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Friday, June 5, 2026

Lighthouse All-Stars Collection XXIII ★ with Zoot Sims (II)

Zoot Sims
Lover Man
Zoot Sims On The West Coast • 1954

The tireless search for recordings that complete the historical puzzle of the Lighthouse All-Stars occasionally yields major surprises. Although the bulk of this volume takes us to an intimate and domestic setting, its inclusion in our Lighthouse All-Stars Collection series is fully justified by an exceptional historical rescue: the presence of Zoot Sims, as a stellar guest, on the stage of the mythical club in Hermosa Beach.
Once again, the miracle is due to Bob Andrews, who, equipped with his now-famous home recorder and a single microphone, managed to record a unique moment in the history of West Coast Jazz. We find ourselves specifically on the night of March 9, 1954. That evening already possessed a historical character for the group itself, as it marked the debut of the legendary drummer Stan Levey in the lineup, occupying the seat just vacated by Max Roach. The All-Stars performed with one of their most powerful incarnations: the horn section aligned Bob Cooper, Bud Shank, Frank Rosolino, and Stu Williamson, complemented by Claude Williamson on piano and the indefatigable Howard Rumsey on double bass.
Andrews set up his microphone and recorded the session. In fact, our previous blog post covered the album Zoot Sims with The Lighthouse All-Stars • 1954, which captured the official session recorded the very next day. Toward the end of the night, Zoot Sims took the stage with his tenor sax to join the band. Unfortunately, the tape on the home recorder was running out, and only a single piece could be captured before it was completely exhausted, leaving this track as the sole surviving testimony of that electric conjunction.
Regarding this valuable piece, which appears in this edition under the title "Lighthouse Days," the producer of the release, Toshinari Shiroshita, offers us a fascinating chronicle of its nature and execution in the liner notes:

The titles of the songs performed changed depending on the occasion at the jam session, adopting names like "Groovy Eyes" or "Goof and I". For this edition, we preferred to use the title "Lighthouse Days", just as Andrews originally noted it in his personal memorandum.
The structure of the piece treats us to an impressive succession of solos in a strict order: it begins with Zoot Sims himself, followed by Stu Williamson, Bud Shank, Frank Rosolino, Bob Cooper, and finally, Claude Williamson on piano. The dynamism of the performance reaches its peak in the final chorus, where an extremely interesting exchange of bars breaks out between the drums and each of the soloists, preventing the piece from falling into a simple improvisation routine. Stan Levey's intervention, with a short but highly sharp and precise drum solo, is irrefutable proof that we are dealing with a first-rate instrumentist.

In terms of the five pieces that complete this album, while the Lighthouse recording is the magnet for completists of the series, the rest of the tracks that round out this volume do not envy its historical importance at all. These five instrumental tracks take us to a much more exclusive setting whose exact date remains a mystery, cataloged simply on an unknown day of that same year, 1954: the intimacy of the home.
As Toshinari Shiroshita himself comments in the insert notes:

This is a valuable record of a very unusual rehearsal session, recorded when Zoot Sims (1925–1985), whose activities took place mainly on the East Coast, returned to his parents' home in California (a town near the Los Angeles International Airport). This rehearsal session was released on LP in 1991 by the Norma label under the title Pinky and Zoot, but the 5 tracks with the addition of vocalist Pinky Winters were released on CD in 2010 as "Pinky +12". This Lover Man being released now is composed of the purely instrumental tracks (without Pinky's vocals) from that session, and includes an unreleased track that was not included in the Norma LP.
Regarding the musicians participating in tracks #1 to #5 at Zoot's house, isn't it true that, except for Zoot, they are musicians who have hardly been heard of? For Zoot, whose activities took place mainly on the East Coast, a session on the West Coast in the mid-1950s like this one is extremely rare, but the reality of the L.A. scene runs deep. It is said that musicians like Heale and Inosencio played in top-tier big bands such as those of Benny Goodman or Woody Herman... His tenor sax style is in the line of Lester Young, and his talent was not only recognized by West Coast musicians but also enjoyed high popularity in Europe.
Pianist Timmy Inosencio was a music teacher at an L.A. high school in his later years and, according to Pinky Winters, was the band instructor at the high school Pinky's eldest daughter attended around 1970. He was a talented jazz musician who, since his high school days, aspired to be a professional jazz pianist and had acquired a solid technique and a great sense of swing. It seems he was a gifted musician who confirmed early on that 'you can't make a living from jazz' and chose that path. Trumpeter Marvin 'Tricky' Heale was Zoot's cousin. John Doorman was erroneously credited on the Norma LP as a trombonist, but Pinky testifies that he was a bass trumpet player and had no blood relation to Irving. Bassist Jim Wolf was Pinky's husband at the time.

1 - Dancing On The Ceiling
(Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart)
2- Popo
(Shorty Rogers)
3 - These Foolish Things (Remind Me Of You)
(Jack Strachey, Harry Link)
4 - I'll Remember April
(Don Raye, Gene DePaul, Pat Johnston)
5 - Lover Man
(Jimmy Davis, Roger Ramirez, Jimmy Sherman)
6 - Lighthouse Days
(Frank Patchen)

#1 to #5:
Zoot Sims (tenor sax), Marvin "Tootie" Hale (trumpet), John Dorman (bass trumpet),
Timothy "Timmy" Inocencio (piano), Jim Wolf (bass), Gary Hale (drums).
Recorded during a rehearsal at Zoot Sims' home, Inglewood, California, 1954
#6:
Zoot Sims, Bob Cooper (tenor saxes); Bud Shank (alto sax); 
Stu Williamson (trumpet); Frank Rosolino (trombone);
Claude Williamson (piano); Howard Rumsey (bass);  Stan Levey (drums).
Recorded live at The Lighthouse, Hermosa Beach, California, March 9, 1954

1 comment:

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