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Wednesday, December 4, 2024

Stan Getz And Swedish All Stars

Stan Getz
And Swedish All Stars • Vol. 2 
Featuring Bengt Hallberg

In Europe today, the musical portrait is a rather unusual one. In Paris, one finds only three clubs with Jazz in any form. Don Byas in his own club, Sidney Bechet in another, and Roy Eldridge at the last one. Note, all three are names with backgrounds of over 15 years on the Jazz Scene. The newer faces like James Moody and Kenny Clarke, well they are there, thats all. 
England has never gotten over Benny Carter and Coleman Hawkins. Italy knows only of Duke and Louis, not that that’s bad but there are so many more faces on the Jazz Horizon. 
It is Sweden and Denmark that have come along with the new sound. They have let us hear a few of their sounds like the late Stan Hasselgrad, Rheinhold Svenson, Peter Rasmussen and the greatest little group in Svend Asmussen. From these sounds, we were left hungry for more. 
In Sweden at Easter time there are a series of Jazz Concerts presented in seven major cities. They usually import one or two American jazz musicians depending upon the cost of the artist. This year they honored Stan Getz with an invitation. 
Upon his landing in Stockholm they had a welcoming party of hundreds of Jazz fans who had a banquet waiting for Stan. So on it went, every city he visited the fans turned out en masse, banquets and parties followed. Every morning as Stan would prepare to depart for another city and another concert, there would be champagne breakfasts, toasts to Stan’s good health and Bon Voyage.
Stan was thrilled, rejuvenated at the thought of this tribute to his talent, overwhelmed with joy Stan, chose to record on his last day in Sweden a living memory of all this, his greatest victory ever. 
He chose the same musicians who worked with him on this concert tour, and as Stan put it, "never have I ever felt more like blowing than that day", need we say more? 
And for those who crave for more Swedish Sounds we suggest a close ear to the pianistics of Bengt Hallberg. *Teddy Reig (liner notes)*

As critic John Bush recalls, 1951 was a busy year for Stan Getz. After leaving Woody Herman's band in 1949 spending the better part of a year on his own, he found his first great rhythm section at a Hartford club jam session.
Just three weeks later, 24-year-old Stan Getz was playing in Stockholm with some of the biggest names in Swedish jazz at the time, recording eight tracks (ranging from Porter's "Night and Day" to the traditional "Ack, Värmeland du Sköna") in two days with a classy all-star group that included a light-fingered young pianist named Bengt Hallberg.
Here are those rare recordings made by Roost Records.

Side 1
1. Standanavian
(Stan Getz)
2. Prelude To A Kiss
(Duke Ellington)
3. I Only Have Eyes For You
(Harry Warren)
4. Dear Old Stockholm
(Traditional)

Side 2
5. Night And Day
(Cole Porter)
6. Flamingo
(Ted Grouya, Edmund Anderson)
7. Don't Get Scared
(Stan Getz)
8. I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
(George Bassman, Ned Washington)

#1 to #5, #8:
Stan Getz (tenor sax); Bengt Hallberg (piano); Gunnar Johnson (bass);
Jack Norén [#1, #4, #5, #8], Kenneth Fagerlund [#2, #3] (drums)
#6, #7
Stan Getz (tenor sax), Lars Gullin (baritone sax), 
Bengt Hallberg (piano), Yngve Åkerberg (bass), Jack Norén (drums)
Recorded in Stockholm, Sweden, March 23 (#1 to #5, #8), and March 24 (#6, #7), 1951

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