Showing posts with label SANDY MOSSE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SANDY MOSSE. Show all posts

LP-639

Sandy Mosse - Relaxin' With Sandy Mosse

Released 1959

Recording and Session Information

Sandy Mosse, tenor saxophone; Junior Mance, piano; Bob Cranshaw, bass; Marty Clausen, drums
September 5 1958, Chicago

LP 639 9054 I'm Old Fashioned
LP 639 9055 Birks' works
9056 The End of a Love Affair
LP 639 9057 Fools Rush In

Sandy Mosse, tenor saxophone; Eddie Higgins, piano; Art Tabachnik, Carl Racine, George Palermo, violin; Harold Kupper, viola; Harry Wagman, cello; Bob Cranshaw, bass; Marty Clausen, drums; Bill McRae, arranged by, conductor
October 13 1958, Chicago

LP 639 9103 Speak Low
LP 639 9104 Cocoanut Sweet
LP 639 9105 My Man's Gone Now
LP 639 9106 Love Is For The Very Young
LP 639 9107 Stella By Starlight

Track Listing

Fools Rush InRube BloomSeptember 5 1958
I'm Old FashionedJerome KernSeptember 5 1958
Birks WorksDizzy GillespieSeptember 5 1958
Stella By StarlightVictor YoungOctober 13 1958
Love Is For The Very YoungDave RaksinOctober 13 1958
Speak LowKurt WeillOctober 13 1958
My Man's Gone NowGeorge GershwinOctober 13 1958
Cocoanut SweetHarold ArlenOctober 13 1958

Liner Notes


In the provincial world of Chicago jazz, musicians do their best to be heard. They try to work with groups of their own, with other groups, at under-scale or no-pay sessions, or alone in bleak apartments, waiting for the call to either coast.

The majority of them are mediocre talents, whose aspirations far exceed their talents. Occasionally, however, the Chicago proving ground produces a genuinely creative jazzman, as it has in the past. These individualists depart the city, seeking solace and reward elsewhere.

There are few homes for imaginative jazzmen in Chicago.

The stigma of the "local" musician haunts their paths along night club row. The petty promoters and jazz parasites harass them and take advantage of their talents. The jazz public, fickle and insecure, casts them aside for the dubious attractions of the "name" performers.

Those musicians who love the city remain. But their life is a residue of bitterness, loneliness, and frustration. A life in jazz is not an easy one.

Sandy Mosse would like to live and work in Chicago. He's been trying to do just that for years, yet his income is substantially less than that of performers with far less artistry.

The tenor man, now in his late twenties, has tried to capture a niche in jazz. By working as regularly as possible, he has become well known to jazz fans in Chicago. He has worked in dives and in plushly padded spas, for club owners who rarely appreciated his efforts. Believing intensely in the rewards — personal and economic — of working steadily, he has attempted to do so in recent years.

In recent months, however, he has worked only sporadically. "They don't know I can play things other than jazz," he said to me once. "They think that because I've concentrated on jazz, I can't play anything else. Right now, I'll take any honest booking," he added.

Sandy Mosse is known to Chicago jazz fans and to a handful of devotees in other cities. He has not recorded album after album, as have other tenor men in other locales. He has chosen to remain in Chicago and has suffered.

Born in Detroit, Mosse came to Chicago when he was 11. He brought with him some background on clarinet. At Chicago's Sullivan high school, he met pianist Lou Levy. Together, they worked in the bands of Jimmy Dale and Jay Burkhart. They spent hours listening to the explorations of Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.

In 1950, after having studied both clarinet and alto, Mosse switched to tenor. It was a case of finding the right sound.

In '51, Mosse headed for Europe. In Paris, he met Wally Bishop, who had been drummer with Earl Hines. Mosse joined Bishop's group, which toured the continent. After the tour, in '52, he married his wife, Clara, a native .of Amsterdam, and they returned to America.

He spent six months with Woody Herman's band, worked with various small groups, then, in '54, returned to Europe. His first recordings — quite rare — were cut then: Modern Sounds: France, with Henri Renaud's all stars (Contemporary 10" C2502), and Blue Star Jazz (Blue Star 6831), also with Renaud's group, In '56, after returning home, he participated in the small group tracks on the reverse side of Bill Russo's The World of Alcina on Atlantic.

It was in '56, too, that he signed with Argo, to embark on series of LPs featuring the work of Chicago jazzmen, his first opportunity to do so.

During the past year, Mosse has worked whenever possible. An able, proud musician, he has turned down jobs for less than union scale. Plagued by personal problems and an intense desire to succeed, he has struggled constantly for months. Often, he has considered a return to Europe, where, in his opinion, the jazz man is an artist, not a freak. To date, he has not succumbed to this urge, preferring to remain in Chicago, working on a day job in order to pay basic family expenses.

Influenced by Lester Young, Stan Getz, and Al Cohn (primarily the latter, Mosse feels), Mosse has managed to weld an individualistic conception, a fluency on the horn that is his own. His work is of value for several key reasons.

He is, above all else, a melodically-oriented musician. His work rarely borders on stridency. He is concerned with melodic content and the appropriate exploitation of that content. This does not mean that he is unaware of harmonic and rhythmic development; he is well aware of both and employs subtle patterns in his work. But to Mosse, the theme and variations are of equal importance.

This melodic strength is evident in this album. With the exception of Dizzy Gillespie's Birks' Works, a tour of the blues world, the selections, made by Mosse, are ones of melodic worth.

Here, Mcsse energetically approaches the Johnny Mercer-Rube Bloom gem, Fools Rush In. He performs the Jerome Kern-Mercer tune, I'm Old Fashioned (from the 1942 film You Were Never Lovelier), in characteristically flowing fashion.

The tracks on which Mosse is backed by a string section emphasize his interest in melodic structure. All the tunes, by the way, originated in Hollywood or on Broadway. Mosse is direct on Stella By Starlight, the Victor Young-Ned Washington tune from the 1944 film, The Uninvited. He is properly balladic on David Raksin's 1953 Love Is For The Very Young, from the film The Bad And The Beautiful. The Kurt Weill-Ogden Nash composition, Speak Low, from 1944's One Touch of Venus, is given another free-flowing Mosse treatment. My Man's Gone Now, from the George Gershwin-Dubose Heyward epic, Porgy and Bess ( 1935), is another Mosse ballad. Cocoanut Sweet, the most recent entry, is from the 1938 Harold Arlen-E. Y. Harburg musical, Jamaica, and, too, is a ballad in Mosse's hands.

Working with Mosse on the quartet side are Junior Mance, piano; Bob Cranshaw, bass, and Marty Clausen, drums. Mance, (listen to him on Birks' Works) well known for his work with the Adderley brothers, currently is with Dizzy Gillespie's group, Cranshaw is a member of Ed Higgins' trio in Chicago. Clausen, a little known (outside of Chicago), but quite inspiring drummer, has worked with Dan Belloc's big band and with various Chicago groups.

On the string tracks, Mance is replaced by Ed Higgins, who has headed his own trio at several leading Chicago night clubs for many months. Cranshaw and Clausen remain. The five strings added to the basic quartet are Arthur Tabachnick, Carl Racine, and George Palermo, violins, Harold Kupper, viola, and Harry Wagman, cello. Bill McRea, a prominent radio-TV arranger in Chicago, arranged and directed the string tracks, as he did for the big band tracks on Vito Price's Argo LP (Argo 631).

This is Sandy Mosse's first LP as a leader. He has been one of the leaders of jazz in Chicago for several years, but has been unable to achieve the recognition he deserves. Perhaps this LP will serve that purpose. If it does, it will be one reward for a musician who has given much of himself to jazz.

DON GOLD
Managing Editor
Down Beat Magazine

RECORDING DATES

9-5-58 Side 1
10-13-58 Side 2

TECHNICAL DATA

Stereo recording made on an Ampex-30()S. Monaural recording made on an Ampex-300S. Frequency response of equipment ± 2db 15cps—23kc.

Masters are made with little or no !imiting of dynamic range, and are cut at a level of not more than 5 cm per second, to avoid overloading pickup cartridges, Masters are in all cases made to duplicate, as closely as possible, what was heard in the control room during the session.

For best results, use RIAA playback equalization. On this recording, use a microgroove stylus only.

LP-609

Sandy Mosse – Chicago Scene

Released 1956


Recording and Session Information


Universal Recording, Chicago, Illinois, July 6, 1956
Dave Mulholland, trumpet; Sandy Mosse, tenor saxophone; Ira Sullivan, tenor saxophone; Eddie Baker, piano; Jimmy Gourley, guitar; Leroy Jackson, bass; Dorrell Anderson, drums

8150 Straight life
8151 Let's get away from it all
8153 Dee's delight
8155 Let's go
8160 Fascinating rhythm
8161 'Tis autumn
8162 Knickerbooper
8163 Clara's blues

One of the following made it onto the album as Outville

8152 Evening in Paris (unissued)
8154 Rekinomon ? (unissued)
8156 Doin' it (unissued)
8157 Balance blues ? (unissued)
8158 Over the rainbow (unissued)
8159 John's blues (unissued)

Track Listing

Straight LifeI. SchulmanJuly 6 1956
Let’s Get Away from It AllM. Dennis-T. AdairJuly 6 1956
KnickerbopperD. MulhollandJuly 6 1956
Dee’s DelightEddie BakerJuly 6 1956
Let’s GoI. SchulmanJuly 6 1956
‘Tis AutumnHenry NemoJuly 6 1956
OutvilleEddie BakerJuly 6 1956
Fascinating RhythmGeorge GershwinJuly 6 1956
Clara’s BluesSandy MosseJuly 6 1956

Liner Notes

Chicago jazzmen have been in an untanable position for years. Because most of the lucrative jobs for talented musicians lie in the recording and TV studios of New York and Los Angeles and in the film studios of Holloywood, most good players head for either city.

There they form part of vast talent pools that provide literally hundreds of good musicians for jazz record dates.

As all but a handful of the firms that record jazz are in those two cities, it becomes obvious that a discery can issue many records without looking much farther than its own nose.

And thus it has been almost inevitable in recent years for most of the jazzmen in Chicago to gravitate to busier centers. Its musicians have been siphoined off at a steady rate/ The comparative few who have remained have generally found it difficult to make a satisfactory living from music.

Even the city's big clubs, which were more numerous at the beginning of 1957 than at any time since World War II, will seldom hire local men. It takes records to make a reputation, they feel, so they seek out of town groups.

This is a discouraging picture in a city which at one time was the hub of thw eowrld's jazz activity.

But few persons have ever done anything serious about trying to alleviate it.

This album is one of what will be a number of Argo LPs devoted to Chicagoans. The names may laregly be unfamiliar to you. They are men who have scuffled and worked day jobs and off-night gigs and only sometimes regaularly in order to stay in Chicago. Some have been sidemen with name bands and groups, then came back home.

All of them have worked in one or more groups in the Windy City, as the men who are able to land playing dates became leaders for a day and hire the man they worked for last week.

The men on this session in its various combinations are:

Sandy Mosse, tenor sax: at 27 a familiar horman on the Chicago scene. Lived and played in Europe in 1951-'52, worked with Woody Herman in '55. Recorded with Bill Russo on Atlantic LP. An important tenor man with seomthing to say.

Ira Schulman, tenor sax: has been a prominent Chicago saxman for nearly a decade. Led own units, played with big bands of Russo, Jay Burkhart, other.

Dave Mulholland, trumpet; also plays flugelhorn, alto horn, writes. A Russo student. Heard frequently with the Jim Lounsbury band.

Eddie Baker, piano has worked with own trio, as accompanist for Bille Holiday, and with Bill Russo on Europe tour in 1955. Also does considerable writing.

Jimmy Gourley, guitar; an unsung guitarist but one of the best. Gained considerable reputation in Europe while living in Paris in 1951-'55. Worked with Burkhart, Jackie Cain and Roy Kral, many others.

Leroy Jackson, bass: another in the long line of excellent bassists to come out of Chicago in the last few years )others: Leroy Vinnegar, Buddy Clark, Wilbur Ware, Johnnie Pate). Has played with Dinah Washington, rhythm and blues groups, many Chicago units.

Dorrell Anderson, drums: longtime member of the Chicago group. Played with Gene Ammons, tenor Johnny Griffin, et al.

Too many liner notes, I feel, claim greatness for the accompanying record when it is simply not there. This will not be one of them.

There are some exhilirating moments here - Mosse on Let's Get Away from It All, Gourley's eloquent guitar Baker's fleet piano; flashes of Schulman's tenor, etc.

But I feel the biggest value of this set lies in its presentation of jazzmen who deserve to be heard even though they are not well-known.

It is a simple matter to assemble a group of poll-winners and near-misses in a New York or Hollywood studio and do a session that figures to do well because of its name value.

It takes some courage to record men simply because you feel it should be done.

This LP is a trailbreaker in the respect that it presents some individual talents that have remained in a city which tries studiously to ignore them.

More will follow.

JACK TRACY
Down Beat Magazine
Straight Life and Let's Get Away from It All are played by a group comprising Sandy Mosse, tenor; Jimmy Gourley, guitar; Eddie Baker, piano; Leroy Jackson, bass; Donell Anderson, drums.
Knickerbooper is played by Ira Schulman, tenor; Dave Mulholland, trumpet, same rhythm section.
Dee's Delight and Let's Go is played by Mosee (1st tenor solo on Dee's Delight, Schulman (second tenor solo on Dee's Delight and only tenor solo on Let's Go, Mulholland, Dourley, and rhythm.
'Tis Autumn is by Schulman and rhtyhm.
Outville and Fascinating Rhythm are by backer, Jackson and Anderson.
Clara's Blues is by Mosse and rythhm.

Recorded on July 6, 1956 at Universal Studios, Chicago.

LP-759

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