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Thursday, February 1, 2024

Phil Sunkel - His Jazz Band And His Music

Phil Sunkel II born as Philip Charles Sunkel, Jr. on November 26, 1925 in Zanesville, Ohio.
After serving in the Army in WWII at age 18 (combat and playing trumpet for the Army Band) overseas, he returned home and went to the Cincinnati Conservatory on the G.I. Bill where he honed his trumpet, flugelhorn, and cornet skills. He ended up in New York City in the 1950's and 60's, which was an exciting and vibrant time for jazz. In addition to albums of his own Jazz Concerto Grosso, and Every Morning I Listen to Phil Sunkel's Jazz Band, he appeared live and on numerous jazz albums as a sideman with the likes of Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan, Gil Evans, Tito Rodriguez, Woody Herman, Dizzy Gillespie, Sauter-Finegan, Claude Thornhill, Charlie Barnet, Dick Meldonian, and many others. He was the trumpet player on the Merv Griffin Show in the early 1960's and played with the Playboy Club Orchestra for seven years, he played at numerous resorts, and played for Broadway musicals. He died on February 27, 2023 in his sleep in a nursing home in Queens, New York. *Walter Bruyninckx*

Phil Sunkel, cornet and trumpet player, was born in 1925 in Zanesville, Ohio. He played with the Claude Thornhill, Charlie Barnet, Stan Getz, Sauter-Finegan, Gerry Mulligan, Gil Evans and Tito Rodriguez bands. Leaving his role as a soloist aside, Phil mainly stood out as an arranger and composer of talent, being these recordings his most celebrated works and the only ones he did as a leader.
My idea of a jazzband, he said is something between a small combo and a big band incorporating the good features of both. Here we have the flexibility of a small group which allows the soloist a maximum of freedom, plus the color and drama produced by the different ensemble sounds.
The further possibilities of using a three voice group superimposed on a similarly conceived orchestral backdrop originated Sunkels most ambitious and outstanding work: "Jazz Concerto Grosso". *Jordi Pujol*

Phil Sunkel's name is unjustly missing from a lot of jazz reference works, though his considerable resume as a sideman includes recordings with Hal McKusick, Al Cohn, Lawrence Brown, Urbie Green, Gerry Mulligan, Erroll Garner, Jimmy Giuffre, Lee Konitz and Gil Evans, to name only a few. This first-call trumpeter evidently only made two records as a leader, both of them for ABC-Paramount in the mid-'50s. This album was the first under his own name, with a tentet including baritone saxophonist Gene Allen, alto saxophonist Dick Meldonian, trombonist Gene Hessler, and trumpeter Al Stewart. Sunkel's precise trumpet solos never fail to swing yet don't resort to showboating. His cool arrangements are comparable to those of Gerry Mulligan and Bob Brookmeyer, with most of the music devoted to Sunkel's tasty originals. *Ken Dryden*

Phil Sunkel's Jazz Band
Every Morning I Listen To... Phil Sunkel's Jazz Band

My idea of a jazzband is something between a small combo and a big band incorporating the good features of both. Here we have the flexibility of a small group which allows the soloist a maximum of freedom, plus the color and drama produced by the different ensemble sounds.
All the arrangements here were conceived with the purpose in mind of creating vehicles for the soloists ideas. Backgrounds were kept at a minimum and used only where they would enhance rather than distort the soloists ideas.
This album was recorded in three separate sessions — May 13, May 23, and June 14, 1956 in New York City. The same personnel was used throughout. Our intentions were to produce some happy spirited music. We had fun making this album and we hope you enjoy it.
*Phil Sunkel (liner notes)*

The set features a tight brace of three trumpets in the lead, alongside trombone, alto, tenor, and baritone — almost an extension of the sounds crafted at the tail end of the swing years, but with some nice modernist inflections too — somewhere in a space between Woody Herman and Stan Kenton, with lots of nice hues and tones in the horns. *dustygroove.com*

Side 1
1 - Jack's Theme
(Phil Sunkel)
2 - Polka Dots And Moonbeams
(Van Heusen, Burke)
3 - Train Ride
(Phil Sunkel)
4 - Old Wives' Tales
(Phil Sunkel)
5 - Every Mornin'
(Phil Sunkel)

Side 2
6 - How Strange
(Prozorowsky, Brent, Stothart, Kahn)
7 - The Animal Man
(Phil Sunkel)
8 - Chomp, Chomp Blues
(Phil Sunkel)
9 - Joe, The Architect
(Phil Sunkel)
10 - T. Blues
(Phil Sunkel)

Phil Sunkel, Al Stewart, Siggy Shatz (trumpets); Gene Hessler (trombone); Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Buddy Arnold (tenor sax); Gene Allen (baritone sax); George Syran (piano); Bob Petersen (bass); Harold Granowsky (drums).
Recorded in New York City, May 13, May 29 and June 14, 1956.

***

Gerry Mulligan And Bob Brookmeyer
Play Phil Sunkel's Jazz Concerto Grosso

I have always been fascinated by the acoustical and rhythmic possibilities of three voice writing. My first opportunity to do something professional in this direction came in 1955 when I joined the Stan Getz Sextet. Stan had previously commissioned me to write some things for his quintet and it was from this material that I now drew and enlarged upon to meet the needs of the new group. The instrumentation was valve trombone, cornet, and tenor backed by bass, drums and piano. The soft broad qualities of the valve trombone and cornet blended well with Stan's warm tenor sound and the resulting textures proved ideal for the moody intimate type things I had written.
My intentions were to retain the harmonic framework of these little songs while injecting a linear feeling into each of the individual horn parts. To do this, each voice 
was made to fall naturally and uncontrived and so designed rhythmically as to sustain the pulse and present a completeness within themselves. The bass, drums and 
piano served to underline, punctuate, and reinforce this linear harmonic activity. The further possibilities of using a three voice group superimposed on a similarly conceived orchestral backdrop soon presented itself as an interesting project for future consideration. 
About a year ago I hit upon a theme that seemed to be of a character suitable for this expanded type of treatment. 
The stark simplicity of its obvious construction made it perfect raw material for the compositional presentation I had in mind. Standing alone, this musical fragment had a naked, self-conscious air; but, after being melodically extended and placed in context, it suddenly took on a noble, earthy quality. This was exactly what I was looking for and with this good strong basic material at hand the piece began to shape itself. 
Now that the whole thing was straight in my own mind I presented the idea to the record company. Creed Taylor was immediately enthusiastic and suggested that I sound Gerry Mulligan and Bob Brookmeyer to appear as soloists. Gerry and Bob liked the idea and their acceptance pushed the work toward its final stages. The members of the band were chosen, the date set, and all that remained was the completion of the score. 
The sketches and fragments that had accumulated over the last year now shaped themselves into a meaningful whole, and we recorded the finished work on October 14, 1957.
*Phil Sunkel (liner notes)*

Although Gerry Mulligan and Bob Brookmeyer get top billing on this LP, the leader, composer, and arranger of all three compositions is cornetist Phil Sunkel. The full 15-piece band is heard on the nearly 16-minute "Jazz Concerto Grosso", with the full band supporting the solos of Mulligan (baritone sax), Brookmeyer (valve trombone), and the leader. The shorter pieces from the following day's session feature a septet with totally different personnel, except for the three major soloists. All of the music is enjoyable and falls clearly into the cool jazz genre, but it has languished in obscurity like Sunkel, though he was later a member of the acclaimed Gerry Mulligan Concert Jazz Band. This long deleted record will be somewhat difficult to locate. *Ken Dryden*

Side 1
1 - Jazz Concerto Grosso

Side 2
2 - Something For The Ladies
3 - Song For Cornet

(All compositions by Phil Sunkel)

#1:
Phil Sunkel (cornet); Nick Travis, Al Stewart, Don Stratton, John Wilson (trumpets); Frank Rehak (trombone); Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone); Eddie Bert (bass trombone); Don Butterfield (tuba); Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Cliff Hoff, Bill Slapin (tenor saxes); Gerry Mulligan, Gene Allen (baritone saxes); Milt Hinton (bass); Osie Johnson (drums).
#2 and #3:
Phil Sunkel (cornet), John Wilson (fluegelhorn), Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone), Jim Reider (tenor sax), Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax), Wendell Marshal (bass), Harold Granowsky (drums).
Recorded in New York City, October 14 (#1) and October 15 (#2, #3), 1957.

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