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Friday, June 7, 2024

His And Hers - The McGuire Sisters

 

The Blue Room

His And Hers
The McGuire Sisters
With Chorus and Orchestra Directed by Dick Jacobs
Vocal Arrangements by Murray Kane
Coral Records CRL 57337
1960

His And Hers
I Love You Truly 
Always
Anniversary Song
The Blue Room
Forever Isn't Long Enough 
I Love You
True Love
Makin' Whoopee
Love And Marriage
This Day
Shuffle Off To Buffalo

For You, For Me, Forevermore - Anita Kerr

 

For You, For Me, Forevermore

For You, For Me
Forevermore
The Anita Kerr Quartette
Decca Records DL 74061
1960

From the back cover: The Anita Kerr Quartette – one of the most popular singing groups in the country – is comprised of Miss Kerr, who sings lead; Dottie Dillard, alto; Gil Wright, tenor; and Louis Nunley, baritone.

For You, For Me, Forevermore
Till The End Of Time
Forever
I'll Always Love You (Querida Mia)
Never Leave Me
All My Life
Why Can't This Night Go On Forever
I'll Always Be In Love With You
This Is Always
Always
Everyday
Twelfth Of Never

Blues Etude - Oscar Peterson

 

Blues Etude

Blues Etude
Oscar Peterson
Featuring Ray Brown, Sam Jones and Louis Hayes
Produced by Richard S. Sherman
Cover Illustration: George Roth
Photo: Chester Sheard
Limelight LM 82039
1966

From the back cover: Oscar Peterson has led, really, three trios (if you except one he had during his formative years in Montreal) in the course of his career. He had a duo that consisted over himself and bassist Ray Brown just before the start of the 1950s. Then came the first trio. It included himself and Ray and a guitarist. The guitarist during most of this period was Herb Ellis. So tight, so integrated, did the group become that when Ellis announced that he was leaving to settle in Los Angeles, a good many of Peterson's admirers were genuinely concerned. What would Oscar do now?

What he did was to hire drummer Edmund Thigpen. And before long, this new group had become as beautifully cohesive as the previous trio, though its sound was of course utterly different. Oscar played a different way than he had with the predecessor group, inevitably. His playing expanded. This trio persisted for six years. They Ray Brown too succumbed to the blandishments of California and, like Herb Ellis before him, elected to settle in Los Angeles. And at the same time, Edmund Thigpen to strike out on his own as the leader of his own group.

Though all of this was amicable, it came as a melancholy disruption for Oscar. Just at the personal level, it was an unhappy event: he and Ray were (and are) as close as two musicians could be. They'd been together more than 15 years – an association whose length was unusual, to say the least, in the turbulent world of music. And now he had no rhythm section at all.

The solution to the problem surprised everyone. He hired a rhythm section that had already worked together for more than five years, a rhythm section whose conception and time feeling couldn't have been more different from his old one. He hired the Cannonball Adderley Sextet rhythm section. Bassist Sam Jones and drummer Louis Hayes made the move with Cannonball's encouragement: a rhythm section is more thoroughly exposed to public attention in a trio than in a sextet and he urged them to take the opportunity.

Now the question was how they would fit themselves to Oscar's style of playing, and vice versa. The group went into rehearsal at Oscar's home in Toronto, Canada. Before long Oscar felt ready to expose it, and he took it on the road. Word began to spread within the music world: this was another excellent trio, and a somewhat new Oscar Peterson.

The enclosed disc is the first recording of this new group. Actually the recording marks a transitional period in the history of the Oscar Peterson trio, since Ray Brown is heard on some of the tracks and Sam Jones on others. Louis Hayes is on all of the tracks. What we hear in the tracks with Sam Jones and Louis Hayes is a different Oscar Peterson – fully and obviously related to the old one, to be sure, but playing in a somewhat different way.

All three members of the new trio are masters of the subtle and little-under-stood art of swinging, and they have learned to swing together. Oscar has bent toward them, they have leaned toward him. In the middle ground they have found an area of common conception. And one can hear Oscar's excitement and sense of discovery in playing with Sam Jones and Louis Hayes.

The group can perhaps be called the Oscar Peterson Trio, Mark III. It is an exciting as its predecessors and, in the expansion of Oscar's own playing that it has produced, it is even more so. – Gene Lees (Gene Lees is a well-known critic, lyricist and writer. He is the author of a novel about the music world, And Sleep Until Noon.)

Side 1

Blue Etude
Shelley's World
Let's Fall In Love
The Shadow Of Your Smile (Love Theme from the "Sandpiper")

Sam Jones - Bass
Recorded 5/4/66

Side 2

If I Were A Bell
Stella By Starlight
Bossa Beguine
L'Impossible
I Know You Oh So Well

Ray Brown - Bass
Recorded 12/3/65

Dreamsville - Charlie Byrd

 

In The Name Of Love

Dreamsville
Charlie Byrd
Columbia Record Club Exclusive D 236
1966

Corcovado
In The Name Of Love
Yesterday
It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
Michelle
While We're Young
The Girl From Ipanema
Travelin' Man
Dreamsville
Just Squeeze Me (Be Don't Tease Me)

Thursday, June 6, 2024

Blind Blake 1926 - 30 'Bootleg Rum Dum Blues'

 

Righteous Blues

Blind Blake
1926 - 1930
'Bootleg Rum Dum Blues'
Cover Art: Fred Romary
Art Direction: Fairchild Productions
Cover Photo: Blind Blake courtesy of John Steiner
Engineer: Paul Cady
Liner Notes Arnold S. Caplin
All selections remastered from the original 78 rpm records in cooperation with John Steiner, New York Recording Laboratories
Produced by Arnold S. Caplin
Biograph Records BLP-12003
1968

From the back cover: In the "County Blues", Sam Charters' supplies the following information: "Arthur Blake, 'Blind Blake', was a good guitar player and singer, and despite a rather nasal quality to his voice, his records were even more popular than Papa Charlie Jackson's. He played in a rhythmic dance style with considerable melodic inventiveness. His first record, 'Early Morning Blues' and 'West Coast Blues' on Paramount 12387, was advertised October 2, 1926, and sold well. He recorded sixty-eight more blues for Paramount over the next four years. He was a heavy drinker, but his landlady, Mrs. Renett Pounds, at 4005 S. Parkway (Chicago), tried to watch out for him as best she could. Two of his most popular records were trio versions of 'Hot Potatoes' and 'Southbound Rag' with the famed clarinet player, Johnny Dodds, and the excellent drummer, Jimmy Bertrand, who played xylophone and slide whistle. Blake's guitar playing filled out the trio with a strong, swinging beat. When the sales of his records began to drop in 1929 he got in touch with a friend, George Williams, who was managing the 'Happy-Go-Lucky' show, and played with the show until late 1930 or 1931, when he returned to Jacksonville." There have been many suggestion to where he originated from. Dr. Hans Rookmaster, a European expert, states "He originally came from Jacksonville, Florida, and probably worked for some time in and around Atlanta, Georgia, before he wandered up North, to Ohio and ultimately to Chicago, where he started to record in 1926... 'Blind Blake's' music did much to shape the style of the younger singers who were to become prominent in the thirties, singers like 'Big Bill Broonzy', 'Josh White' (who led the blind artist for some time), and many others...". Bob Groom, editor of "Blues World" (English) states in an article devoted to "Blind Blake", "Because of his association with 'Gechee' music of the Georgia Sea Island, it seems likely that 'Blake' or to give his real name, Arthur Phelps, was born somewhere in the south of the State probably around 1895. He wandered the South in the years between the wars, spending time in Chicago whilst recording. He was at one time thought to have died there, but it now seems that he actually returned to Atlanta when the depression ended his recording career and was killed there in a street car accident in 1941." And to complicate the situation further, Paul Oliver mentions in his liner notes of a European LP devoted to "Blake", "Came the depression, and with it the end of recording for many blues singers and for all too many, obscurity or an early death. So it was for Blind Blake. After 1930, Josh White saw him no more and believed that he was murdered in the streets of Chicago: Big Bill Broozy thought he died about 1932 in Joliet, within sight of the grim prison that featured in his blues...". In an article in a 1946 issue of the Colliers magazine, "Preacher In Song" by Avery S. Denham, it is related that Josh White served as the "lead boy" (a term used in connection with blind artists, a helper), for a succession of blind singers, Joel Taggart, John Henry Arnold, and lastly, "Blind Lemon (called Lemmon in the article). But there is no mention of "Blind Blake". In Robert Shelton's biography of Josh White, "The Josh White Songbook" (Quadrangle Books), there is no mention of Josh White ever being "lead boy" for "Blind Blake".

Amid all this confusion, one clear fact remains: "Blind Blake" was a blues artist of considerable talent, with his own expression always clearly defined. He recorded with numerous artists including: Daniel Brown, Gus Cannon, Bertha Henderson, Papa Charlie Jackson, "Ma" Rainey, Elzadie Robinson, Irene Scruggs, Charlie Stand, Leola B. Wilson, and The Hokum boys, in all a total of forty sides for the Paramount Record Company. These were recorded from December 1926 to September, 1931, in Chicago, Wisconsin, and Richmond, Indiana. Under his lead he recorded eight-six sides, from September, 1926 to June, 1932, and four of these list the artist as Blind Arthur". On Paramount 12892 the song is listed as "Blind Arthur's Breakdown", played by "Blind Blake", which may verify his first name as being Arthur. The eighty-six sides were recorded in Chicago and Garfton, Wis.

Side 1
Blind Blake
1. Come On Boys, Let's Do That Messin' Around
2. Skeedle Loo Doo Blues
3. Bucktown Blues - Blind Blake (vcl-gtr.) unknown kazoo
4. Black Dog Blues
5. Bad Feeling Blues
6. That Will Never Happen No More - unknown rattlebones

Chicago no. 1 Sept., 1926, no. 2. Oct. 1926, 
no. 3., 4, April, 1927, no. 5, 6, May, 1927

Side 2
1. Brown Skin Woman
2. Hey Hey Daddy Blues
3. Low Down Loving Gal - Blind Blake (vcl.-grt. - talking)
4. Bootleg Rum Dum Blues
Playing Policy Blues
Righteous Blues

No. 1, 2, Oct., 1927. no. 3. Sept., 1928
No. 4, May, 1928, Chicago
No. 5, 6, July, 1930, Grafton, Wis., c.

Lillipops And Roses - Paul Petersen

 

Lollipops And Roses

Lollipops And Roses
Paul Petersen
Colpix Records CP 429
1962

From the back cover: In addition to being one of the most popular, young performers on TV, sixteen year-old Paul Petersen is well on his way to becoming one of the nation's top recording stars. Paul, who plays Donna Reed's son on "The Donna Reed Show" made his first record for Colpix only a few months ago. "She Can't Find Her Keys" was an immediate smash, and a sparkling new facet was added to an already impressive career. Since then, Paul has followed his initial hit with "What Did They Do Before Rock N' Roll?" (done as a duet with his TV sister, Shelley Fabares) and his current hit, which is the title tune of his first album. Level-headed Paul Petersen is unaffected by his disk success and still plans to become an engineer. The only seeming flaw in his plans is the disapproval, sure to be registered by his legion of fans. Included in "Lollipops And Roses" are his current and past clicks, as well as a flock of attractive old and new tunes that add up to easy-listening pleasure for all record buyers.

From Billboard - September 29, 1962: Here's a collection of new and old sides by Paul Petersen that should interest his many fans. The set includes such chart-makers as "She Can't Find Her Keys," "Lollipops And Roses" and "What Did They Do Before Rock 'N Roll," with Shelley Fabares. But there are new sides too, including "Little Boy Sad," "Be Anything To Anyone You Love." Could be big.

She Can't Find Her Keys
Keep You Love Locked
Little Sad Boy
Be Everything To Anyone You Love
Mama, Your Little Boy Fell
One Girl
Lollipops And Roses
Love Me Tender
Please, Mr. Sun
Blue Moon
Penny Is Seventeen
What Did They Do Before Rock 'N Roll

Sunday, June 2, 2024

Testing 1234 Project 3 Total Sound / Popular Science Monthly

 

Testing 1234

Testing 1234
Project 3 Total Sound / Popular Science Monthly
Produced by Enoch Light
Associate in Production: Ronald M. Benrey, Electronics Editor, Popular Science Monthly
Technical consultant to Project 3: William M. Klages
Cover Art: Charles E. Murphy
The Total Sound PR201SD
1967

Peter Roberts, whose voice you hear throughout this recording, is a well known radio and television announcer and newsman. He served for many years as a host on NBC's weekend Monitor program and now shares New York City's most popular morning radio program, Rambling with Gambling on WOR, with John Gambling.

William M. Klages, who produced the technical tests, is technical consultant to Project 3 Records. Currently on the National Broadcasting Company's television engineering staff, he has been prominent in audio-visual fields for 20 years.

Side One
Introduction
Channel Identification
Phasing
Channel Balance
Introduction To Frequency Response
Test Frequencies 
Acoustical Test
Low Frequency Tracking
Rumble And Noise
Standard Pitch "A"

Side Two
Orchestral Sound Line, presenting the normal range of the large "pops" recording orchestra
Percussion Party Line, featuring tympani drums, bongos, bells, organ, Fender bass and guitar
Stereophonic Strings, the warm, exciting tonality of double bass, cellos, violas and violins
Guitar Underground, seven guitars with the Now Sound, playing Georgy Girl
Twenty-One Trombones, revealing the dramatic, demanding emotional impact of twenty-one of the world's greatest trombonists, playing Here's That Rainy day
Tara Theme, full large "pops" orchestral expose

Woody Herman's Big New Herd At The Monterey Jazz Festival

 

Skylark

Woody Herman's Big New Herd
At The Monterey Jazz Festival
Supervision: Nesuhi Ertegun
Recording Engineer: Tom Dowd
Cover Photo: Sam & Jim Vestal
Atlantic 1328
1960

Woody Herman - Alarinet & Alto Sax
Zoot Sims, Bill Perkins & Richie Kamuca - Tenor Saxes
Don Lanphere - Alto & Tenor Saxes
Med Flory - Baritone Sax
Al Porcino, Bill Candoli, Ray Linn & Frank Huggins - Trumpets
Bill Chase, Urbie Green, Sy Zentner & Bill Smiley - Trombones
Vic Feldman - Piano & Vibraharp
Charlie Byrd - Guitar
Monty Budwig - Bass
Mel Lewis - Drums

From the back cover: One of the most impressive things about the 1959 Monterey Jazz Festival (which was in itself a pretty impressive affair, as witness the reviews) was the Festival orchestra put together especially to function as a workshop orchestra during the week preceding the Festival and, during the actual three days of the Festival, to double as the Woody Herman Festival Herd and the workshop band (augmented  by various soloists and members of the San Francisco Symphony).

It was a long, hard week of work for the musicians. Rehearsals morning, noon and night; literally. And when the first evening concert – Friday – began with the Chris Barber band and Ottilie Patterson singing the blues, the latecomers walking down to the Festival arena passed by the rehearsal hall and heard the Woody Herman Festival Herd wailing away through the numbers heard on this album. They had volunteered an extra rehearsal "for Woody."

On Saturday afternoon the Herman band played under the blazing Monterey sun, interrupted occasionally by the roar of a low-flying civilian plane (the Air Force and the Navy gallantly re-routed their fliers but nobody could control the casual civilian). "I'm beginning to hate him," Woody remarked as the particularly annoying small plane flew over for the umpteenth time during the set.

Part of the program on Saturday afternoon and again on Saturday evening consisted of a set by the Herman Herd ("I wish I could take this band on the road!" Woody said, and everyone agreed it was one of the greatest bands Woody had ever stood before). It was recorded by Atlantic, both afternoon and evening, when the Monterey sun was replaced by the cold, foggy breeze from the Pacific and the spectators, who that afternoon were wearing Bavarian shots and sun glasses, were wrapped in blankets, ski boots and wool caps.

Saturday night the Lambert-Hendricks-Ross Trio sang out an introduction for the Herman band. Woody turned around to the 19 men and yelled, "Bow Bow! Bow! Bow!" and they roared into Four Brothers. It was the classic Herman chart written by Jimmy Giuffre for the legendary Second Herd (the one with Stan and Zoot and Serge and Herbie Steward). It's been in the books for over ten years, played practically every night. "The sheets are all dog-eared," Mel Lewis noted. But oddly enough this is only the second time Herman has recorded it. The solos this time (first time around) are by Zoot Sims, Med Flory (bariton), Bill Perkins and Richie Kamuca. Then at the end, it's Perkins, Zoot, Richie and Med. They follow the short Woody Herman bit ("After all he is our dad," Jon Hendricks wrote).

Like Some Blues Man is from the afternoon session. You'll hear Woody's high-flying friend roaring around upstairs. "He'll be gone in a minute," Woody hopefully remarked. He wasn't Vic Feldman starts this one with a vibes solo, you hear some delightful Conti Candoli trumpet, a Bill Perkins tenor solo, Urbie Green on trombone and Charlie Byrd on guitar (he was one of the hits of the Festival) and at the end the airplane buzzes the band again! The tune was written and arranged by Ted Richards whose work whose unmistakable evidence of his close collaboration in the past with Gene Roland.

Skoobeedoobee ("from the picture 'Sal Mineo in Purgatory'," Woody introduced it) is also from the afternoon session and has Vic Feldman on piano. Vic almost didn't get to play at all at Monterey. At the opening rehearsal he stepped forward to speak to Woody and slipped and fell off the bandstand and hurt his knee. Not too seriously, luckily. Zoot Sims and Urbie Green – and Woody too – have solo spots and I am particularly fond of the explosions by Mel Lewis at the end. Mel, incidentally, never worked with Woody before "although I always wanted to," he says. Most of the others had, and Conti Condoli, Urbie, Richie, Zoot, Perk and Med Flory especially were veterans of other Herman bands. Don Lanphere and Bill Chase were from Woody's most recent band. This is another Ted Richards opus.

Monterey Apple Tree got a beautifully "in" introduction by Woody. "It's a very old tune of ours," he said, "and this year we're changing the title because I feel it's only fair to the fellas that are going to play it and also the listeners – this year we're gonna call it Monterey Apple Tree." Almost everybody gets into the act on this one and towards the end there's a find exchange of statements between tenor Don Lanphere and baritone Med Flory.

Skylark, an arrangement by Ralph Burns, is a vehicle for the lyric trombone of Urbie Green and Urbie is also featured on Magpie which closed the LP. This was written by Joseph Mark, a cousin of Al Cohn who contributed so many compositions to the Herman book over the years.

These were exciting session and we're lucky they came out so well on tape and could be preserved for our enjoyment. Recording outdoors is hazardous, but this LP is one of the more successful of this sort of thing, in my opinion. It's hard to separate the memories and listen objectively to the music in a situation like this. Monterey 1959 was one of the greatest musical experiences of my life and, it would seem, that of a lot of other people. Musicians like J. J. Johnson, Mel Lewis and Woody Herman apparently feel the same way. ("I'll be back even if I'm not working it," Mel says).

The reviews were almost unanimous in praise. "This one's for jazz," Down Beat Gene Lees said and added, "Monterey... made previous jazz festivals look like grab bags, musical potpourris that do not compare with the smoothly purposeful and thought-provoking Monterey Festival. " Annie Ross commented, "It's actually inspiring to get out here and find people working like this." After reading off a list of things to be corrected next year, musical consultant John Lewis said, "It's only the best Festival ever!" Gunther Schuller wrote, "The musicians are both pleased and surprised. They are treated with respect, warm and even reverence." All of this colors my listening to this LP, I frankly admit.

Monterey was a gas for musicians and fans alike. That it was, is a tribute to the planning of Jimmy Lyons, the founder and moving force behind the Festival, and John Lewis who served  (without fee, incidentally) as musical consultant.

As for me, I was grateful to them then for the exhilarating program. I'm grateful now that Atlantic has preserved this portion of it for our future pleasure. If it gives you one tenth the pleasure it has already given me, it will be a success. – Ralph J. Gleason

From Billboard - June 6, 1960: Some of the color and excitement of the Monterey Festival is caught here in six numbers which include "Four Brothers," "Like Some Blues Man," and "Skylark." Woody has a group of fine musicians here – the group which doubled as the Festival's workshop ork during the week preceding the event. Ralph Gleason has written a set of informative notes, which also reflect the spirit of the Festival.

Four Brothers
Like Some Blues Man
Skoobeedoobee
Monterey Apple Tree
Skylark
The Magpie

The Swingin' Benny Goodman Sextet

 

You're Gonna Lose Your Gal

The Swingin' Benny Goodman Sextet
Cover Photo: Arnold Newman
Harmony Columbia HL 7278
1960

From Billboard - November 14, 1960: This is a rather weak collection of sides by B.G., but his name value should help it sell on racks. This presents the Goodman Sextet in its middle-'50's period, with vocals by Benny himself. Tunes include "Four Or Five Times," "Oh Baby," "Walkin' With The Blues" and "Bye Bye Blues."

Four Or Five Times
I've Got A Feeling I'm Falling
Oh Babe
Walkin'
Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
Bye Bye Blues
You're Gonna Lose Your Gal
Walkin' With The Blues
Doodle-Lee-Yoo-Doo