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Showing posts with label Jackie McLean. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jackie McLean. Show all posts

Friday, August 1, 2025

Trumpet Conclave (III)

 Since the time the natives of New Orleans supposedly heard Buddy Bolden's sound from miles away, the trumpet has been the most enduring of all the jazz horns. While the clarinet has decreased sharply in usage, and the trombone assumed a somewhat lesser role than it once held, the trumpet (and I include the cornet and flugelhorn here) has remained an important voice through all of the periods of jazz.
What Louis Armstrong was to the '20s, and Roy Eldridge to the '30s, Dizzy Gillespie was to the '40s. Diz ushered in the modern school of trumpet playing and, together with his most prominent disciples, Fats Navarro and Miles Davis, created a language for the trumpeters of the '50s and '60s. Navarro, had he lived, undoubtedly would have gone on to greater things but, through Clifford Brown, he did have a great impact on the '50s. Davis, of course, became the sound of the '50s and is still exerting an influential force in the '60s.By the mid-50s, the time the following recordings were made, new men had emerged, most of them showing the imprint of the Gillespie-Navarro-Davis triumvirate. Two of the most active on the New York scene were Art Farmer and Donald Byrd.
Art Farmer came to New York to stay in the fall of 1953 when he returned from a European tour with Lionel Hampton's Orchestra. Prior to joining Hamp, he had been active on the West Coast, recording with Wardell Gray.Settling in New York, he co-led a quintet with alto saxophonist Gigi Gryce, and later worked as a sideman with both Horace Silver's quintet and Gerry Mulligan's quartet. In 1959, Farmer and tenor saxophonist Benny Golson formed the Jazztet. When they disbanded, Farmer started his own quartet which featured guitarist Jim Hall until he was replaced by pianist Steve Kuhn.Of late, Farmer has given up the trumpet to concentrate on the flugelhorn with no loss of the characteristics that marked him as one of the most genuinely sensitive trumpet artists to emerge in the '50s.
Donald Byrd arrived in New York in 1955 from his native Detroit. Four and a half years younger than Farmer, Donald was not as mature as Art but his incipient talent was obvious to everyone who heard him in the George Wallington quintet at the Cafe Bohemia. That talent, and his reputation, continued to grow as he worked with Art Blakey, Max Roach, Red Garland, John Coltrane, et al. In 1958, Byrd and baritone saxophonist Pepper Adams had a group at the Five Spot. Since that time, Byrd has worked in Europe, and headed his own combo in the United States. Presently, he is in Europe, playing, and studying composition with Nadia Boulanger.
Idrees Sulieman, who participates in one of the following albums, five years Farmer's senior, and was active on New York's 52nd Street in the mid-'40s with drummer Sid Catlett's group. Originally from St. Petersburg, Florida, he studied at the Boston Conservatory and worked with a wide variety of bands including Cab Calloway, Earl Hines, Louis Jordan, Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Erskine Hawkins, and Dizzy Gillespie. He was also a member of the Minton's set in the mid and late '40s. It was then he recorded with Thelonious Monk. In the '50s, Sulieman played with Randy Weston and Teddy Charles among others. Then he took a group to North Africa and Europe, and decided to remain on the latter continent, making Sweden his main base. Idrees, who formed his style before either Farmer or Byrd, is out of Gillespie and Navarro. There are no overt references to Davis, but the later influence of Clifford Brown is evident. Sulieman is very much his own man, however. His is a plunging, soaring, highly-volatile style which does not play it safe and is all the more exciting for it.
In the '20s and '30s, when musicians of the same instrument got together at a jam session they were out to cut each other. In many ways it was an overtly healthy competition. While the trumpet "battles" on the recordings that follow were not conducted at that level, the underlying sense of rivalry, combined with the feeling of respect for, and enjoyment of, each of the other men's playing, helped to inspire all concerned. I think that the music produced, and the pervading spirit, proves that. *Ira Gitler (August 1964)*


Art Farmer • Donald Byrd
Two Trumpets

The presence of two musicians of the some instrument a session will usually produce some interesting results. Each is naturally going to try and outdo the other and while it may not be the cutthroat competition of the Thirties (an overtly healthy competition at that), the underlying sense of rivalry combined with the feeling of respect for and enjoyment of the other's playing very often helps to inspire each.
In recent months. Prestige has tried to stimulate the Friday afternoon recording sessions by bringing together musicians of the same horn.
In Two Trumpets (an un chi-chi title if I ever heard one), Art and Donald once again join horns with Jackie McLean as middleman and foil soundwise. Two of the numbers ("Dig" and "The Third") have conversational exchanges between the trumpets and each Bb hornman also has a number entirely to himself. *Ira Gitler (liner notes, 1956)*

This is a pairing session that was well conceived and programmed. On three tracks, both trumpets are present to challenge and be stimulated by each other with McLean as a third horn and a contrast in timber. To provide further balance, each trumpet has a solo vehicle. Byrd (Midnight) and Farmer (When Your Love Has Gone) are heard in searching moving ballad interpretations.
On the others, both blow with swift imagination and heat. There are passages of quick exchanges, particularly the long exciting bout at the end of Dig, that recall in spirit if not idiom a 1939 Ellington record, Tootin' Through the Roof, with Cootie Williams and Rex Stewart.
Both Farmer and Byrd have a long and fertile jazz life ahead. Thus far, it seems to me that Farmer is the more settled of the two, particularly on up-tempos. He is, I think, closer to having found his inner style than Byrd, although Byrd is getting there. McLean is searing and a welcome presence. Harris plays with consistent taste and ease. Art Taylor and Doug Watkins are strongly underneath. Good notes by Ira Gitler that identify all solos. *Nat Hentoff (Down Beat, February 6, 1957)

1 - The Third
(Donald Byrd)
2 - Contour
(Kenny Drew)
3 - When Your Lover Has Gone
(Elinar A. Swan)
4 - Dig
(Miles Davis)
5 - 'Round Midnight
(Monk, Williams, Hanighen)

Art Farmer, Donald Byrd (trumpets); Jackie McLean (alto sax);
Barry Harris (piano); Doug Watkins (bass); Art Taylor (drums).
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey, August 3, 1956

✳✳✳


Art Farmer • Donald Byrd • Idrees Sulieman
Three Trumpets

Several times in the past few years Prestige has brought together, in the recording studio, musicians of the same instrument. Many of these friendly jousts between altomen, tenormen, or trumpeters have proved to be highly stimulating affairs, ones in which the emphatic competition has spurred the participants on to playing an inspired stripe. One of these sessions was Two Trumpets (Prestige LP 7062) which featured the horns of Art Farmer and Donald Byrd.
In Three Trumpets, Farmer and Byrd return and are joined by another of the leading modern trumpeters, Idrees Sulieman. Sulieman, active on the New York scene since the mid-Forties has, nevertheless, not been recorded as extensively as the other two and is just started to receive the true credit due him. His is a plunging, soaring, highly volatile style out of the Gillespie-Navarro wing with a more recent parallel influence of Clifford Brown added in. Out of all these sources, Idrees is very much his own man, a daring jazz man who is not afraid to reach out for the ideas which crystalize in his brain at the moment, however hard they may seem to execute. Whether he's safe or not, he does not, as they say in sports, "choke up in the clutch".
As with speaking voices, each trumpeter has his own sound and phrasing, musical sentences as it were which make each one a distinct personality. *Ira Gitler (liner notes, 1957)*

The most appropriate title for this LP would be Bopper's Paradise Regained.
The three trumpeters join forces here in a heated, multi-noted session that will leave many listeners rather limp. There is an impressively vivid rapport among the horns, despite varying approaches to the skeletal forms attacked.
Sulieman is rough and ready. As Ira Gitler says in the notes, "Idrees is very much his own man, a daring jazzman who is not afraid to reach out for the ideas which crystallize in his brain at the moment, however hard they may seem to execute". In this set he is reaching most of the time and grasping successfully quite often.
Farmer's is the delightfully lyrical horn, regardless of temp. Byrd continues to fulfil the potential so many defined months ago. His playing is impressively creative.
In general, the horns seem to converge within the Gillespie-Navarro-Davis tradition, with a Clifford Brown influence apparent, too. Nevertheless, the listener does not feel that he has heard it all before, as each of the trumpeters has something genuinely individualistic to say.
The backing is effective. O'Brien, a 21-year-old pianist from Connecticut making his recording debut, plays confidently, reminiscent of early Bud Powell. He will testify to the heated nature of the session, because he played it with a 102 degree fever. Addison Farmer, Art's twin, handles bass chores capably and Ed Thigpen digs in, too.
The originals, with Sulieman's the most distinctive, are more for jumping off purposes than for melodic significance. Basically, the are lustrous races at medium or up tempos, while O'Brien's Beauty the closest thing to a ballad.
Devotees of modern trumpet playing will relish this, despite some of the technical flaws and moments of hesitancy that accompany a session of such a hectic nature. The playing of the three soloists makes this worth hearing, for the sparks they plant and the fire that develops.
*Don Gold (Down Beat, January 23, 1958)*

1 - Palm Court Alley
(Idrees Sulieman)
2 - Who's Who
(Art Farmer)
3 - Diffusion Of Beauty
(Hod O'Brian)
4 - Forty Quarters
(Idrees Sulieman)
5 - You Gotta Dig It To Dig It
(Donald Byrd)

Art Farmer, Donald Byrd, Idrees Sulieman (trumpets);
Hod O'Brien (piano); Addison Farmer (bass); Ed Thigpen (drums).
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey, January 26, 1957

Monday, July 24, 2023

Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers - Play Lerner And Loewe

"This was a tough session. Some of those tunes were really rough. But we just wanted to stay in there and do it right. Nobody wanted to give up".
That's Art Blakey speaking. The 37-year-old drummer and leader of the Jazz Messengers started recording this album about 10 p.m. on March 13, and wrapped it up at 6:30 a.m. the next day. 
"At first, we didn’t really know what to do. We had figured out some arrangements, but show tunes are so strange. We started right in reworking the arrangements. We figured out some ideas of our own, all five of us, and things began to shape up".
The set comes off as a good distillation of the style of the Jazz Messengers. Starting with a melody, or even a scrap of one, the Messengers work out among themselves the unison opening and closing, then fit their solos into the framework. Behind it all is Blakey, highlighting, underlining, pushing and commenting with his battery of drums.
The tunes, now familiar to anyone with ears, are by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe, and are from their three substantial stage successes, "My Fair Lady", "Brigadoon" and "Paint Your Wagon".
The transition from show tune to jazz vehicle did happen overnight. Says Blakey, "This was like a challenge. The guys cooperated well together. The group was like a family. This is the kind of thing I’d like to do again. A challenge, but the kind we now know we can lick".
*Dom Cerulli (liner notes)* 

One of the rarest of all Art Blakey records, this LP finds the Jazz Messengers (featuring new member Johnny Griffin on tenor and trumpeter Bill Hardman) performing jazz versions of six show tunes by Lerner & Loewe, including three ("Almost Like Being in Love", "I Could Have Danced All Night", and "On the Street Where You Live") that would soon become standards. Despite some of the musicians' unfamiliarity with the songs, this date is quite successful. *Scott Yanow*

The music of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe — composers usually associated with the Broadway stage, brought into a whole new light here by the late 50s Jazz Messengers! The album's one of Art Blakey's more unusual outings — part of that great 1957 run away from Blue Note — but it cooks strongly with a lineup that includes Jackie McLean on alto, Johnny Griffin on tenor, and Bill Hardman on trumpet — all players who bring an unusual degree of bite to these tunes, while still reflecting the lyrical beauty within! The group sparkles and shines with the sort of brilliance and energy that Blakey's leadership brings to the group, completely transforming tunes that include "I Could Have Danced All Night", "Almost Like Being In Love", "On The Street Where You Live", and "There But For You Go I". *dustygroove.com*

1 - I Could Have Danced All Night
2 - On The Street Where You Live
3 - There But For You Go I
4 - They Call The Wind Maria
5 - I Talk To The Trees
6 - Almost Like Being In Love
7 - A Night At Tony's (take 3) 
8 - A Night At Tony's (take 4) 
9 - Social Call (take 4) 
10 - Social Call 
11 - Off The Wall (take 5)
12 - Couldn't It Be You?

(All compositions by Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe)

#1 to #6: from Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers - Selections From Lerner And Loewe's...
Bill Hardman (trumpet), Johnny Griffin (tenor sax), Sam Dockery (piano), Spanky DeBrest (bass), Art Blakey (drums).
Recorded at Webster Hall, New York City, March 13, 1957.
#7 to #12: *bonus tracks*
Bill Hardman (trumpet), Lee Morgan (trumpet [#7 to #10]), Melba Liston (trombone [#7 to #10]), Cecil Payne (baritone sax [#7 to #10]), Johnny Griffin (tenor sax [#7 to #12]), Sahib Shihab (alto sax [#7 to #10]), Wynton Kelly (piano [#7 to #10]), Jackie McLean (alto sax [#11, #12]), Sam Dockery (piano [#11, #12]), Spanky DeBrest (bass), Art Blakey (drums).
Recorded at RCA Studio 3, New York City, April 2 (#7 to #10) and April 8 (#11, #12), 1957.

Saturday, March 4, 2023

Miles Davis - Conception

Literally speaking, what happened five minutes ago is history but when we talk about history usually we are not referring to the recent past. If it is history we're considering then the event must have a significance that sets it apart as something special. 
On October 5, 1951, a recording session was held whose importance memory would ill serve without the permanent evidence. All of us have been present at those magic moments when memorable music was made. If there is no recording device present, however, to preserve the sounds they become pretty hazy as the years roll by. 
When the tracks that make up this album were first issued, in part, on 10-inch LPs, we knew that they would be historic recordings. More than eighteen years later their value has increased. True the men involved have gone on to greater musical maturity and wider public acclaim, but October 5, 1951 represents a time in their lives when their playing reflected the particular kind of vitality —and way of looking at the world— that comes only from youth. At the time Art Blakey was 32 and Tommy Potter 33 —not exactly old— but I’m referring specifically to Miles Davis (25), Walter Bishop Jr. (24), Sonny Rollins (22) and Jackie McLean (19). The talent was there and so was the desire to play, fired by an involvement with a music that had captured their imagination and which they were helping to further develop.
Although all seven tracks in this LP have been released before, this is the first time that the complete session has been issued in one album. That in itself is of historical importance. Conception is some heavy history. *Ira Gitler (Liner notes, March 1970)*

Conception is a picture of what Davis learned from Parker, and a small taste of what Rollins was about to hit us with, but it’s also a defiant half-step forward towards the music that would make these guys jazz icons.
One of the great draws of jazz music is how its greatest players all tended to collaborate with each other, and the combination of Miles Davis and Sonny Rollins on Conception is no exception. These sessions, recorded in 1951 for the Prestige label, feel like a playful and inventive introduction between Davis and Rollins. We can hear them getting to know each other, falling in rhythm with one another. Of course, on top of that, we also get to see two young men just beginning to realize their powers.
Davis was just starting to pull away from his work with Charlie Parker and to make his own way. By 1951, he had already recorded the material that would become Birth of the Cool (which didn’t see release until 1956), and he was just a few years away from a string of unforgettable Prestige releases with his first quintet. Rollins too was quietly making a name for himself. He was just a few years away from creating a classic run of hiw own albums for Prestige, including 1956’s Saxophone Collosus. The impending freedom for both players to create, and the recognition that came along with it, informs at least part of these recordings. 
These tracks stretch out and jam in a way that was innovative for the time. *Matthew Fiander*

Some rewarding, sometimes dazzling post-bop jazz featuring trhee musicians' musicians — Davis, Rollins and drummer Art Blakey.  Set has drawbacks, including some drum-heavy balances, too much echo occasionally in the remastering (these were recorded in '51 and out previously on 10-inch), and Rollins' squeaky reed.
Neverthless, dyed-in-the-wool modernises will buy them. Demostrates Davis' up-tempo work on "Denial", and despite the band sound on "Dig" which actually is "Sweet Georgia Brown". *Billboard, February 4, 1956* 

Side 1
1 - Conception
(Shearing)
2 - Dig
(Davis)
3 - It's Only A Paper Moon
(Arlen, Rose, Harburg)
4 - Denial
(Davis)

Side 2
5 - Out Of The Blue
(Davis)
6 - My Old Flame
(Johnston, Koslow)
7 - Bluing
(Davis)

Miles Davis (trumpet), Sonny Rollins (tenor sax), Jackie McLean (alto sax), Walter Bishop, Jr. (piano), Tommy Potter (bass), Art Blakey (drums).
Recorded at Apex Studios, New York City, October 5, 1951.