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Monday, July 24, 2023

Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers - Play Lerner And Loewe

"This was a tough session. Some of those tunes were really rough. But we just wanted to stay in there and do it right. Nobody wanted to give up".
That's Art Blakey speaking. The 37-year-old drummer and leader of the Jazz Messengers started recording this album about 10 p.m. on March 13, and wrapped it up at 6:30 a.m. the next day. 
"At first, we didn’t really know what to do. We had figured out some arrangements, but show tunes are so strange. We started right in reworking the arrangements. We figured out some ideas of our own, all five of us, and things began to shape up".
The set comes off as a good distillation of the style of the Jazz Messengers. Starting with a melody, or even a scrap of one, the Messengers work out among themselves the unison opening and closing, then fit their solos into the framework. Behind it all is Blakey, highlighting, underlining, pushing and commenting with his battery of drums.
The tunes, now familiar to anyone with ears, are by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, and are from their three substantial stage successes, "My Fair Lady", "Brigadoon" and "Paint Your Wagon".
The transition from show tune to jazz vehicle did happen overnight. Says Blakey, "This was like a challenge. The guys cooperated well together. The group was like a family. This is the kind of thing I’d like to do again. A challenge, but the kind we now know we can lick".
*Dom Cerulli (liner notes)* 

One of the rarest of all Art Blakey records, this LP finds the Jazz Messengers (featuring new member Johnny Griffin on tenor and trumpeter Bill Hardman) performing jazz versions of six show tunes by Lerner & Loewe, including three ("Almost Like Being in Love", "I Could Have Danced All Night", and "On the Street Where You Live") that would soon become standards. Despite some of the musicians' unfamiliarity with the songs, this date is quite successful. *Scott Yanow*

The music of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe — composers usually associated with the Broadway stage, brought into a whole new light here by the late 50s Jazz Messengers! The album's one of Art Blakey's more unusual outings — part of that great 1957 run away from Blue Note — but it cooks strongly with a lineup that includes Jackie McLean on alto, Johnny Griffin on tenor, and Bill Hardman on trumpet — all players who bring an unusual degree of bite to these tunes, while still reflecting the lyrical beauty within! The group sparkles and shines with the sort of brilliance and energy that Blakey's leadership brings to the group, completely transforming tunes that include "I Could Have Danced All Night", "Almost Like Being In Love", "On The Street Where You Live", and "There But For You Go I". *dustygroove.com*

1 - I Could Have Danced All Night
2 - On The Street Where You Live
3 - There But For You Go I
4 - They Call The Wind Maria
5 - I Talk To The Trees
6 - Almost Like Being In Love
7 - A Night At Tony's (take 3) 
8 - A Night At Tony's (take 4) 
9 - Social Call (take 4) 
10 - Social Call 
11 - Off The Wall (take 5)
12 - Couldn't It Be You?

(All compositions by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe)

#1 to #6: from Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers - Selections From Lerner And Loewe's...
Bill Hardman (trumpet), Johnny Griffin (tenor sax), Sam Dockery (piano), Spanky DeBrest (bass), Art Blakey (drums).
Recorded at Webster Hall, New York City, March 13, 1957.
#7 to #12: *bonus tracks*
Bill Hardman (trumpet), Lee Morgan (trumpet [#7 to #10]), Melba Liston (trombone [#7 to #10]), Cecil Payne (baritone sax [#7 to #10]), Johnny Griffin (tenor sax [#7 to #12]), Sahib Shihab (alto sax [#7 to #10]), Wynton Kelly (piano [#7 to #10]), Jackie McLean (alto sax [#11, #12]), Sam Dockery (piano [#11, #12]), Spanky DeBrest (bass), Art Blakey (drums).
Recorded at RCA Studio 3, New York City, April 2 (#7 to #10) and April 8 (#11, #12), 1957.

6 comments:

  1. https://www.mediafire.com/file/qjbnthc5506oefp/ABJM_plylrnrndlw.rar/file

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  2. Gracias blbs siempre es un placer para mi escuchar a Bill Hardman. Su disco Politely es todo un placer escucharlo.

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  3. Muchas gracias por compartir.

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  4. I didn't know this Vik edition! Muchas gracias, Hector !

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