Search This Blog

Friday, June 19, 2026

Five-Star Collection... The Concert Jazz Band (I)

In late 1960, Gerry Mulligan shaped one of the most ambitious projects of his career: the Concert Jazz Band, an orchestra that, in the midst of the economic decline of big bands, openly defied the market conditions of the jazz scene at the time. Far from any retrospective gesture, the ensemble proposed a reformulation of modern orchestral language, transferring to the expanded format the principles of textural clarity, counterpoint, and interaction that Mulligan had developed in his pianeless formations since the early 1950s.
The initial support of the project was made possible thanks to an agreement with Norman Granz, producer of Verve Records, who guaranteed the financial backing necessary to keep an orchestra of these characteristics active. Within this framework, and in a remarkably brief span of time —between May 1960 and December 1961—, the Concert Jazz Band established the complete core of its discographic production.
In chronological order, this corpus can be reconstructed from five titles that are considered the main body of work of the orchestra:
The Concert Jazz Band — sessions from May and July 1960 in New York, Gerry Mulligan and the Concert Jazz Band on Tour — recordings from the October–November 1960 tour in the United States and Europe, Gerry Mulligan and the Concert Jazz Band at the Village Vanguard — recorded on December 11, 1960 in New York, Gerry Mulligan Presents a Concert in Jazz — sessions from July 1961 at Webster Hall, and Gerry Mulligan '63 — recorded in December 1962.
Viewed in this way, the project appears as a complete arc that coordinates studio, tour, and live documentation, allowing one to follow the evolution of the ensemble from its initial formulation to its point of maximum elaboration.
This artistic development, however, was abruptly interrupted by non-musical factors. Granz's sale of Verve to MGM put an end to the financing scheme that made the orchestra viable, forcing its dissolution shortly after the 1961 sessions, at the very moment when the group had reached its highest degree of cohesion and aesthetic definition.
Contemporary critical reception not only accompanied this process, but also consecrated it. In the pages of DownBeat magazine, three of these recordings obtained the maximum rating of five stars: the debut album The Concert Jazz Band, reviewed by Don DeMicheal in the December 8, 1960 issue; the live recording at the Village Vanguard; and Gerry Mulligan '63, whose assessment underscores the level of integration achieved by the orchestra in its final stage. Read together, these reviews trace a sort of critical arc that accompanies the trajectory of the group: from the initial affirmation of its viability, through the confirmation of its effectiveness live, to its consecration as one of the most accomplished orchestral achievements of modern jazz.
In that sense, the Concert Jazz Band asserts itself as one of the most unique orchestral formulations of its time, and one of the last great reformulations of the big band language in 20th-century jazz; although its existence was brief, the recordings it left behind still allow us today to perceive, with remarkable clarity, the creative impulse that gave it birth.
Without prejudice to focusing later on the two remaining productions that complete this corpus, let us dedicate the next three entries to examining the albums from this pentalogy that were honored by DownBeat magazine with its highest rating...


Gerry Mulligan
The Concert Jazz Band

In deciding on the instrumentation for the new band that makes its album debut here, Gerry Mulligan says: "I wanted the same clarity of sound and interplay of lines that I had in the smaller groups. 
"We have a clarinet in the reed section, not primarily for a clarinet-lead effect but for a sound contributing to the ensemble in general. As for the soloists, I wanted to use just a few men for the bulk of the solo work, so that they would be heard enough for the audience to become familiar to their styles."
What he has built, says Gerry, is essentially a concert band —a jazz band for listening— and it was on this premise that the band's first tour was arranged by Norman Granz for the fall of 1960. 
Further words are unnecessary. The album delivers its own exciting message: that this is the best new jazz orchestra of the year. *Leonard Feather (from the liner notes)*

Big bands in jazz have generally been of two sorts. The first reflects the thinking of such men as Fletcher Henderson and Don Redman, that of three sections –brass, reeds, rhythm –working as individual units within the whole, sometimes together, other times in opposition or in response to each other. While this concept is definitely tied to early jazz, it has stronger affiliations with brass bands and European music; and while there is room for individual contributions in the form of solos, the main emphasis is on group cohesion. The arranger is the controller. The major function of such bands is to provide dance music.
The other big-band concept stems from the thinking of Duke Ellington. The three sections are present as in the other, and the arranger is still important. But the individual members are not subservient to either section or pen. The part must fit the man, not vice versa. The spirit is that of a small jazz group, although the context is that of a big band. The brilliance and colors of numerous instruments can be achieved when desired, but –and this is the crucial difference between the two concepts –the creativity, freedom, and interaction of individuals found in small groups is retained. Such bands produce music the primary function of which is to stimulate the listener's ear, not his feet.
The Mulligan band is firmly in the Ellington camp. It is not an Ellington imitation, though Sweet and Low is a deep bow in Duke's direction, but reflects the feel, the spirit of Ellington –the feel, the spirit of small group jazz.
More specifically, it is an extension and expansion of Mulligan's concept as we've come to know it through his quartet and sextet: the combination of extremes –simplicity with complexity, cool intellectualism with hot-blooded emotion, sophistication with guts.
Because of these many facets and of the variety of emotional experience the band offers, I feel this is the most important big band in jazz today. (In person the impact of the band is even greater than on this album. It is unfortunate that Mulligan intends to disband, but the band is scheduled to reorganize later in 1961.)
It is not a blasting band; in many ways it is reminiscent of the Claude Thornhill Band when Gil Evans was writing for it. Attention is paid to blend, control, and dynamics. By using another baritone in the sax section, Mulligan retains fulness behind his solos. The brass is usually voiced close, giving it a subdued, almost muffled sound. Even in the shout choruses the brass keeps it head and depth.
Lewis and Clark, the rhythm section on all but one track and the one that toured with the band, are superlative. The rhythm is always firm yet never too tight. These two are the source of the band's relaxation. They push the whole band but do it unobtrusively. What Lewis plays fits so well and logically that at times the listener might miss his contribution, but on careful listening, you realize he's kicking everybody. Lewis is the Dave Tough of his time –a drummer felt more than heard.
The main soloists on the record are Mulligan, Brookmeyer, and Sims.
Mulligan builds his solos with more care than he has in some time. Each phrase relates to the next; each solo is like a story. He plays well on all tracks, but his most touching work is on Valentine and the lovely Django Reinhardt ballad Manoir de Mes Reves.
Brookmeyer's playing is the best I've heard him do. He seems to have found his true element in this band. Wit and melodiousness he always had, but here there's a fire that wasn't burning so brightly in the past. He has a gusty, burry, wonderful solo on his own arrangement of Advantage; in one place his fill over the saxes is nothing but a breathy slur –no brass sound, just breath.
Sims hasn't as much blowing room on the record as he has in person –he doesn't play in the section but is featured on a couple of tunes each set –but he has a meaty solo on Bweebida Bobbida.
This is one of the best records of 1960.
*Don DeMicheal (Down Beat, December 8, 1960 [5 stars])*

Side 1
1 - Sweet And Low
(Harry Warren, Al Dubin)
2 - Bweebida Bobbida
(Gerry Mulligan)
3 - Manoir De Mes Rêves (Django's Castle)
(Django Reinhardt)
4 - You Took Advantage Of Me
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)

Side 2
5 - Out Of This World
(Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
6 - My Funny Valentine
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
7 - Broadway
(Henry Woode, Teddy McRae, Bill Bird)
8 - I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
(Duke Ellington, Peggy Lee)

Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Conte Candoli, Nick Travis (trumpets [#1 to #7]);
Don Ferrara, Danny Stiles, Phil Sunkel (trumpets [#8];
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone);
Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone); Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet);
Zoot Sims[#1 to #7], Jim Reider [#8] (tenor saxes); Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); 
Buddy Clark [#1 to #7], Bill Tackus [#8] (basses):
Mel Lewis [#1 to #7], Dave Bailey [#8] (drums).
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, New York City, May 21 [#8],
July 25 [#1 to #4] and July 27 [#5 to #7], 1960

✤✤✤✤

For those who prefer the digital version of the Concert Jazz Band's debut album, there are several options. One of them is the one presented by the Poll Winners Records label titled The Concert Jazz Band • The First Album.
This edition brings together the complete original Gerry Mulligan LP, The Concert Jazz Band (Verve V6-8388), which marked the discographic debut of this extraordinary big band formation. Its tracks feature the presence of stellar figures such as Zoot Sims, Bob Brookmeyer, Conte Candoli, Gene Quill, Mel Lewis, and, of course, Mulligan himself. As a bonus, the disc incorporates all surviving tunes from the band’s second studio session —recorded in between the three sessions that made up the original LP—, as well as three tracks recorded live in Milan, four months after completing the album.


Gerry Mulligan
The Concert Jazz Band
The First Album

1 - Sweet And Low
(Harry Warren, Al Dubin)
2 - Bweebida Bobbida
(Gerry Mulligan)
3 - Manoir De Mes Rêves (Django's Castle)
(Django Reinhardt)
4 - You Took Advantage Of Me
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
5 - Out Of This World
(Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
6 - My Funny Valentine
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
7 - Broadway
(Henry Woode, Teddy McRae, Bill Bird)
8 - I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
(Duke Ellington, Peggy Lee)
9 - I Know, Don't Know How
(Gerry Mulligan)
10 - Barbara's Theme
(Johnny Mandel)
11 - Sweet And Slow (first version)
(Harry Warren, Al Dubin)
12 - Out Of This World (first version)
(Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
13 - Go Home (live in Milan, 1960)
(Ben Webster)
14 - Apple Core (live in Milan, 1960)
(Gerry Mulligan)
15 - Barbara's Theme (live in Milan, 1960)
(Johnny Mandel)

#1 to #8:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Conte Candoli, Nick Travis (trumpets [#1 to #7]);
Don Ferrara, Danny Stiles, Phil Sunkel (trumpets [#8]);
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone);
Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone); Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet);
Zoot Sims[#1 to #7], Jim Reider [#8] (tenor saxes); Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); 
Buddy Clark [#1 to #7], Bill Tackus [#8] (basses):
Mel Lewis [#1 to #7], Dave Bailey [#8] (drums).
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, New York City, May 21 [#8],
July 25 [#1 to #4] and July 27 [#5 to #7], 1960

#9, #10, #11, #12:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Danny Stiles, Phil Sunkel (trumpets);
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone); Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone);
Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet); Jim Reider (tenor sax);
Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); Bill Tackus (bass); Dave Bailey (drums).
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, New York City, June 1, 2 and 3, 1960

#13, #14, #15:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Conte Candoli, Nick Travis (trumpets);
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone); Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone);
Bob Donovan (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet); Zoot Sims, Jim Reider (tenor saxes);
Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); Buddy Clark (bass): Mel Lewis (drums).
Recorded live at Teatro Lirico, Milan, Italy, November 14, 1960

Sunday, June 14, 2026

Lighthouse All-Stars Collection XXV ★ with Gerry Mulligan

Gerry Mulligan
Swing House
Gerry Mulligan On The West Coast 
Rare Ands Unissued Recordings • 1952

✤✤

More Mulligan at The Lighthouse

At the end of 1951, fleeing police pressure in New York, Gerry Mulligan embarked on a journey to the West Coast that would permanently reshape his career and the sound of modern jazz. Freshly arrived in Los Angeles, the saxophonist split his creative focus between commercial discipline—crafting dance arrangements for the Stan Kenton Orchestra—and the absolute freedom of the local club scene. It was in these informal settings that the passion and tape recorder of Bob Andrews captured, on an amateur yet historically invaluable basis, the very jam sessions that document Mulligan's transition toward worldwide acclaim and the birth of his legendary piano-less quartet. This crucial historical testament is beautifully captured by Ken Poston in the original liner notes:

At the end of 1951 Gerry Mulligan decided to leave New York and head west to Los Angeles. The vice squad had started putting heavy pressure on jazz musicians and Gerry didn’t want to put up with it any longer. His girlfriend, Gale Madden, had paved the way for Gerry to write arrangements for Stan Kenton once they got to Los Angeles. In the middle of the winter they left Manhattan and hitchhiked all the way to the west coast.
Once there they moved into the Harvey Hotel and Gerry fulfilled his writing assignment for Kenton. He also began sitting in around town at whatever jam sessions he could find. There were three places in particular that he frequented; the Showtime, in the San Fernando Valley, the Lighthouse in Hermosa Beach and the Haig in the mid-Wilshire district.
Most of the recordings on this collection were made by Bob Andrews, jazz fan, record store owner and amateur recording engineer. In 1952 he had just started to take his tape recorder to local jazz clubs and although nothing has materialized from the Showtime he did capture Gerry Mulligan several times at the Lighthouse and the Haig. In addition to the jam session recordings we’ve included a few of the lesser heard dance arrangements he wrote for Kenton in 1952.
This is an important historical document because it captures Gerry just a few months after his arrival in Los Angeles and follows his progress up to the point he forms the piano-less quartet. Although he had many accomplishments by the time he came to Los Angeles, he was far from a household name in the jazz world. By the end of the year he had gained world wide attention and was instrumental in establishing the west coast jazz phenomenon.
*Ken Poston (from the liner notes)*

1 - Indiana
(James F. Hanley, Ballard MacDonald)
This is the earliest of the Bob Andrews recordings that captured Gerry Mulligan sitting in around Los Angeles. This was actually recorded on a Saturday night and features Mulligan joining the Lighthouse rhythm section.
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Frank Patchen (piano)
Howard Rumsey (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, May 10, 1952

2 - Robbins' Nest
(Illinois Jacquet, Sir Charles Thompson)
"Robbins' Nest" features Mulligan sitting in with the Lighthouse All Stars at one of the legendary Sunday sessions at the Lighthouse.
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Shorty Rogers (trumpet);
Jimmy Giuffre, Bob Cooper (tenor saxes); Frank Patchen (piano);
Howard Rumsey (bass); Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, June 1, 1952

3 - Tiny's Blues
(Tiny Kahn)
Two nights later Mulligan was running the off-night jam session at the Haig and on this occasion Gerry played the tenor as opposed to the baritone. Tiny's Blues has been issued a few times over the years but always with the incorrect date. This recording comes from Bob Andrews original reel which has the recording date documented on the box.
Gerry Mulligan, Dave Pell (tenor saxes), Ted Ottison (trumpet);
Paul Smith (piano); Joe Mondragon (bass); Billy Wilson (drums).
Recorded live at The Haig, Los Angeles, June 3, 1952

4 - Rose Room
(Art Hickman, Harry Williams)
Bob Andrews captured Gerry once again the following week at the Haig. Gerry ran things from the bandstand but it was an open session for anyone who wanted to play. On this particular occasion both Conrad Gozzo and Gene Roland dropped by.
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Conrad Gozzo, Gene Roland (trumpets);
Jimmy Rowles (piano); Howard Roberts (guitar); Joe Mondragon (bass); Unknown (drums).
Recorded live at The Haig, Los Angeles, June 10, 1952

5 - It's Sand Man
(Ed Lewis)
The jam sessions at the Lighthouse worked a little different than those at the Haig. Howard Rumsey invited specific guests although he did allow others to sit in throughout the day. This is the working Lighthouse All Stars with Andy Lambert subbing for Rumsey.
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Shorty Rogers (trumpet),
Jimmy Giuffre (tenor sax), Milt Bernhart (trombone),
Frank Patchen (piano), Andy Lambert (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, June 14, 1952

6 - Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea
(Harold Arlen, Ted Koehler)
More from the June 14 session. Aaron Sachs and Tommy Potter were both in town with Earl Hines band and Howard recruited them to come down for the session.
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Aaron Sachs (clarinet),
Jimmy Giuffre (tenor sax), Frank Patchen (piano),
Tommy Potter (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, June 14, 1952

7 - Get Happy / Utter Chaos
(Harold Arlen, Ted Koehler / Gerry Mulligan)
Red Norvo came in as the featured attraction and the house piano was put into storage. Instead of continuing the jam session format on Tuesday nights Gerry formed his own group and the "piano-less quartet" was born. Gerry handpicked the group from musicians he had played with around town and included Chet Baker at the suggestion of Bob Whitlock. This recording was not made by Bob Andrews, but by another fan that sent the tape to Mulligan many years later. August 1952 is the date written on the tape box although it's possible it comes from a bit later. If it is August of 1952 it would be right at the beginning of the quartet.
Gerry Mulligan Quartet:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Chet Baker (trumpet),
Bob Whitlock (bass), Chico Hamilton (drums).
Recorded live at The Haig, Los Angeles, August, 1952

8 - Bweebida Bobbida
(Gerry Mulligan)
In October of 1952 Shorty Rogers had been a regular member of the Lighthouse All Stars for a year. Shorty had recorded under his own name, separate from the All Stars, and was really beginning to make a name for himself. Howard Rumsey used to allow him to take nights off from the Lighthouse so he could lead his own band for special engagements. During the fall Shorty formed a super group that included both Mulligan and Chet Baker as well as Art Pepper and Wardell Gray. The Mulligan group had completed their first engagement at the Haig and recorded their first sides for the new Pacific Jazz label. This Shorty Rogers group did at least two engagements. The first was a Gene Norman concert at The Rendezvous Ballroom, which was released on two LAJI members only CDs. This engagement took place at the 5-4 Ballroom in south central Los Angeles.
Shorty Rogers and His Giants:
Shorty Rogers, Chet Baker (trumpets); Art Pepper (alto sax);
Wardell Gray (tenor sax); Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax);
John Graas (french horn); Hampton Hawes (p);
Joe Mondragon (bass); Lawrence Marable (drums).
Recorded live at 5-4 Ballroom, Los Angeles, October 10, 1952

9 - Too Marvelous For Words
(Richard A. Whiting, Johnny Mercer)
"Too Marvelous for Words" was featured a few times by the Kenton Orchestra including this 1952 broadcast of the Bob Snydor Show. The original handwritten score is dated February 4, 1952.
Stan Kenton Orchestra:
Buddy Childers, Maynard Ferguson, Conte Candoli, Don Dennis, Ruben McFall (trumpets);
Bob Burgess, Frank Rosolino, Keith Moon, Bill Russo (trombones);
George Roberts (bass trombone);  Dick Meldonian, Vinnie Dean (alto saxes);
Lee Elliott, Bill Holman (tenor saxes); Bob Gioga (baritone sax);
Stan Kenton (piano); Sal Salvador (guitar) Don Bagley (bass) Stan Levey (drums).
Bob Snydor Show, Bristol, Connecticut, July 13, 1952

10 - All The Things You Are
(Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein II)
"All the Things You Are" was featured regularly during the New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm period and was a feature for Buddy Childers. This recording comes from a Concert in Miniature broadcast from September of 1952. The original score is dated March 9, 1952.
Stan Kenton Orchestra:
Buddy Childers, Maynard Ferguson, Conte Candoli, Don Dennis, Ruben McFall (trumpets);
Bob Burgess, Frank Rosolino, Keith Moon, Bill Russo (trombones);
George Roberts (bass trombone); Lee Konitz, Vinnie Dean (alto saxes);
Bill Holman, Richie Kamuca (tenor saxes); Bob Gioga (baritone sax);
Stan Kenton (piano); Sal Salvador (guitar); Don Bagley (bass); Stan Levey (drums).
Concert in Miniature, Fort Sheridan, Illinois, September 2, 1952

11 - Dancing In The Dark
(Arthur Schwartz, Howard Dietz)
"Dancing in the Dark" wasn't played often but had stayed in the book for many years. It was one of the earliest arrangements Gerry wrote not long after his arrival in Los Angeles. The original score is dated January 19, 1952.
Stan Kenton Orchestra:
Jack Sheldon, Frank Higgins, Billy Catalano, Bob Ojeda, Bud Brisbois (trumpets);
Billy Smiley, Archie LeCoque, Kurt Larsen, Jim Amlotte, Bob Olson (trombones);
Steve Perlow, Bill Perkins, Lennie Niehaus, Bill Trujillo, Bill Robinson (reeds);
Stan Kenton (piano); Red Kelly (bass); Jerry McKenzie (drums).
Holiday Ballroom, Chicago, Illinois, October 10, 1958

12 - Where Or When
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
"Where or When" is another dance arrangement that stayed in the book for a long time. The original score is dated January 19, 1952.
Stan Kenton Orchestra:
Frank Huggins, Bud Brisbois, Rolf Ericson, Joe Burnett, Roger Middleton (trumpets);
Archie LeCoque, Kent Larsen, Jimmy Knepper (trombones);
Jim Amlotte, Bill Smiley (bass trombones); Lennie Niehaus (alto sax);
Bill Trujillo, John Bonnie (tenor saxes); Billy Root, Sture Swenson (baritone saxes);
Stan Kenton (piano); Scott LaFaro (bass); Jerry McKenzie (drums).
County Fair Building, Ukiah, California, February 26, 1959

13 - Begin The Beguine
(Cole Porter)
The original score to "Begin the Beguine" is dated March 1952. Gerry never said much about his dance charts for Kenton other than joking he was given "dogs work." He did however make special note of Begin the Beguine since Artie Shaw was one of his early idols.
Stan Kenton Orchestra:
Bud Brisbois, Dalton Smith, Bill Chase, Danny Nolan, Rolf Ericson (trumpets);
Bob Fitzpatrick, Kent Larsen, Bill Smiley (trombones);
Jim Amlotte, Bob Knight (bass trombones); Lennie Niehaus (alto sax);
Bill Trujillo, Ronnie Rubin (tenor saxes); Jack Nimitz, Marvin Holladay (baritone saxes);
Stan Kenton (piano); Peter Chivily (bass); Jimmy Campbell (drums); Mike Pacheco (percussion).
Enlisted Mens Club, Barstow, California, January 30, 1960

Wednesday, June 10, 2026

Lighthouse All-Stars Collection XXIV ★ Rarities at The Lighthouse

Los Angeles Jazz Institute 
Presents
West Coast Rarities

✤✤

Gerry Mulligan, Lennie Niehaus and Bud Shank at The Lighthouse

Apart from the unitary and official recordings that have been presented within the Lighthouse All-Stars collection, there are many stray private recordings that are gradually becoming known. One of them is this compendium with unreleased recordings compiled from original sources from the Los Angeles Jazz Institute archive.
Specifically, there are only three live recordings at the Lighthouse Cafe, although the others are of equal importance as they involve equally famous settings related to the West Coast Jazz movement of the 1950s.
Through this valuable material, which spans from 1952 to 1958, we witness the birth and consolidation of a vibrant musical scene in Southern California. The audio testimonies show us the inner history of its protagonists at key moments, such as a Gerry Mulligan newly arrived in the city and about to revolutionize the genre with his pianoless quartet, or the debut of Shorty Rogers' Big Band during an early morning television charity telethon.
The album also functions as a cartographic journey through the night spots that defined the era, taking the listener beyond the Lighthouse to enter jazz temples as legendary as The Haig, the Rendezvous Ballroom in Balboa, Zardi's, or the Peacock Lane, and even singular events like the grand opening of a record store. Likewise, the document highlights the close camaraderie and spirit of collaboration among West Coast musicians, fostering spontaneous summits where figures of the stature of Stan Getz joined established groups.
It is also worth noting the enormous logistical and historical value of some of these tracks, which document the famous off-nights at the Lighthouse, when on Mondays and Tuesdays the club opened its doors to guest ensembles such as the Lennie Niehaus Quintet. It should be noted that the recordings contained on this compact disc come from a variety of sources, some of which were recorded under non-professional conditions; however, the editors have rightly considered that the extreme rarity and unique character of these performances preclude and compensate for any flaws that the quality of the original sound may present.

1 - Elevation
(Gerry Mulligan)
At the time of this recording, Gerry Mulligan had been in Los Angeles for about five months but had yet to find regular work. He wrote some arrangements for Stan Kenton and participated in jam sessions all over town. This rare recording finds Mulligan, prior to the formation of his "pianoless" quartet, sitting in on one of the Sunday sessions at The Lighthouse.
Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet), Jimmy Giuffre (tenor sax), Bob Cooper (tenor sax),
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Frank Patchen (piano),
Howard Rumsey (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, June 1, 1952

2 - Move
(Denzil Best)
"Move" was recorded live at The Haig during one of the first appearances of the new Gerry Mulligan Quartet. The group played the four Tuesdays in August while the Red Norvo Trio was the featured attraction throughout the week. It was during these first Tuesday nights that the Quartet became a sensation prompting the formation of Pacific Jazz Records. Before long both Mulligan and Chet Baker would become major jazz stars.
The Gerry Mulligan Quartet:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Chet Baker (trumpet),
Bob Whitlock (bass), Chico Hamilton (drums).
Recorded live at the Haig, Los Angeles, August, 1952

3 - Short Snort
(Shorty Rogers)
This live concert, recorded at the Rendezvous Ballroom in Balboa, features a dream line-up put together by Shorty Rogers specifically for this date. A true summit meeting of the giants of West Coast jazz.
Shorty Rogers and His Giants:
Shorty Rogers, Chet Baker (trumpets); Art Pepper (alto sax);
Wardell Gray (tenor sax); Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax);
Bob Enevoldsen (valve trombone); Hampton Hawes (piano);
Joe Mondragon (bass); Lawrence Marable (drums).
Recorded live at the Rendezvous Ballroom, Balboa Beach, September 28, 1952

4 - Short Stop
(Shorty Rogers)
This television broadcast from 1953 marked the debut of Shorty Rogers Big Band. It comes from a 25 hour Cerebral Palsy telethon hosted by Jack Webb. The show began at 11pm on Friday night and continued until midnight Saturday. Jazz fans had to stay up late if they wanted to see Shorty's new big band. The jazz segment didn't get underway until 3 o'clock in the morning.
Shorty Rogers Big Band:
Shorty Rogers, Conrad Gozzo, Tommy Reeves, Reuben McFall (trumpets);
Jack Dulong, Bud Shank, Bill Perkins, Don Davidson (reeds);
Herbie Harper, Harry Betts, Bob Enevoldsen (trombones);
John Graas (french horn); Paul Sarmento (tuba);
Marty Paich (piano); Joe Mondragon (bass); Shelly Manne (drums)
Cerebral Palsy Telethon, KBCA Channel 7, Los Angeles, June 6, 1953

5 - The Goof and I
(Al Cohn)
"The Goof and I " was recorded live at the Grand Opening of Larsen's Record Room in El Segundo and features the swinging 1955 version of the All-Stars with that great front line of Candoli, Shank, Cooper and Rosolino.
Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars:
Conte Candoli (trumpet), Bud Shank (alto sax),
Bob Cooper (tenor sax), Frank Rosolino (trombone),
Claude Williamson (piano), Howard Rumsey (bass), Stan Levey (drums).
Recorded live at Larsen's Record Room, El Segundo, March 4, 1955

6 - Topsy
(Edgar Battle, Eddie Durham)
By 1955, Shorty Rogers was a very busy man. In addition to his ever growing studio work, the Giants had recently started recording for Atlantic Records and had also begun a long engagement at Zardi's Jazz Club on Hollywood Blvd. Shorty's boyhood friend from the Bronx, Stan Getz, was in Los Angeles at the time and is found here sitting in with the Giants.
Shorty Rogers and His Giants with Stan Getz:
Shorty Rogers (trumpet), Jimmy Giuffre (clarinet), Stan Getz (tenor sax),
Pete Jolly (piano), Ralph Pena (bass), Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at Zardi's, Hollywood, August 4, 1955

7 - Everybody Moan
(Ernie Wilkins)
Maynard Ferguson had spent the latter part of 1956 in New York with his Birdland Dream Band. After the Birdland engagement and subsequent recordings for Vik records he returned to Los Angeles and re-formed the West Coast Dream Band. That band was booked for the holidays at the Peacock Lane Club which was located at Hollywood Blvd. and Western Ave.
Maynard Ferguson and His Orchestra:
Maynard Ferguson, Ed Leddy, Joe Burnett, Tom Slaney (trumpets);
Herb Geller, Richie Kamuca, Nino Tempo, Willie Maiden (reeds);
Bob Fitzpatrick, Bob Burgess (trombones);
Paul Moer (piano); Red Kelly (bass); Mel Lewis (drums).
Recorded live at Peacock Lane, Hollywood, January 4, 1957

8 - Just Friends
(John Klenner, Sam M. Lewis)
By the late 1950s, The Lighthouse All-Stars worked Wednesday - Saturday plus the Sunday Concerts. Mondays and Tuesdays featured groups booked specifically for the off-nights. During the summer of 1957, the off night group was The Lennie Niehaus Quintet. This rare recording was made from the audience on one of those Monday or Tuesday nights.
The Lennie Niehaus Quintet:
Lennie Niehaus (alto sax), Bill Perkins (tenor sax),
Paul Moer (piano), Buddy Clark (bass), Mel Lewis (drums).
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, July, 1957

9 - Do Nothin' Till You Hear From Me / Theme
(Duke Ellington / Bud Shank)
During the holiday season of 1957-58 Bud Shank returned to the familiar surroundings of the Lighthouse this time leading his own successful Quartet. The quartet was captured here for the KMLA "Nightlife" program.
Bud Shank Quartet:
Bud Shank (alto sax), Claude Williamson (piano),
Don Prell (bass), Chuck Flores (drums).
KMLA "Nightlife" Broadcast
Recorded live at the Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, January 1, 1958

Friday, June 5, 2026

Lighthouse All-Stars Collection XXIII ★ with Zoot Sims (II)

Zoot Sims
Lover Man
Zoot Sims On The West Coast • 1954

The tireless search for recordings that complete the historical puzzle of the Lighthouse All-Stars occasionally yields major surprises. Although the bulk of this volume takes us to an intimate and domestic setting, its inclusion in our Lighthouse All-Stars Collection series is fully justified by an exceptional historical rescue: the presence of Zoot Sims, as a stellar guest, on the stage of the mythical club in Hermosa Beach.
Once again, the miracle is due to Bob Andrews, who, equipped with his now-famous home recorder and a single microphone, managed to record a unique moment in the history of West Coast Jazz. We find ourselves specifically on the night of March 9, 1954. That evening already possessed a historical character for the group itself, as it marked the debut of the legendary drummer Stan Levey in the lineup, occupying the seat just vacated by Max Roach. The All-Stars performed with one of their most powerful incarnations: the horn section aligned Bob Cooper, Bud Shank, Frank Rosolino, and Stu Williamson, complemented by Claude Williamson on piano and the indefatigable Howard Rumsey on double bass.
Andrews set up his microphone and recorded the session. In fact, our previous blog post covered the album Zoot Sims with The Lighthouse All-Stars • 1954, which captured the official session recorded the very next day. Toward the end of the night, Zoot Sims took the stage with his tenor sax to join the band.
Regarding this valuable piece, which appears in this edition under the title "Lighthouse Days," the producer of the release, Toshinari Shiroshita, offers us a fascinating chronicle of its nature and execution in the liner notes:

The titles of the songs performed changed depending on the occasion at the jam session, adopting names like "Groovy Eyes" or "Goof and I". For this edition, we preferred to use the title "Lighthouse Days", just as Andrews originally noted it in his personal memorandum.
The structure of the piece treats us to an impressive succession of solos in a strict order: it begins with Zoot Sims himself, followed by Stu Williamson, Bud Shank, Frank Rosolino, Bob Cooper, and finally, Claude Williamson on piano. The dynamism of the performance reaches its peak in the final chorus, where an extremely interesting exchange of bars breaks out between the drums and each of the soloists, preventing the piece from falling into a simple improvisation routine. Stan Levey's intervention, with a short but highly sharp and precise drum solo, is irrefutable proof that we are dealing with a first-rate instrumentist.

In terms of the five pieces that complete this album, while the Lighthouse recording is the magnet for completists of the series, the rest of the tracks that round out this volume do not envy its historical importance at all. These five instrumental tracks take us to a much more exclusive setting whose exact date remains a mystery, cataloged simply on an unknown day of that same year, 1954: the intimacy of the home.
As Toshinari Shiroshita himself comments in the insert notes:

This is a valuable record of a very unusual rehearsal session, recorded when Zoot Sims (1925–1985), whose activities took place mainly on the East Coast, returned to his parents' home in California (a town near the Los Angeles International Airport). This rehearsal session was released on LP in 1991 by the Norma label under the title Pinky and Zoot, but the 5 tracks with the addition of vocalist Pinky Winters were released on CD in 2010 as "Pinky +12". This Lover Man being released now is composed of the purely instrumental tracks (without Pinky's vocals) from that session, and includes an unreleased track that was not included in the Norma LP.
Regarding the musicians participating in tracks #1 to #5 at Zoot's house, isn't it true that, except for Zoot, they are musicians who have hardly been heard of? For Zoot, whose activities took place mainly on the East Coast, a session on the West Coast in the mid-1950s like this one is extremely rare, but the reality of the L.A. scene runs deep. It is said that musicians like Heale and Inosencio played in top-tier big bands such as those of Benny Goodman or Woody Herman... His tenor sax style is in the line of Lester Young, and his talent was not only recognized by West Coast musicians but also enjoyed high popularity in Europe.
Pianist Timmy Inosencio was a music teacher at an L.A. high school in his later years and, according to Pinky Winters, was the band instructor at the high school Pinky's eldest daughter attended around 1970. He was a talented jazz musician who, since his high school days, aspired to be a professional jazz pianist and had acquired a solid technique and a great sense of swing. It seems he was a gifted musician who confirmed early on that 'you can't make a living from jazz' and chose that path. Trumpeter Marvin 'Tricky' Heale was Zoot's cousin. John Dorman was erroneously credited on the Norma LP as a trombonist, but Pinky testifies that he was a bass trumpet player and had no blood relation to Irving. Bassist Jim Wolf was Pinky's husband at the time.

1 - Dancing On The Ceiling
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
2- Popo
(Shorty Rogers)
3 - These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
(Jack Strachey, Harry Link)
4 - I'll Remember April
(Don Raye, Gene DePaul, Pat Johnston)
5 - Lover Man
(Jimmy Davis, Roger Ramirez, Jimmy Sherman)
6 - Lighthouse Days
(Frank Patchen)

#1 to #5:
Zoot Sims (tenor sax), Marvin "Tootie" Hale (trumpet), John Dorman (bass trumpet),
Timothy "Timmy" Inocencio (piano), Jim Wolf (bass), Gary Hale (drums).
Recorded during a rehearsal at Zoot Sims' home, Inglewood, California, 1954
#6:
Zoot Sims, Bob Cooper (tenor saxes); Bud Shank (alto sax); 
Stu Williamson (trumpet); Frank Rosolino (trombone);
Claude Williamson (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass);  Stan Levey (drums).
Recorded live at The Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, California, March 9, 1954

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Lighthouse All-Stars Collection XXII ★ with Zoot Sims (I)

Zoot Sims
With
The Lighthouse All-Stars • 1954

As we near the end of our "Lighthouse All-Stars Collection" jazz series, which brings together official albums and exclusive private recordings of the emblematic ensembles led by Howard Rumsey, it is now the turn of Zoot Sims, the absolute protagonist of this album.

Although musical historiography frequently links him to the West Coast jazz movement, Sims developed the bulk of his activity in New York during the 1950s. In those years, the jazz environment humorously ironized that he only traveled to the West Coast when he ran out of money in New York. Regardless of these anecdotes, his figure consolidated an exceptional respect and affection among the public and jazz fans in Japan. This discographic record constitutes a magnificent testimony of one of his most successful historic collaborations alongside the Lighthouse All-Stars.

Released on February 25, 2009, this album represents the world premiere CD release of a precious and previously unreleased documentary document. The Lighthouse All-Stars comprised the musicians who had established themselves as regulars at the long-running California jazz club, centered around bassist Howard Rumsey. The recording captures a brilliant improvisation session (jam session) in which Zoot Sims intervenes as a special guest, integrating with the regular lineup. It is an indispensable sound document that preserves with absolute fidelity the vibrant energy, spontaneity, and swing characteristic of a golden era for jazz, standing out as a rare West Coast performance where the special guest takes the first solo on every single track. The album's track list is integrated by three tracks: Frank Patchen's original composition "Goofy Eyes", an impeccable reading of the standard "All The Things You Are", and Milt Jackson's iconic "Bags Groove".

1 - Goofy Eyes
(Frank Patchen)
2 - All The Things You Are
(Oscar Hammerstein II, Jerome Kern) 
3 - Bags Groove
(Milt Jackson)

Zoot Sims, Bob Cooper (tenor saxes); Bud Shank (alto sax);
Stu Williamson (trumpet [#2]); Frank Rosolino (trombone);
Claude Williamson (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass); Stan Levey (drums).
Recorded live at The Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, California, March 10, 1954

Friday, May 29, 2026

Five-Star Collection... Dizzy Gillespie

Dizzy Gillespie
Horn Of Plenty 

In the spring of 1952, as modern jazz continued to spread across Europe, Dizzy Gillespie returned to Paris already established as one of the central figures of modern music. The city had largely ignored him when, barely twenty years old, he first arrived in Europe with Teddy Hill's orchestra in 1937. But Paris could no longer ignore him during his second visit, in February 1948, when he caused one of the greatest upheavals jazz had ever known by unleashing the explosive force of his bebop big band upon an audience still largely unprepared for it. Whether through that brief but unforgettable adventure or through his decisive role in shaping the entire language of bebop, Dizzy's contribution ensured that jazz would never be the same again. His name had by then joined that small circle of fundamental figures who altered the course of jazz history.
When he returned to Europe in 1952 to appear at the Paris Salon du Jazz — his third trip to the continent — memories of the triumphs of his big band four years earlier were still deeply etched in the minds of French jazz enthusiasts. But the context had changed. The big band itself already belonged to the past, and bebop had moved beyond the shock of its first youthful explosion. Dizzy still had bop, but he also had roots: his style was beginning to mature into a broader synthesis, an amalgam of all his musical experience that hinted at a new kind of modern classicism.
It was in this atmosphere that Gillespie led a flexible Paris-based group including tenor saxophonist Don Byas, pianist Arnold Ross, and several French musicians such as Hubert and Raymond Fol, Pierre Michelot, and Pierre Lemarchand. The sessions — held on March 27 and April 11 at Parisian studios such as Jouvenet and the Schola Cantorum — were recorded for the Blue Star label, distributed by Vogue, which at the time was actively documenting the presence of major American jazz soloists in the French capital.
A year later, Blue Note Records, always alert to high-quality jazz being recorded outside the United States, acquired the American release rights to part of those recordings. Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff decided to include them in their 10-inch LP "5000 series", devoted to modern jazz in compact format. The result was Horn Of Plenty (BLP 5017), released in 1953 with eight performances combining standards such as "Sweet Lorraine", "Wrap Your Troubles in Dreams", and "Somebody Loves Me" with more recent pieces like "Afro-Paris".
Unlike most Blue Note productions of the period, there was no New York recording session and no direct supervision by Lion or Wolff; the material was licensed entirely from the French masters. This also explains the album's distinctive sound and the presence of European musicians throughout several of the performances. Blue Note issued the album with its characteristic graphic design but without liner notes, perhaps because the label had not participated directly in the recording process and lacked complete session details.
In retrospect, Horn of Plenty stands as a singular document within both Dizzy Gillespie's and Blue Note's catalogs: an early example of transatlantic collaboration that demonstrated the vitality of bebop far beyond its original birthplace. These Paris sessions captured Gillespie at a moment of artistic transition — more relaxed and reflective, surrounded by French colleagues and removed from the pressures of the big-band world — at a time when his music had already begun to assume an international dimension.

Cut in Paris a year ago, these were made at two dates. The numbers with four horns (Diz, Don Byas, Hubert Fol, Bill Tamper) have a French rhythm section (Raymond Fol, Pierre Michelot, Pierre Lemarchand); titles with smaller group have an American rhythm section (Arnold Ross, Joe Benjamin, Bill Clark). Lady Bird is the only title to make full use of an arrangement and of the French soloists (Hubert sounds like a boppish Benny Carter, Tamper like a Bill Harris). 
Although there are minor flaws (Dizzy's lip falters here and there; the rhythm section is logy on the last title) the overall impression is highly favorable. Rejecting comedy for the nonce, Diz played fine, sincere horn with true emotional content and melodic value. His one slow chorus on Lorraine, three choruses on Somebody and muted work on the fast, exciting minor Afro are especially effective. Don Byas is all over the place too, sounding like old times.
*Down Beat, Chicago, March 11, 1953 [5 stars]*

Side 1
1 - Sweet Lorraine
(Mitchell Parish, Cliff Burwell)
2 - Lady Bird
(Tadd Dameron)
3 - Hurry Home
(Buddy Bernier, Romert D. Emmerich, Joseph Meyer)
4 - Afro Paris
(Billy Taylor)

Side 2
5 - Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
(Harry Barris, Ted Koehler, Billy Moll)
6 - She's Funny That Way
(Neil Moret, Richard Whiting)
7 - Somebody Loves Me
(George Gershwin, Buddy G. De Sylva, Ballard MacDonald)
8 - Everything Happens To Me
(Matt Denis, Tom Adair)

#3, #4:
Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet), Don Byas (tenor sax), Arnold Ross (piano),
Joe Benjamin (bass), Bill Clark (drums), Umberto Canto (congas).
Recorded at Studio Jouvenet, Paris, France, March 27, 1952
#1, #2, #5, #6, #7, #8: 
Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet), Bill Tamper (trombone),
Hubert Fol (alto sax), Don Byas (tenor sax),
Raymond Fol (piano), Pierre Michelot (bass), Pierre Lemarchand (drums)
Recortded at the auditorium of the Schola Cantorum, Paris, France, April 11, 1952

✤✤✤✤

For those who prefer the digital versions of these recordings, the material originally issued by Blue Note as Horn of Plenty can be found in the second of the two volumes Vogue devoted to documenting Dizzy Gillespie's Parisian stay in 1952 and 1953. While this volume gathers the studio sessions recorded for the French label, the other focuses on the live performances documented during those same European visits.
The Vogue edition also offers several advantages over the original Blue Note LP: not only does it include performances omitted from Horn of Plenty, but also a number of alternate takes later recovered from the French archives. In this way, the listener gains access to a far more complete picture of Dizzy's Paris period, both in the studio and on stage.


Dizzy Gillespie
In Paris • Volume 2

Recording opportunities were not lacking for Dizzy and Vogue lured him into the studios twice within barely a fortnight. He recorded a total of twelve titles and included here are four previously unissued alternate takes. The first session took place on March 27th 1952 with Dizzy backed by the trio then accompanying Lena Horne at the Lido. Giving the main support was the very man who had been his fellow quintet member at the Onyx Club in 1944, tenor saxophonist (and now European resident) Don Byas. Afro Paris and Say Eh belong to Dizzy's Afro-bop and "oo-bop-sha-boo" side, while Hurry Home and I Cover the Waterfront are handled in a sober classical ballad style while still bringing endless unmistakably bop turns and inflections.
The April 11th session finds Dizzy playing with an open, vibrant and rich sound throughout, backed by Hubert Fol's prestigious quartet, with trombonist Bill Tamper and Don Byas mainly present to strengthen the ensemble voices. The programme opens with the erroneously titled Cripple Crapple Crutch, a dragging blues which Dizzy was to perform throughout the rest of his career. "I wouldn't give a blind sow an acorn, wouldn't give a cripple crab a crutch", he sings, and you can't get much crueller than that! Dizzy Song, Somebody Loves Me and Wrap Your Troubles (the latter in two takes) are taken at brisk medium tempos, while the other four titles are slow ballads which allow Dizzy to expand truly magnificently.
The following year Dizzy returned to Europe, this time with his own quintet and singer Joe Carroll. For the February 22nd 1953 Vogue studio session, whose eight titles include Joe Carroll's vibrant vocal on Clappin' Rhythm issued here for the first time, Nat Peck's trombone replaces Bill Graham's baritone saxophone. Dizzy again plays open throughout and produces some of the most fabulous trumpet solos one could wish to hear. This session has humour (the tongue-in-cheek quality of Always, 'S Wonderful and even Mon homme), bop surrealism in Joe Carroll's Oo-Bla-Dee, beauty (Moon Nocturne, This Is the Way), blues (Watch Out) and a constant natural swing. In short: excellent music, still completely contemporary forty years later.
*Don Waterhouse (from the liner notes)*

1 - Afro Paris
(Billy Taylor)
2 - Afro Paris
(Billy Taylor)
3 - Hurry Home
(Buddy Bernier, Romert D. Emmerich, Joseph Meyer)
4 - Hurry Home
(Buddy Bernier, Romert D. Emmerich, Joseph Meyer)
5 - Say Eh
(Dizzy Gillespie)
6 - Say Eh
(Dizzy Gillespie)
7 - I Cover the Waterfront
(Johnny Green, Edward Heyman)
8 - You Ain't Such a Much
(Pleasant Joseph)
9 - Dizzy Song (Lady Bird)
(Tadd Dameron)
10 - Somebody Loves Me
(George Gershwin, Buddy G. De Sylva, Ballard MacDonald)
11 - She's Funny That Way
(Neil Moret, Richard Whiting)
12 - Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
(Harry Barris, Ted Koehler, Billy Moll)
13 - Wrap Your Troubles In Dreams
(Harry Barris, Ted Koehler, Billy Moll)
14 - Sweet Lorraine
(Mitchell Parish, Cliff Burwell)
15 - Everything Happens to Me
(Matt Denis, Tom Adair)
16 - I Don't Know Why
(Roy Turk, Fred E. Ahlert)
17 - Always
(Irving Berlin)
18 - Mon Homme
(Maurice Yvain, Albert Willemetz)
19 - Clappin Rhythm
(Dizzy Gillespie)
20 - Fais Gaffe (Watch Out)
(Dizzy Gillespie)
21 - Moon Nocturne
(Nathaniel Shilkret)
22 - This Is the Way
(Dizzy Gillespie)
23 - 'S Wonderful
(George Gershwin)
24 - Oo-Bla-Dee
(Mary Lou Williams, Milt Orent)

Note:
The recording locations on the artwork are incomplete or incorrect
and are added to, or corrected, below:

#1 to #7:
Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet, vocal), Don Byas (tenor sax), Arnold Ross (piano),
Joe Benjamin (bass), Bill Clark (drums), Umberto Canto (congas).
Recorded at Studio Jouvenet, Paris, France, March 27, 1952
#8 to #16:
Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet, vocal), Bill Tamper (trombone), Hubert Fol (alto sax),
Don Byas (tenor sax), Raymond Fol (piano),
Pierre Michelot (bass), Pierre Lemarchand (drums).
Recortded at the auditorium of the Schola Cantorum, Paris, France, April 11, 1952
#17 to #24:
Dizzy Gillespie (trumpet, vocal [#19]), Nat Peck (trombone), Wade Legge (piano),
Lou Hackney (bass), Al Jones (drums), Joe Carroll (vocal [#24]).
Recorded at Studio Rex, Paris, France, February 22, 1953

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Five-Star Collection... Bill Evans and Jim Hall

Bill Evans & Jim Hall
Undercurrent

In June 1961, Bill Evans reached the pinnacle of jazz with his trio at New York's Village Vanguard. However, the euphoria was brutally cut short just days later by the tragic death of his bassist, Scott LaFaro. Devastated, Evans withdrew from the world and stopped playing for nearly a year. It was Jim Hall who gently pulled him out of the darkness. Undercurrent was that saving grace—a masterpiece born from raw healing and absolute creative empathy.
The visual gateway to this profound rebirth is one of the most hauntingly beautiful covers in jazz history. The striking image, captured by pioneering photographer Toni Frissell in December 1947 at Weeki Wachee Spring, Florida, depicts a performer suspended in crystalline waters like an underwater phantom. Her drifting white dress embodies the very essence of the album's title: a weightless, deep, and silent undercurrent that mirrors the quiet intensity of Evans' piano and Hall's guitar.
Yet, when turning over the sleeve of this deeply emotional and visual album, any collector expecting traditional, comforting liner notes is in for a shock. Instead, we run into a wonderful, cryptic anomaly titled "Wait Quickly", signed by the experimental writer Barry J. Titus.
Leaving the sacred jazz critics of the day aside, visionary producer Alan Douglas decided that this profound return to music shouldn't be explained, but rather translated into modern art. The result is a sharp literary fiction; a cross between hard-boiled pulp and William Burroughs' cut-up beat poetry, masterfully driven by the stream of consciousness technique immortalized by James Joyce in Ulysses.
Titus shatters syntax and discards punctuation, blending flashes of pure poetry with mundane, everyday thoughts—perhaps capturing the fragmented mind of a healing genius. Yet, through the apparent chaos, real clues from the studio remain: explicit mentions of the piano leg shadows ("piano leg shadows"), the instrument's keys ("fat ended keys"), and even the fetishized date of May 15th, 1959.
Do not look for linear logic here; this text has dated in a way the music never will, yet it remains a fascinating relic meant to be felt. Below, we share this visual and literary experiment for you to experience on your screen while letting the music play...

Rimmed iron wheels chew candy between tracks window smithers Xmas tree window silver money fleeing present unone given coca cola smiling blank wall perspires omens heads nodding close gaped lips seen stick stuck taxi sign disrobes May 15th, 1959, hanging about her knees mail bundle wheeled cripple clutches Read Wall Street clock white sun monocle IIV or VII long blink see eyes time? Appari-tional liquid hesitates a foot, a universe below the white paint-trussed varicose cieling. Liquid slips, drops, unoutlineable shape, presenting absence, glides unreal, an excuse for splattering focus, a school of Dolphins or a dark Grecian head. Virtu-oso: practice makes perfect. Two sharps. Ice crystal diamond egg frog oan wrkwrx-wrxwrx. Donned rubber belts nose mouth. Nub knuckled fingers bounce overfilled heat tear salt balling. Again. Two sharps: Ice crystal, diamonkey, egg, nail rubonk, snill. Huhhh. Snill. rubru, nail, frog, dia-mond many windows flash ice. Air out. Curtain fingers, cieling lines, French door bars gripped unstill sun broiling play, fat ended keys with black spines. “How could the Augsburg festival have been in Vienna, hah! Loewy?” Paint corner her jagged lip fingertips petrified red cream smile flicked starving grotto. “I mean is she a satirist or,” her tendon muscle stomach dieted twist the flat skirt front. “I think she needs a milk man, Loewy.” The shambled, bent, stripped fingers forked each others angles. His imagination chained in Veronica’s orange ochre wallpaper, blankets. A quick-silver limb paints the swamptoon. “Yes, I do!” shook, he shivered, remembering, room loose daggers broke ice bergs about them. Peanut butter note, Fang, Fang. Ice Fang back wriggled sorcerer hand hung dead skin frog fangs back Mama into Eassie leap shrunk from the door hid sharpened tusk hallway awwrice fang bump jump. “Six fifteen,” growled grate hunched on the sofa. “You’re presence is expiring, I mean, inspiring.” Blue, yellow tinged, Mars capillaried, eye, blue crystal, whites slash, “I know what I want! Why is it such a struggle for you? I feel revolu-tions.” Lie quicksilver idealisation limb delusion chrome rationalisation dance dragged curtained bog cracked ice ama-zon child’s burning nerves. Always left whiskers, uneven fingernails, premature orgasms hairy legs, long nose pranthula. Go play. Eat chocolate cake, peanut but-ter, pickles, but clean your room and wash your elbows. Ceiling lines, piano leg shad-ows, French door bars, eleven to four thirty. “Ma!” shook the still fingers. Rec-tangled silence coagulated, scraped wait-ing, dangling. Daddyeeee drove him smack clamored up back fallen stairs into the quilt where a silk wrapped, dark quaked moon bled tears. Run vanity open smear black commaed cheek. “Coups d’etat!” forehead burst powder, lipstick ribboned run eye shadow sink spit spigot greyened clear washed black rubbed lather pushed red pressed tan smeared blue smudged grey circled one eye deathlaughcue hic-cupping criggle vermouth spread on the table top gash crystal core neck glass cupped fingers polished green. A silver ghost hears. Life illuminates a paper screen. Eyes dance truth’s instrument. Sieve, sickle and sloat, the rad grimes grey molds parted skins furrowed tissue lives skeletal screams. Long brown stone blunt nose raised, “Naked day?” puffed sound hat swivel, “I don’t know what to say.” Jagged leaning brown limbed face. His eyes crumbled smiles smoke dust wound warm bricks.
*"Wait Quickly" by Barry J. Titus (from the liner notes)*

This collaboration between Evans and Hall has resulted in some of the most beautiful, thoroughly ingratiating music it has been my pleasure to hear —now or any other time. Each of the selections is suffused with a lyric charm, a tenderness, an elegance, an unabashed romanticism that take one's breath away. These joint inventions have the stamp of inevitability about them, the ring of utter verity in every line and note —the result of a perfect meeting of minds.
Yet not only is the music remarkable for its delicacy and subtlety of interaction, it is immediately appealing for its manifest loveliness. Of the six selections, five are warm, ardent ballads. They are afforded reflective, luminous performances that emphasize to the utmost the lyricism of the songs, yet are never cloying or overdone. It would be difficult to imagine more perfect realizations of the songs —especially "Dream Gypsy" and Hall's attractive "Romain"— for on every one there are any number of moments of glowing, unalloyed beauty, as Evans and Hall spin out their shimmering entwining lines.
The sixth song, "Valentine", is something of a dark horse. Reportedly, United Artists wanted an entire collection of ruminative ballads on the order of the first five; but after the session at which the ballads were recorded, Evans and Hall continued to play for their own satisfaction. Fortunately, the tape machines were left running. Fortunately, because "Valentine" is sure to assume the status of a classic.
Taken at a medium-up tempo, the track is a truly astonishing display of collective creation, with two of jazz' foremost lyrical players at peak form, responding to each other's inventions in a ceaseless, probing, restless and powerful rush of extemporization, producing a seamless whole of force, intensity, and impassioned fervor.
On this track Evans plays in a harder, more jabbing, and extroverted style than has been his wont, supporting Hall's lead lines with a series of fragmented, angular, broken-rhythm chord patterns, and phrasing in his own solos in a lithe, muscular, fiery manner. It's an explosive, highly exciting performance, one that never lets up and which builds to a strong climax.
In the face of such blazing beauty, any attempts at description or analysis are bound to prove fruitless. This music must be heard, and I cannot recommend it highly enough to jazz fans of all persuasions. You can't help but respond to this, for music of this high order knows no age or school. Real art never does. *Pete Welding (Down Beat, November 22, 1962 [5 stars])*

1 - My Funny Valentine (alternate take)
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
2 - My Funny Valentine
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
3 - I Hear A Rhapsody
(Fragos, Baker, Gasparre)
4 - Dream Gypsy
(Judith Veevers)
5 - Stairway To The Stars
(Malneck, Signorelli, Parish)
6 - I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
(Bassman, Washington)
7 - Romain
(Jim Hall)
8 - Romain (alternate take)
(Jim Hall)
9 - Skating In Central Park
(John Lewis)
10 - Darn That Dream
(DeLange, VanHeusen)

Bill Evans (piano), Jim Hall (guitar)
Recorded at Sound Makers, New York City,
April 24 (#3, #5, #6) and May 14 (#1, #2, #4, #7 to #10), 1962

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Lighthouse All-Stars Collection XXI ★ with Stan Getz (II)

Stan Getz
With
The Lighthouse All-Stars • 1953

Having presented in our previous post Stan Getz's extraordinary stint at the Lighthouse on September 14, 1952, chronology now moves us eight months forward. We find ourselves on May 31, 1953, to examine a fundamental document that records, once again, the participation of the tenor sax giant and jazz musician par excellence as a guest alongside the Lighthouse Allstars. This new series of exciting live performances at the Lighthouse Café on Pier Avenue, Hermosa Beach, California, was captured by recording engineer Bob Andrews using a single microphone and a tape recorder.

Getz was born on February 27, 1927, in Philadelphia. His real name was Stanley Gayetzki, but his parents changed it due to discrimination. Discovered by Woody Herman's producer, by the late 1940s and into the 1950s he had already made a name for himself, being acclaimed during those years as "The Sound." He can be considered an exceptional musician who remained at the forefront throughout his entire life, continuing his musical activity until shortly before passing away from liver cancer in California on June 6, 1991.
On the other hand, the Lighthouse Allstars—the band backing Getz on this occasion—were the house group at the club. Although Shorty Rogers and Jimmy Giuffre were the central figures of the ensemble at that time, for this session we have Teddy Charles on vibes, Russ Freeman on piano, leader Howard Rumsey on bass, and Shelly Manne on drums.

The vibrant beach atmosphere can be felt throughout this magnificent compilation of live West Coast Jazz. The festive crowd enjoyed these jam sessions, and their enthusiasm drove the band, inspiring an energy that transforms the dynamics wherever the recording is played. If some of the horns—Getz, Bob Cooper, and Jimmy Giuffre—seem slightly off-mic, it must be kept in mind that these are neither perfectly balanced nor professionally mixed recordings. However, it is by no means a sloppy audience tape; the overall sound is surprisingly consistent, and the music is exceptional, including brilliant passages by vibraphonist Teddy Charles.
Amidst this impeccable rhythm section, Getz sounds divine on every track, in any company, no matter what happens. Great moments abound in this superb compilation, where two extensions of Basie's repertoire stand out in particular: an interpolation of nearly 12 minutes of Harry "Sweets" Edison's "Jive at Five" and a magnetically modern rendition of Eddie Durham's "Topsy". Ultimately, the album stands as a valuable session that splendidly captures Getz's golden era in 1953.

Off Note:
It is imperative to warn the reader and collector about the gross editorial errors carried by the CD edition of this volume (coordinated under the Interplay/Norma label).
In the first place, the front cover incurs a flagrant chronological error by dating the session as 1954, when historical documentation and the liner notes themselves unanimously confirm that the recording took place on May 31, 1953.
Allow me the boldness of presenting this album cover as it should have been, if only as an illustration:


In the second place (and as a warning to those who can read the Japanese text), an analysis of the liner notes—signed by producer Yasunori Iwanami—reveals an alarming lack of editorial oversight. The text enthusiastically describes the performance of songs that are not present on the CD, surely due to recycling generic information from the complete All-Stars sessions, completely ignoring the actual content of the disc.
As if that were not enough, the tray card adds two other monumental errors:
a) "Jive At Five" is listed as "Jive Jumpin'" and credited to Claude Williamson. This is a doubly egregious blunder, given that "Jive at Five" is an absolute classic by Count Basie and Harry "Sweets" Edison from 1938. By mistitling it, they confuse the piece with a later composition or arrangement, stripping the track of its true historical roots.
b) "So Long Broadway" is presented under the title "Heading Hermosa" and credited to Stu Williamson, which is nothing short of a record label fantasy. They decided to alter the original title of the composition to provide some "local color" related to Hermosa Beach, burying the song's real name.
Let us then separate the wheat from the chaff: the music of Getz and the All-Stars in May '53 is sublime, but the packaging of this edition is a true disappointment that we take charge of amending here. The correct information is as follows:

1 - Only Have Eyes For You
(Al Dubin, Harry Warren)
2 - Jive At Five (as Jive Jumpin')
(Count Basie, Harry "Sweets" Edison)
3 - Moonlight In Vermont
(John Blackburn, Karl Suessdorf)
4 - Love Me Or Leave Me
(Gus Kahn, Walter Donaldson)
5 - So Long Broadway (as Heading Hermosa)
(Teddy Charles)
6 - Topsy
(Eddie Durham, Edgar Battle)

Stan Getz, Bob Cooper (tenor saxes); Jimmy Giuffre (baritone sax);
Teddy Charles (vibes); Russ Freeman (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass); Shelly Manne (drums).
Recorded live at The Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, California, May 31, 1953

(to be continued...)