
Trombones: Dick Shearer, Mike Egan, Jeff Uusitalo, Allan Morrissey, Douglas Purviance
Rhythm: Stan Kenton, piano; John Worster, acoustic & electric bass; Gary Hobbs, drums; Ramon Lopez, Latin percussion

From Billboard - January 15, 1977: One must approach the six tracks comprising this tightly grooved record just as one would a Messiaen record or Cage LP. It is only for the daring, for the adventurous, for those who welcome the uncommon.

Now well into his 36th year as a leader, the boldly uncompromising Kenton may well shock his most frequent disciples with this LP. He craftly introduces the set with Stevie Wonder's "Too Shy To Say" and, with cunning, leads the listener into an immensely complex Mark Taylor chart with his own simple, melodic piano introduction. Much of it is out of tempo – rubato – but the harmonies are tight, ultra modern and severe. Occasionally the Wonder melody is evident.

It isn't what Kenton does as a bandleader, but that he dares. No other maestro possesses his guts and integrity. Along the distant path from Balboa Beach in 1941 Stan has acquired and lost countless followers, but by striving for fresh musical sounds he constantly replaces his losses with new and youthful devotees. That's the way he wants it.

Hank Levy's "Pegasus" is a horse in a different color and mood. The second of the half-dozen instrumental tracks spots Timmy Hagan's, son of an Ohio banker, on solo trumpet along with Terry Layne's saxophone. Tempo is bright. Hagans again is featured on Mark Taylor's "Granada Smoothie" and there's a short Jeff Usitalo trombone contribution. The ensembles are powerful, propelling and precise but the band forever swings as Basie and Herman swing these days.

Kenton's attitude is that it doesn't have to swing to be good music. And his philosophy again is evident through "Ninety Degrees Celsius," another Levy original with Hagans and Layne again soloing at blistering tempo, and "Journey To Capricorn" with the indefatigable Hagans and saxist Alan Yankee hogging the solo mikes. Levy again is the composer-arranger.

To this long-time booster of Kentonia, the LP's prime rib is the final track on side two, Chick Corea's succulent "Celebration Suite" running 12 minutes and charted by Yankee. It is today's Kenton product at its juiciest and most meaty, harmonically and rhythmically. "Celebration" displays all of the most admirable facets of the band as Stan knuckles the Kanabe and John Worster, bass; Roy Reynolds, saxophone; Ramon Lopez, Latin percussion, and Cary Hobbs, conventional drums, pop through with uniformly ebullient, moving and often exciting contributions. 

"Celebration Suite" is an ideal track to close out a highly cerebral program unsweetened by old pop tunes in 1977 dress.

There is no pandering to commerciality in this package. One listens to the mass of sound coming down and recalls Stan's oft-repeated view that he is not ahead of the times. "There are," he offers, "just a lot of people who are behind the times."

He taped this package knowing well that its appeal is limited, an attitude he as maintained through the decades except for a period in the mid-40's when he half-heartedly emphasized a clarinet section and cute pie vocals not only by June Christy and Gene Howard but by a bulky, unimpressive mixed vocal group.

Yet one ponders if Kenton's complex fare may in time be accepted by the masses. People change just as music, art and everything else changes, perhaps imperceptibly, with the months and years. There are sufficient musicians and Kenton buffs today to sustain Stan's efforts; perhaps before the '70s end his intransigent convictions will be hailed and revered by a new legion of record buyers eager to discard the shallow pop and jazz confections of the moment.

"Journey To Capricorn" was recorded last August at United Western Studio, Los Angeles, with Bob Curnow as producer and Jerry Barnes, chief engineer. Creative World's sales and marketing director, Julio Aiello, assisted Barnes and bill Stilfield with the mix-downs. There is no acutely needed annotation – only titles and credits are listed. But as Big Stan willingly admits, only a minuscule minority of the nation's 215 million will give a damn. – Dave Dexter, Jr.

Too Shy To Say
Composer: Stevie Wonder
Arranger: Mark Taylor
Soloist: Stan Kenton

Pegasus
Composer & Arranger: Hank Levy
Soloists: Tim Hagans & Terry Layne

Granda Smoothie
Composer & Arranger: Mark Taylor
Soloists: Jeff Uusitalo & Tim Hagans

90° Celsius
Composer & Arranger: Hank Levy
Soloists: Tim Hagans & Terry Layne

Journey To Capricorn
Composer & Arranger: Hank Levy
Soloists: Alan Yankee & Tim Hagans

Celebration Suite
Composer: Chick Corea
Arranger: Alan Yankee
Soloists: Stan Kenton, Roy Reynolds, John Worster & Gary Hobbs

Monday, April 1, 2024

Woody's Winners - Woody Herman

 

Opus De Funk and Theme

Woody's Winners
Featuring The New "Northwest Passage"
Wood Herman
Recorded live at Basin Street West, San Francisco, on June 28, 29 and 30, 1965
Cover Photo: Columbia Records Photo Studio - Henry Parker
Columbia Records STEREO CS 9236

Clarinet, Alto Sax - Woody Herman
Tenor Sax - Gary Klein, Salvatore Nistico, Andy McGhee
Baritone Sax - Tom Anastasia
Trumpet - Gerald Lamy, Dusko Goykovich, Bob Shew, Don Rader, Bill Chase
Trombone - Henry Southall, Frank Tesinsky, Donald Doane
Piano - Nat Pierce
Bass - Anthony Leonardi
Drums - Ronnie Zito

From the back cover: Woody Herman himself has indeed been – and decidedly is – a winner. He has basked in the limelight of the winner's circle many times for more than a quarter of a century. He has ben honored by jazz polls for the high musical quality of his own performances and for his respective "Herds." His outstanding recordings, from the old 78's to albums of the 1960's, are collectors' items. He has even toured foreign lands for the State Department. Woody Herman, in short, has earned the rare respect, adulation and lasting enthusiasm of countless people from all over the world.

Woody's groups have been among the notably productive seedbeds for jazz musicians, who have been nurtured, trained and very often explosively introduced to the public. To cite specific cases would easily involve a long list of jazz musicians. Even in 1965 there were new talents in the Herman band whose brilliance, vigorous spirit and musicianship attracted and stirred crowds from San Francisco to the Jazz Festival in Juan les Pins, Antibes. This process, the subtle, complex evolution of the Herman bands under Woody's effectual leadership, has been occurring for a long time and cannot be explained by a single performance of relationship. The French have a word for it, I believe – épanouissement. Although it has no exact of literal English translation, it does convey the idea of "becoming," and encompasses such nuances as growth, development, unraveling, flowering and fulfillment.

This album, recorded live at Basin Street West in San Francisco, is the realization of a long-held hope of mine. Having Woody play for the first time in Basin Street West (a spacious, attractive club that John Hammond has called one of the finest jazz rooms in the country) was a three-day jazz joyride. Album Producer Teo Macero and other Columbia staffers were present during the engagement, and were rocked by this newest edition of Woody's wailing, free-swinging, smoking band. Woody's stand-up firing squad nearly blew the glasses and everything else off the patron's tables. No doubt about it, the band held its audiences spellbound. 

The selections: 23 Red - Bill Chase wrote this blistering swinger several years ago. When I first heard it in December, 1963 in Las Vegas, I hoped that it would be recorded some day. The seemingly mystic title is very simply explained. The numeral 23 and the color red are a "lucky" combination that composer Chase used at roulette tables in Reno, Tahoe and Las Vegas when the band played there. Actually, "23" is the band's repertoire code name for the tune "Four Brothers" ("hot tunes" such as "Caledonia," identified as "24," and "Early Autumn," "21," are also "lucky" at the felt-lined tables).

This opening track is one of the album's many highlights. The trumpet-centered chart features Chase, Dusko Goykovich and Don Rader in a romping trumpet choir that opens with lightening excitement and explodes into Chase's shout to initiate a fascinating series of exchanges (on chorus each of two bars, two choruses of four bars and two choruses of two's).

My Funny Valentine – This version has been labeled by its arranger, Don Rader, as "My Funky Valentin." Dig Woody's low-register clarinet with its natural, warm, woody sound. Rader's open-horn work is followed by an Al Cohn-tinged tenor of Gary Klein. The trumpets screech as lead trumpeter Chase impressively penetrates the sound barrier. My Wailin' Valentine it is!

Northwest Passage – Woody's galloping warhorse get a redressing job by arranger-pianist Nat Pierce. Originally recorded on March 1, 1945, by the "First Herd," it now joins the ranks of "Apply Honey" and "Caledonia," head arrangements rendered in later, contemporary versions. All we need now is "Your Father' Mustache" and "Wild Root," and the twenty-year cycle of up-tune overhauling will be nearly complete.

Woody, Nistico and Rader on mute kick it off and then Sal lashes into his long solo, much like a voracious Cro-Magnon devouring a long-sought meal. Chase's trumpet slices in, rapier-like, to boost the scorching excursion to its conclusion. A real pressure-cooker.

Poor Butterfly – an oldie scored by Rader who, incidentally, contributed several nice arrangements during this latest tenure with Woody. Previous associations with the Maynard Ferguson and Basie bands helped pave the way for Don's current creative outpourings. Father Herman's richly beautiful alto and clarinet never dip into the commonplace. His lyrical statements can be serene and lovely, yet at the same time be buoyed up by intense sincerity and passion.

Woody's Whistle – This is an original blues by Dusko Goykovich, who wanted to "get the guys to relax and release tensions, to rid themselves of cobwebs with the hard-walking feeling of this number." The chart processes highly interesting thematic phrases. Nat Pierce's groovy pianists carry the line again while over it Woody sometimes sings the short commentary: "Your sister smokes... your sister smokes... smokes in bed." Nistico's wailing is followed by Dusko' crying re-entry.

To close the tune, Woody blows hi pocket whistle. It is not just a device for this tune; it has been a functional part of Woody's stage accouterment for some time. Woody blows it to signal to members of the band that intermission is over, and that it's time to regroup on the bandstand for the next set.

Red Roses For A Blue Lady – Another arrangement by the Yugoslavia trumpet star, Dusko Goykovich, this has a good Herman reed-section sound. Andy McGhee fashions a cruising, warmly attractive tenor solo.

Opus de Funk and Them (Blue Flame) – I am delighted that this Horace Silver vehicle is included! Back in June, 1955, Woody recorded Nat Pierce's arrangement of it, and here it is again a decade later – and what a swinging version it is! Nat's wonderful piano work (Woody makes a jocose reference to pianist Mary Lou Williams) forecasts the visceral swing of the performance. Gary Klein uncorks a Lester/Al Cohn-ish solo, and Chase reaches way upstairs to lift the elation even higher. Finally, Dusko pours fresh, flaming fuel into this steamer, while the band grooves with propulsive riffs.

This was the final tune the band played that last night at Basin Street West. It was obviously inspired by the very hip crowd gathered there. Their enthusiasm was so demonstrative that they stood up and shouted, demanding more. The band, however, segued into the Herman theme, Blue Flame. Woody's recorded comment, "We dug it the most," sums up what happened at Basin Street West. The Herman band, playing with unusual élan, had provided some of its most arm-pumping, hand-clapping, finger-snapping, foot-tapping big-band jazz ever! – Herb Wong, KJAZ-FM, San Francisco

23 Red
My Funny Valentine (from "Babes In Arms")
Northwest Passage
Poor Butterfly
Greasy Sack Blues
Woody's Whistle
Red Roses From A Blue Lady
Opus de Funk and Theme (Blue Flame)