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Friday, June 19, 2026

Five-Star Collection... The Concert Jazz Band (I)

In late 1960, Gerry Mulligan shaped one of the most ambitious projects of his career: the Concert Jazz Band, an orchestra that, in the midst of the economic decline of big bands, openly defied the market conditions of the jazz scene at the time. Far from any retrospective gesture, the ensemble proposed a reformulation of modern orchestral language, transferring to the expanded format the principles of textural clarity, counterpoint, and interaction that Mulligan had developed in his pianeless formations since the early 1950s.
The initial support of the project was made possible thanks to an agreement with Norman Granz, producer of Verve Records, who guaranteed the financial backing necessary to keep an orchestra of these characteristics active. Within this framework, and in a remarkably brief span of time —between May 1960 and December 1961—, the Concert Jazz Band established the complete core of its discographic production.
In chronological order, this corpus can be reconstructed from five titles that are considered the main body of work of the orchestra:
The Concert Jazz Band — sessions from May and July 1960 in New York, Gerry Mulligan and the Concert Jazz Band on Tour — recordings from the October–November 1960 tour in the United States and Europe, Gerry Mulligan and the Concert Jazz Band at the Village Vanguard — recorded on December 11, 1960 in New York, Gerry Mulligan Presents a Concert in Jazz — sessions from July 1961 at Webster Hall, and Gerry Mulligan '63 — recorded in December 1962.
Viewed in this way, the project appears as a complete arc that coordinates studio, tour, and live documentation, allowing one to follow the evolution of the ensemble from its initial formulation to its point of maximum elaboration.
This artistic development, however, was abruptly interrupted by non-musical factors. Granz's sale of Verve to MGM put an end to the financing scheme that made the orchestra viable, forcing its dissolution shortly after the 1961 sessions, at the very moment when the group had reached its highest degree of cohesion and aesthetic definition.
Contemporary critical reception not only accompanied this process, but also consecrated it. In the pages of DownBeat magazine, three of these recordings obtained the maximum rating of five stars: the debut album The Concert Jazz Band, reviewed by Don DeMicheal in the December 8, 1960 issue; the live recording at the Village Vanguard; and Gerry Mulligan '63, whose assessment underscores the level of integration achieved by the orchestra in its final stage. Read together, these reviews trace a sort of critical arc that accompanies the trajectory of the group: from the initial affirmation of its viability, through the confirmation of its effectiveness live, to its consecration as one of the most accomplished orchestral achievements of modern jazz.
In that sense, the Concert Jazz Band asserts itself as one of the most unique orchestral formulations of its time, and one of the last great reformulations of the big band language in 20th-century jazz; although its existence was brief, the recordings it left behind still allow us today to perceive, with remarkable clarity, the creative impulse that gave it birth.
Without prejudice to focusing later on the two remaining productions that complete this corpus, let us dedicate the next three entries to examining the albums from this pentalogy that were honored by DownBeat magazine with its highest rating...


Gerry Mulligan
The Concert Jazz Band

In deciding on the instrumentation for the new band that makes its album debut here, Gerry Mulligan says: "I wanted the same clarity of sound and interplay of lines that I had in the smaller groups. 
"We have a clarinet in the reed section, not primarily for a clarinet-lead effect but for a sound contributing to the ensemble in general. As for the soloists, I wanted to use just a few men for the bulk of the solo work, so that they would be heard enough for the audience to become familiar to their styles."
What he has built, says Gerry, is essentially a concert band —a jazz band for listening— and it was on this premise that the band's first tour was arranged by Norman Granz for the fall of 1960. 
Further words are unnecessary. The album delivers its own exciting message: that this is the best new jazz orchestra of the year. *Leonard Feather (from the liner notes)*

Big bands in jazz have generally been of two sorts. The first reflects the thinking of such men as Fletcher Henderson and Don Redman, that of three sections –brass, reeds, rhythm –working as individual units within the whole, sometimes together, other times in opposition or in response to each other. While this concept is definitely tied to early jazz, it has stronger affiliations with brass bands and European music; and while there is room for individual contributions in the form of solos, the main emphasis is on group cohesion. The arranger is the controller. The major function of such bands is to provide dance music.
The other big-band concept stems from the thinking of Duke Ellington. The three sections are present as in the other, and the arranger is still important. But the individual members are not subservient to either section or pen. The part must fit the man, not vice versa. The spirit is that of a small jazz group, although the context is that of a big band. The brilliance and colors of numerous instruments can be achieved when desired, but –and this is the crucial difference between the two concepts –the creativity, freedom, and interaction of individuals found in small groups is retained. Such bands produce music the primary function of which is to stimulate the listener's ear, not his feet.
The Mulligan band is firmly in the Ellington camp. It is not an Ellington imitation, though Sweet and Low is a deep bow in Duke's direction, but reflects the feel, the spirit of Ellington –the feel, the spirit of small group jazz.
More specifically, it is an extension and expansion of Mulligan's concept as we've come to know it through his quartet and sextet: the combination of extremes –simplicity with complexity, cool intellectualism with hot-blooded emotion, sophistication with guts.
Because of these many facets and of the variety of emotional experience the band offers, I feel this is the most important big band in jazz today. (In person the impact of the band is even greater than on this album. It is unfortunate that Mulligan intends to disband, but the band is scheduled to reorganize later in 1961.)
It is not a blasting band; in many ways it is reminiscent of the Claude Thornhill Band when Gil Evans was writing for it. Attention is paid to blend, control, and dynamics. By using another baritone in the sax section, Mulligan retains fulness behind his solos. The brass is usually voiced close, giving it a subdued, almost muffled sound. Even in the shout choruses the brass keeps it head and depth.
Lewis and Clark, the rhythm section on all but one track and the one that toured with the band, are superlative. The rhythm is always firm yet never too tight. These two are the source of the band's relaxation. They push the whole band but do it unobtrusively. What Lewis plays fits so well and logically that at times the listener might miss his contribution, but on careful listening, you realize he's kicking everybody. Lewis is the Dave Tough of his time –a drummer felt more than heard.
The main soloists on the record are Mulligan, Brookmeyer, and Sims.
Mulligan builds his solos with more care than he has in some time. Each phrase relates to the next; each solo is like a story. He plays well on all tracks, but his most touching work is on Valentine and the lovely Django Reinhardt ballad Manoir de Mes Reves.
Brookmeyer's playing is the best I've heard him do. He seems to have found his true element in this band. Wit and melodiousness he always had, but here there's a fire that wasn't burning so brightly in the past. He has a gusty, burry, wonderful solo on his own arrangement of Advantage; in one place his fill over the saxes is nothing but a breathy slur –no brass sound, just breath.
Sims hasn't as much blowing room on the record as he has in person –he doesn't play in the section but is featured on a couple of tunes each set –but he has a meaty solo on Bweebida Bobbida.
This is one of the best records of 1960.
*Don DeMicheal (Down Beat, December 8, 1960 [5 stars])*

Side 1
1 - Sweet And Low
(Harry Warren, Al Dubin)
2 - Bweebida Bobbida
(Gerry Mulligan)
3 - Manoir De Mes Rêves (Django's Castle)
(Django Reinhardt)
4 - You Took Advantage Of Me
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)

Side 2
5 - Out Of This World
(Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
6 - My Funny Valentine
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
7 - Broadway
(Henry Woode, Teddy McRae, Bill Bird)
8 - I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
(Duke Ellington, Peggy Lee)

Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Conte Candoli, Nick Travis (trumpets [#1 to #7]);
Don Ferrara, Danny Stiles, Phil Sunkel (trumpets [#8];
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone);
Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone); Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet);
Zoot Sims[#1 to #7], Jim Reider [#8] (tenor saxes); Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); 
Buddy Clark [#1 to #7], Bill Tackus [#8] (basses):
Mel Lewis [#1 to #7], Dave Bailey [#8] (drums).
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, New York City, May 21 [#8],
July 25 [#1 to #4] and July 27 [#5 to #7], 1960

✤✤✤✤

For those who prefer the digital version of the Concert Jazz Band's debut album, there are several options. One of them is the one presented by the Poll Winners Records label titled The Concert Jazz Band • The First Album.
This edition brings together the complete original Gerry Mulligan LP, The Concert Jazz Band (Verve V6-8388), which marked the discographic debut of this extraordinary big band formation. Its tracks feature the presence of stellar figures such as Zoot Sims, Bob Brookmeyer, Conte Candoli, Gene Quill, Mel Lewis, and, of course, Mulligan himself. As a bonus, the disc incorporates all surviving tunes from the band’s second studio session —recorded in between the three sessions that made up the original LP—, as well as three tracks recorded live in Milan, four months after completing the album.


Gerry Mulligan
The Concert Jazz Band
The First Album

1 - Sweet And Low
(Harry Warren, Al Dubin)
2 - Bweebida Bobbida
(Gerry Mulligan)
3 - Manoir De Mes Rêves (Django's Castle)
(Django Reinhardt)
4 - You Took Advantage Of Me
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
5 - Out Of This World
(Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
6 - My Funny Valentine
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
7 - Broadway
(Henry Woode, Teddy McRae, Bill Bird)
8 - I'm Gonna Go Fishin'
(Duke Ellington, Peggy Lee)
9 - I Know, Don't Know How
(Gerry Mulligan)
10 - Barbara's Theme
(Johnny Mandel)
11 - Sweet And Slow (first version)
(Harry Warren, Al Dubin)
12 - Out Of This World (first version)
(Harold Arlen, Johnny Mercer)
13 - Go Home (live in Milan, 1960)
(Ben Webster)
14 - Apple Core (live in Milan, 1960)
(Gerry Mulligan)
15 - Barbara's Theme (live in Milan, 1960)
(Johnny Mandel)

#1 to #8:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Conte Candoli, Nick Travis (trumpets [#1 to #7]);
Don Ferrara, Danny Stiles, Phil Sunkel (trumpets [#8]);
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone);
Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone); Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet);
Zoot Sims[#1 to #7], Jim Reider [#8] (tenor saxes); Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); 
Buddy Clark [#1 to #7], Bill Tackus [#8] (basses):
Mel Lewis [#1 to #7], Dave Bailey [#8] (drums).
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, New York City, May 21 [#8],
July 25 [#1 to #4] and July 27 [#5 to #7], 1960

#9, #10, #11, #12:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Danny Stiles, Phil Sunkel (trumpets);
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone); Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone);
Dick Meldonian (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet); Jim Reider (tenor sax);
Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); Bill Tackus (bass); Dave Bailey (drums).
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, New York City, June 1, 2 and 3, 1960

#13, #14, #15:
Gerry Mulligan (baritone sax); Don Ferrara, Conte Candoli, Nick Travis (trumpets);
Wayne Andre (trombone); Alan Raph (bass trombone); Bob Brookmeyer (valve trombone);
Bob Donovan (alto sax); Gene Quill (alto sax, clarinet); Zoot Sims, Jim Reider (tenor saxes);
Gene Allen (baritone sax, bass clarinet); Buddy Clark (bass): Mel Lewis (drums).
Recorded live at Teatro Lirico, Milan, Italy, November 14, 1960

3 comments:

  1. The Concert Jazz Band (LP)
    With my thanks to Iván K.!
    https://mega.nz/file/5ssCwKKZ#lBIC1Wf7ZryBj1bf-HxCiovlp8u5Oe7dRo26nlLbcDw

    The Concert Jazz Band • The First Album (CD)
    * Links reserved for regular contributors *

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thank you for sharing these albums
    And thank you Ivan K!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Perdona, todo está bien. Muchas gracias

    ReplyDelete