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Sunday, November 9, 2025

Five-Star Collection... Stan Kenton

Stan Kenton And His Orchestra
New Concepts Of Artistry In Rhythm

The format for this album was sketched by Kenton himself, and his staff arrangers have developed and interpreted his ideas with rare skill and understanding. New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm is a tribute to these men of the modern school whose stature is ever increasing. It is their ingenuity and creative ability that is directing the course of tomorrow's music.
The intense imagination of Stan Kenton gave pulsing life to Artistry in Rhythm more than ten years ago, and today the freshest and most stimulating ideas of modern music are still in his work — in his New Concepts of Artistry in Rhythm.
Throughout the ten years of the Kenton Orchestra's life its music has gradually changed — with accumulated knowledge, experimentation, and association — to bring the listener an ever fresh approach.
This album discloses even more exciting developments in the orchestra's brilliant sound. Masterful musicians like first trumpeter Buddy Childers, first trombonist Bob Burgess, first saxophonist Vinnie Dean, and drummer Stan Levey give it the mark of their personalities; and above all stands the dynamic quality of Stan Kenton, inspiring his orchestra and, indeed, a whole profession — carrying the vibrant message of his music to hosts of eager listeners everywhere. *(from the liner notes)*

This is the New Concepts LP, and it might well have been called Artistry in Russo, for Bill wrote five of these seven originals. First title, which your atlas will show you means Havana, starts with a startling and highly entertaining piece of writing for the trombones, with the Latin rhythm and the unison reeds easing in, followed by unison trumpets. Blood, the swingingest side of the whole set, was penned by Gerry Mulligan, indicates that Stan needs bigger doses of Mulligan in his books.
The Count (Conte Candoli) is well framed in his portrait; the Invention for Sal Salvador and Maynard Ferguson was written by tenor man Bill Holman. Improvisation, the longest and most ambitious number of the set, has some of the most brilliant Russo writing as he used it is the one we enjoyed the least, for its qualities are neurotic and depressing.
The Frank who speaks is trombonist Rosolino, and although he doesn't speak as freely and happily as he used to with Georgie Auld's quintet, this is an effective jazz horn concerto and swings more than the other Russo items. My Lady is addressed by Lee Konitz' alto in attractively melancholy tones. *(Down Beat, Chicago, May 6, 1953 [5 stars])*

1 - 23° N — 82° W
(Bill Russo)
2 - Portait Of A Count
(Bill Russo)
3 - Improvisation
(Bill Russo)
4 - Invention For Guitar And Trumpet
(Bill Holman)
5 - My Lady
(Bill Russo)
6 - Young Blood
(Gerry Mulligan)
7 - Frank Speaking
(Bill Russo)

Buddy Childers, Maynard Ferguson, Conte Candoli, Don Dennis, Ruben McFall (trumpets); 
Bob Burgess, Frank Rosolino, Keith Moon, Bill Russo (trombones); 
George Roberts (bass trombone); Vinnie Dean, Lee Konitz (alto saxes); 
Richie Kamuca, Bill Holman (tenor saxes); Bob Gioga (baritone sax);
Sal Salvador (guitar); Stan Kenton (piano);  Don Bagley (bass); 
Stan Levey (drums), Denon Kenneth Walton (bongos [#1]).
Recorded at Universal Studios "A", Chicago, Illinois, September 10 (#2, #6, #7),
September 11 (#1), September 15 (#4, #5) and September 16 (#3), 1952

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