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Showing posts with label Vernell Fournier. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vernell Fournier. Show all posts

Saturday, July 12, 2025

Jazz goes to... Johnnie Pate

Johnnie Pate Trio
Plus Three
Jazz Goes Ivy League

John William Pate (born December 5, 1923) is an American former musician, a jazz bassist who became a producer, arranger, and leading figure in Chicago soul, pop, and rhythm and blues.
He learned piano and tuba as a child and later picked up the bass guitar. He learned arranging while serving in the United States Army.
Following stints with Coleridge Davis and Stuff Smith in the 1940s, in 1951, Pate was recording on Chess Records with Eddie South and his Orchestra, credited on bass and arrangements. This was also the first of a series of Chess recordings on which Pate collaborated with saxophonist Eddie Johnson. In the 1950s, he was also a resident arranger for Red Saunders' house band at the Club DeLisa. Pate's arranging skills were greatly influenced by Quincy Jones, whom he was an "avowed disciple" of.
Johnny Pate's trio recorded for a number of Chicago labels, including Gig and Talisman. For the Cincinnati-based Federal Records, the Johnny Pate Quintet had a hit with "Swinging Shepherd Blues", which reached No. 17 on the Billboard R&B chart in spring 1958.
One of the last albums on which Pate played bass was James Moody's 1958 album Last Train from Overbrook, on the Chess subsidiary, Argo Records.
In the late 1960s, Pate served as a national trustee on the National Academy of Arts and Sciences and he was very instrumental in bringing the Grammy Awards to television.
Pate turned 100 on December 5, 2023. *wikipedia.org*

Colloquialisms, neoterisms, and jargons, have been the innate privilege of Youth Americana. Thus the term lvy League. It would seem that the Ivy Leaguer would be solely confined to a particular type of college student. It is true that the embryo came from our colleges, but more significant is the fact that whether or not the Ivy Leaguer dares normal convention in his attire, general appearance and way of life is not important, but rather his willingness to accept new concepts and ideas. The Ivy Leaguer no longer can be confined to our colleges, but rather to all those who are young in heart and spirit. Thus we have dedicated this LP to the Ivy Leaguer or to all who are young in heart... for these people are sincere Ivy Leaguers. The sounds you hear and the interpretation are truly Ivy League.
Johnnie Pate not only is a bassist but a great young composer and arranger, having studied at Midwestern Conservatory in Chicago. He has worked with Red Allen, Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan and a host of others. Since then Johnnie has formed the Johnnie Pate Trio which was voted the outstanding jazz combo in Chicago for two consecutive years 1956-57. Some of his original works have been recorded by George Shearing and Eddie South. *(liner notes)*

An excellent bit of jazz from the Chicago scene — featuring the early roots of a set of players that would go onto influence the city's soul scene in a huge way. Johnnie Pate's probably best known as the arranger behind many great soul singles — including most of the Impressions 60s work — but he's playing bass here with a group that includes other great soul studio talents, like Charles Stepney on vibes, Lennie Druss on flute, Floyd Morris on piano, and Wilbur Wynne on guitar. The tracks are longish — with kind of a soul jazz take on the chamber jazz groove of the west coast, showing the first signs of the evolution of the jazz sophistication that would influence Stepney's later productions for Cadet, or Druss' work in the Soulful Strings. Titles include "Nita", "Que Jay", "Currant Jelly", and "Soulful Delight".  *Dusty Groove, Inc.*

Side 1
1 - Nita
2 - Blues For The Ivy Leaguer
3 - Que Jay

Side 2
4 - Current Jelly
5 - Karen
6 - Soulful Delight

(All compositions by Johnnie Pate)

Lennie "Lenny" Druss (flute), Charles Stepney (vibes), Floyd Morris (piano),
Wilbur Wynne (guitar), Johnny Pate (bass), Vernell Fournier (drums).
Recorded in Chicago, Illinois, October 16 (#4, #5, #6) and October 22 (#1, #2, #3), 1957

Friday, September 15, 2023

Norman Simmons And Richard Evans - Two Obscure Jazz Trio Albums


A superb craftsman and an accomplished soloist, arranger, composer and educator, pianist Norman Simmons was born in Chicago in 1929. By 1954 he was leading a popular trio in his home town, where it became the group of choice for such visiting greats as Lester Young, Wardell Gray, Charlie Parker, Ben Webster, and Dexter Gordon.
Simmons made his recording debut with his trio on this 1956 Argo album, sensitively accompanied by bassist Victor Sproles and drummer Vernell Fournier, his impeccable swing, taste, judgment and technique — and a trio approach redolent of pianist Billy Taylors — are evident throughout a varied programme of originals and standards. The ballads, "Moonlight in Vermont" and "My Funny Valentine", in particular show an exquisite feel for the form.
Bassist Richard Evans, born in Birmingham, Alabama in 1932 but raised in Chicago, had an enviably multifaceted CV by the time he made his leader debut on record with Richards Almanac in 1959, also for Argo. Experience with the Sun Ra Arkestra, Lionel Hampton, Maynard Ferguson and as one of singer Dinah Washingtons accompanists, ensured he knew how to deliver. Leading a trio enhanced by the excellent work of pianist Jack Wilson and drummer Robert Barry, he offers a mobile fulcrum for an engagingly varied programme of standards and originals, deft, accessible and always swinging. *Jordi Pujol*

Norman Simmons Trio
Plus
Richard Evans Trio

About Norman Simmons Trio:
If this first album is a sample of things to come, a new talent has arrived. The group is similar in styling and technique to Billy Taylor's. The trio hails from Chicago, where theyare quite popular, and interest ois a national level should develop in time. The Norman Simmons Trio is definitely one to watch. *Billboard, May 6, 1957*

About Richard Evans Trio:
A rare early trio session from bassist Richard Evans — known much more famously for his late 60s soul and jazz arrangements at Chess! The set's not only unique for it's exposure of Evans as a jazz artist, but it also marks one of the first appearances of pianist Jack Wilson — still a part of the Chicago scene at the time of this album, but already playing with the fluid lyricism we love so much from his 60s LA recordings! Wilson's piano is a really key part of the record, and he works a groove that's simply sublime — filled with lots of flowing, gliding touches on the top of the keys, but also coming across with enough of a bottom to give the record plenty of soul! The drummer in the group is Robert Barry, another noteworthy south sider at the time — and titles include "Consu", "The Preacher", "Trees", "Vera", "Should I", and "Daybreak". Nice cover, too, with a young Evans sitting in front of a globe! *dustygroove.com*

1 - Capacity In Blues
(Norman Simmons)
2 - Stella By Starlight
(Young, Washington)
3 - Jan
(Norman Simmons)
4 - My Funny Valentine
(Rodgers, Hart)
5 - Peppe
(Norman Simmons)
6 - Chili Bowl
(Norman Simmons)
7 - Moonlight In Vermont
(Suessdorf, Blackburn)
8 - You Do Something To Me
(Cole Porter)
9 - Love Is Eternal
(Norman Simmons)
10 - They Cant Take That Away From Me
(G. and I. Gershwin)
11 - Tranquility
(Norman Simmons)
12 - Trees
(Rasbach, Kilmer)
13 - Vera
(Bill Evans)
14 - Im Glad There Is You
(Madeira, Dorsey)
15 - The Preacher
(Horace Silver)
16 - Crazy Rhythm
(Meyer, Kahn)
17 - Bye Bye, Blackbird
(Henderson, Dixon)
18 - Daybreak
(Adamson, Grofe)
19 - Consu
(Jack Wilson)
20 - Should I?
(Brown, Freed)
21 - Jeepers Creepers
(Warren, Mercer)

#1 to #11: The Norman Simmons Trio 
from the album Norman Simmons Trio (Argo LP 607)
Norman Simmons (piano), Victor Sproles (bass), Vernell Fournier (drums).
Recorded at Universal Studios, Chicago, Illinois, October 1956.

#12 to #21: The Richard Evans Trio
from the album Richard's Almanac (Argo LP 658)
Jack Wilson (piano), Richard Evans (bass), Robert Barry (drums).
Recorded at Ter-Mar Studios, Chicago, Illinois, July 21, 22 and 23, 1959.