Gerry Mulligan
Gerry Mulligan And His Ten-Tette
Gerry Mulligan is one of the inventors of the contemporary jazz form, and his early promise experimenting with small forward-looking groups achieves fruition with this extensive exhibit of his art. Gerry is that rare phenomenon — a truly originative talent. Everything he does is unique and he has the unalterable courage to do as he "hears" fit. With it all, there is no restraining self-consciousness. Quite the contrary, Gerry is irresistibly "full of malarkey!" There’s an impishness about both him and his music that lends great charm.
He's a young composer who somehow combines the restless intensity of a serious and sensitive composer with the levity of a leprechaun. And it's all here in the music.
Gerry's early background in the music field is surprisingly orthodox. He even arranged for Tommy Tucker and Elliot Lawrence, but he quickly espoused the modern sounds and "gigged" around New York with the small coterie of musicians that spearheaded the search for new and interesting things to say in jazz. He helped to organize, write for, and play on one of the milestones of modern jazz, the Miles Davis "Move" record date for Capitol.
But here, perhaps for the first time, he has been given carte blanche — freedom to express himself without limitation. (...)
The moods and feelings captured here range all the way from something resembling a German Salvation Army Band playing on a Heidelberg street corner — with a beat — to the reckless abandon of a Deep South Revivalist meeting. But all the way, it's ingenious, challenging, and warm. This is what jazz is coming to. In fact, it's here! *Gene Norman (from the liner notes)*
Gerry's dectet (two trumpets, bone, French horn, alto, two baritones, tuba, bass, drums) eschews atonality, polytonality, polyphony, and pretension, goes in for strictly jazz sounds that begin where Miles Davis' famous Capitol sessions (also partly organized by Mulligan) left off.
The rich diversity of orchestrated tonal hues is what gives this set its fifth star. The solos, though secondary, are almost completely, and justifiably, monopolized by Mulligan and Chet Baker. Gerry switches to piano on three tunes, including the attractive Ontet. Latter is based on the last chorus of Godchild, which he scored for the Davis date.
Of the other originals Walking Shoes has the warmest flavor, a legit blues quality with a semisatirical end; Westwood has Gerry’s most eloquent baritone solo and Flash the most variety, with some great Bud Shank alto, and delightful ensemble accents in the last chorus. Simbah is a simple riff thing with a strangely Gershwin-esque quality in the first release.
If you're already bored by the Mulligan foursome, this set is the perfect restorative.
*Down Beat (Chicago, October 7, 1953 [5 stars])*
Side 1
1 - Rocker
(Gerry Mulligan)
2 - Walking Shoes
(Gerry Mulligan)
3 - Simbah
(Gerry Mulligan)
4 - Ontet
(Gerry Mulligan)
Side 2
5 - Westwood Walk
(Gerry Mulligan)
6 - A Ballad
(Gerry Mulligan)
7 - Taking A Chance On Love
(Vernon Duke, John La Touche, Ted Fetter)
8 - Flash
(Gerry Mulligan)
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax, piano [#4, #7, #8]); Chet Baker, Pete Candoli (trumpets);
Bob Enevoldsen (valve trombone); John Graas (french horn);
Ray Siegel (tuba); Bud Shank (alto sax); Don Davidson (baritone sax);
Joe Mondragon (bass); Chico Hamilton [#1, #2, #5, #6], Larry Bunker [#3, #4, #7, #8] (drums).
Recorded at Capitol Recording Studios, Hollywood, California,
January 29 (#1, #2, #5, #6) and January 31 (#3, #4, #7, #8), 1953

With all my thanks to Francisco C.
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