Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All Stars
Live In The Solo Spotlight
By the end of 1952 Howard Rumsey had transformed a small local bar in Hermosa Beach, California into a name known around the world. The Lighthouse became the centerpiece of the West Coast Jazz scene and the Lighthouse All-Stars became international jazz celebrities. Situated just a few yards from the beach with the cool ocean breeze and the smell of salt water in the air, it was the picture perfect setting for what would become known as "West Coast Jazz".
But that wasn't always the case.
In 1949 when Howard first came upon the Lighthouse there wasn't anything about it that would foresee it's future success. It was small and dingy, primarily catering to a rough merchant seaman crowd and it was close to going out of business.
Howard suggested to owner John Levine that he try putting on a jazz jam session on Sunday afternoons. The Lighthouse had been having live music with a variety of local musicians but it hadn't made much of an impact, plus in 1949 it was universally accepted that Sunday was the worst day of the week for the liquor business. Luckily, Levine was a gambler and figured he didn't have anything to lose at that point, so on May 29, 1949 Howard presented his first Sunday session at the Lighthouse and recalled "We propped open the doors and started blasting and within an hour we had more people in the place than Levine had seen all week".
The success of that first Sunday established the weekly Sunday Jam Session policy and became a tradition that helped catapult the Lighthouse into it's role as the center of West Coast Jazz.
Over the next couple of years Howard was able to replace the merchant seaman crowd with college age kids coming in off the beach to hear the live jazz and Sundays continued to be the featured attraction. The sessions started in the afternoon and ran until 2 in the morning. The Lighthouse All-Stars served as the core group with different guest musicians sitting in each week. The guest artists ran the gamut from local up and coming artists to established stars including big name out of town visitors.
This disc features guest artists captured live with the All-Stars by Bob Andrews and Donald Dean, two local jazz fans who frequented the Lighthouse with their tape recorders. The sound quality varies from track to track and while not professional recordings they are extremely important historical documents of those Sundays in Hermosa Beach and we are happy to be able to share them with you. All of the recordings are previously unissued. *Ken Poston (from the liner notes, 2014)*
About The Lighthouse Cafe:
A couple of years ago, Howard Rumsey, one of the original Kentonites (bass), would have been rated by most as washed up with the music business. He had taken a job as tile setter and was glad to be heading a little combo on Sunday afternoons at the Lighthouse café in Hermosa Beach, a small beach town about 45 minutes from Hollywood.
Today, thanks mainly to Howard's constructive, intelligent job of developing and presenting, with the cooperation of the management, a sound, CONSISTENT, policy, the Lighthouse has become virtually a full-time operation with a notable group of musicians holding the stand Wednesday through Sunday.
The Sunday sessions start at 2 p.m. and run to midnight, with special guest stars (paid—not just “sitting in” and blasting without purpose) appearing from 2 to 6 p.m.
The payoff is that it is paying off—and big. Business has been consistently good, even during the past winter (off-season at beach towns) and the place is so packed all day Sundays you have to get there early to get a seat near the bandstand. The fact that the drinks are good, prices are reasonable, and nobody gets hustled is an important factor. Says Howard, in summing up:
"The things that make us happy is that the crowds we are drawing, aren't full of these so-called 'hipsters' and queer characters so often associated with our kind of music. I think we’re getting what you might call a good cross section of that 'general public' that's supposed to shy away from good music, just as, I think, musicians are inclined to shy away from the 'general public'. There’s a mental hazard there on both sides. We've managed to cross it on a kind of imaginary bridge".
*Hal Holly, "The Hollywood Beat", Down Beat, August 24, 1951*
Fortunately for fans of Jazz on the West Coast and for posterity, Bob Andrews and Donald Dean, two local Jazz devotees, frequented the Lighthouse with their tape recorders and some of what they recorded has been issued on CD under the auspices of the Los Angeles Jazz Institute headed up by Ken Poston.
The sound quality varies from track to track and while not professional recordings they are extremely important historical documents of those Sundays in Hermosa Beach. All of the recordings are previously unissued. *Steven A. Cerra*
1 - Love Me Or Leave Me
(Walter Donaldson, Gus Kahn)
Art Pepper (alto sax); Doug Mettome, Shorty Rogers (trumpets);
Hampton Hawes (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass); Shelly Manne (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, June 3 (or 10), 1951
2 - Blue Moon
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
Maynard Ferguson (trumpet), Frank Patchen (piano),
Howard Rumsey (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, 1952
3 - Stuffy
(Coleman Hawkins)
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Shorty Rogers (trumpet), Bob Cooper (tenor sax),
Frank Patchen (piano), Howard Rumsey (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, June 14, 1952
4 - Scrapple From The Apple
(Charlie Parker)
Stan Getz, Arno Marsh (tenor saxes); Shorty Rogers (trumpet); Milt Bernhart (trombone);
Hampton Hawes (piano); Charlie Drayton (bass); Larry Bunker (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, September 14, 1952
5 - Indiana
(Warne Marsh)
Warne Marsh (tenor sax), Frank Patchen (piano),
Howard Rumsey (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, December 14, 1952
6 - Perdido
(Juan Tizol)
Harry "Sweets" Edison, Shorty Rogers (trumpets); Jimmy Giuffre (tenor sax);
Milt Bernhart (trombone); Hampton Hawes (piano);
Howard Rumsey (bass); Shelly Manne (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, February 8, 1953
7 - Maid In Mexico
(Russ Freeman)
Chet Baker, Rolf Ericson (trumpets); Bud Shank (alto sax); Jimmy Giuffre (tenor sax);
Russ Freeman (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass); Max Roach (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, September 13, 1953
8 - Everything Happens To Me
(Matt Dennis, Tom Adair)
Jack Sheldon (trumpet), Claude Williamson (piano),
Howard Rumsey (bass), Max Roach (drums).
Lighthouse Cafe, March 7, 1954
9 - Toots Sweete (Suite)
(Bill Holman)
Bob Cooper, Zoot Sims (tenor saxes); Bud Shank (alto sax);
Stu Williams (trumpet); Frank Rosolino (trombone);
Claude Williamson (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass); Stan Levey (drums);
Lighthouse Cafe, March 7, 1954












