LP-738

The Art Farmer Quartet - Perception




Released 1964

Recording and Session Information



Art Farmer, trumpet, fluegelhorn; Harold Mabern, piano; Tommy Williams, bass; Roy McCurdy, drums
Nola Studios, New York City, 25-27 October 1961

11424 Tonk
11425 Change partners
11426 Nobody's heart
11427 Ponsu
11428 The day after
11429 Lullaby of the leaves
11430 Kayin'

Track Listing

PunsuArt Farmer25-27 October 1961
The Day AfterTom McIntosh25-27 October 1961
Lullaby Of The LeavesB. Petkere & Jos. Young25-27 October 1961
Kayin´Art Farmer25-27 October 1961
TonkRay Bryant25-27 October 1961
Blue RoomL. Hart & R. Rodgers25-27 October 1961
Change PartnersLarry Coleman & Jos. Darion25-27 October 1961
Nobody´s HeartL. Hart & R. Rodgers25-27 October 1961

Liner Notes

"I think of Art as 'Mr. Melody'. He has an uncanny gift for melody, and for the ways of weaving it in and out of harmonic progressions effectively, as though he were creating another composition himself. Art has a big, round, warm sound all his own, which makes his ballads seem to sing. Art doesn't compose very many tunes, but when he does, they are so meaningful...he has a vast knowledge of scales and modes, which is evidenced in his playing. I predict that before long, Art will be one of the biggest jazz trumpeters we have ever known."

Those comments were made back in 1960 by Benny Golson, shortly after he had become Art Farmer's partner in the direction of the Jazztet. Except that the word fluegelhorn may now be substituted for trumpet, all of Golson's remarks apply to the Farmer of 1964. Another important change can be made in the original text: that last sentence can safely be switched from the future to the present tense.

For the benefit of those who may have jumped on the Farmer bandwagon a few years late, a brief summation of his background may be in order. Born Arthur Stewart Farmer in Council Bluffs, Iowa, August 21, 1928, he was raised in Phoenix, Arizona. In 1945 he and his twin brother, the late Addison Farmer, moved to Los Angeles. With the exception of a 1947-8 hiatus in New York, Art remained a West Coaster for most of the next seven years, working with the bands of Horace Henderson, Floyd Ray, Johnny Otis, Benny Carter and the combo of Wardell Gray. In 1952-3 he spent a year in the memorable Lionel Hampton band that included Clifford Brown and Quincy Jones in its trumpet section; some records made in Sweden with a small group during that time were among the first to bring him national attention among jazz audiences.

Settling in New York in 1953, Art formed a group with Gigi Gryce, an alumnus of the same Hampton band. After a year or two off and on with Gryce, he joined Horace Silver's early quintet in 1956. Two years later he began an intermittent association with Gerry Mulligan that lasted several years and included a couple of motion picture assignments (I Want To Live), (The Subterraneans). After three years as co-leader of the Jazztet, Art struck out on his own again in late 1962; most recently he has been heard leading a quartet that features guitarist Jim. Hall.

During the Jazztet years, Farmer doubled between trumpet and fluegelhorn. Lately, however, he has completely abandoned the trumpet for public appearances, relegating it to practice sessions at home.

"The fluegelhorn gets the sound I want more consistently than the trumpet," he told Gene Lees in a Down Beat interview. "I like to hear the low notes. I talk in a low voice, and I like to play like that...if you want to shout and scream, then fluegelhorn is not the instrument."

If shouting and screaming is your musical meat, then this is not your album.

Art's personality is reflected in his approach to music just as surely as his softly modulated speaking voice is reflected in the sound of his horn. This is an unpretentious, mainly introspective session Of the kind that has led too often to comparisons between Art and Miles Davis. Analogies of this kind are a common ailment among jazz critics, who tend to throw names around as if to imply that every soloist has to have a stylistic genealogical tree. Farmer's is a typical case of a style that has undergone such labored analysis, while in fact the only need is for an examination of his work in its own terms. What you hear when you listen to these sides is not a Davis-influenced luminosity or a Hackett-inspired lyricism, but rather a Farmer-fashioned individuality.

Art's rhythm section is composed of men with impressive credits in the contemporary scene. Harold Mabern, whom I heard a while back as a member of Miles Davis' group, was also featured in the Jazztet during its later days and has been heard on records with Jimmy Forrest and others. As Harvey Pekar once observed. "He is a relatively unsung pianist who extracts a full, warm sonority from the instrument; he uses long, complex phrases on the up-tempo tunes, yet his work retains an aura of calm."

Roy McCurdy, a drummer so dependably effective that he has been referred to as Sturdy McCurdy, was also a member of the Jazztet and has been heard with Sonny Rollins and other combos around New York. Tommy Williams is best known for his work during the past couple of years with Stan Getz.

Punsu establishes the attractive mood of the set immediately. A simple but charming theme. it provides a framework for a long, beautifully flowing Farmer solo as vell as for a Mabem excursion that demonstrates the above-cited ability to avoid violence. Tommy Williams' chorus, too, is unspectacularly effective.

The Day After is an exquisite illustration of Art's ability to distill into a brief performance all the essence of his melodic creativity. Listening to this track, a non-musician friend of mine commented: "It seems as though he can even make a major chord sound minor."

Lullaby of the Leaver is an unorthodox treatment of the 1932 pop standard. After an opening chorus on which, except for the release, Art is accompanied only by Williams' walking bass, he yields the spotlight immediately to Tommy for a solo chorus. An unexpected and valuable-added touch is the casual commentary by Art during the second half of the bass and piano choruses, almost as if his horn were performing the comping role of a rhythm section member.

Kayin' was named for Art's manager, Miss Kay Norton. A brightish-tempoed theme on the regular 32-bar pattern, it recalls his confident comment about the mood generated with his horn: enjoy the feeling I get when I'm putting air through the fluegelhorn; the sound is natural and good, so I can stop worrying about how I sound and just worry about what I want to play and how to play it."

Tonk, not to be confused with the old Ellington-Strayhorn piano duet specialty of the same name, is based on an A-A-A-B structure in 16-bar stanzas plus an eight-bar release that is actually a variation of A. McCurdy's brush fills and general support are a bouyantly helpful element.

Blue Room, a Rodgers & Hart standard that goes all the way back to 1926, is introduced in a characteristically speculative Farmer mood, with occasional comments from Tommy Williams. In strong contrast is Change Partners, the most extrovert track of the session. McCurdy's support is a dynamic plus factor in this renovation of the 1938 Irving Berlin song.

The closing track, Nobody's Heart, offers a succinct compendium of virtues: a standard tune ideally suited to Art's idiom, a rerninder of his essentially melodic nature, a delightful interlude of quiet chording by Mabern, and, most impressive of all, the unaccompanied Farmer passages that open and close this low-key performance.

So many angry voices are being heard in jazz at present that the equanimity of an Art Farmer may seem anachronistic to the uninitiated. The truth. of course, is that the new and harsher sounds no more cancel out such values as Farmer's than James Joyce invalidates Dickens, or Baldwin Langston Hughes. As long as there is room for beauty and lyricism in jazz, such voices as Farmer's will newer be silenced.

LEONARD FEATHER

LP-737

Oliver Nelson - Fantabulous




Released 1964

Recording and Session Information



Art Hoyle, Eugene (Snooky) Young, trumpet; Ray Wiegand, trombone; Tony Studd, bass trombone; Phil Woods, clarinet, alto saxophone; Bob Ashton, clarinet, tenor saxophone; Kenny Soderblom, flute, tenor saxophone; Oliver Nelson, tenor saxophone, arranger, conductor; Jerome Richardson (baritone saxophone,flute, alto-flute; Patti Bown, piano; Ben Tucker, bass Grady Tate, drums
Universal Recording Studio, Chicago, March 19 1964

13071 Teenie's blues
13072 Daylie's double
13073 Three plus one
13074 A bientot
13075 Hobo flats
13076 Take me with you
13077 Post no bills
13078 Laz-ie Kate

Track Listing

Hobo FlatsOliver NelsonMarch 19 1964
Post No BillsOliver NelsonMarch 19 1964
A BientotBilly TaylorMarch 19 1964
Three Plus OneOliver NelsonMarch 19 1964
Take Me With YouWillie Jean Tate & Oliver NelsonMarch 19 1964
Daylie's DoubleAudrey NelsonMarch 19 1964
Teenie's BluesOliver NelsonMarch 19 1964
Laz-ie KateOliver NelsonMarch 19 1964

Liner Notes

OLIVER NELSON hit the jazz world like a tornado about four years ago and he's been gaining momentum ever since. Although relatively unknown when he moved to New York City from his native St. Louis, Oliver shortly established himself as one of the most sought-after reedmen in town and was constantly in demand for recording sessions, concert orchestras, stage bands and jazz club dates. On these jobs he would play alto, tenor, baritone saxophone or clarinet as the occasion required; but on one job I recall, he played third trumpet in Reuben Phillips' band at the Apollo Theatre!

For all his facility with various instruments, Oliver best likes to express himself on the tenor sax and does most of his solo work on that instrument. His style is an interesting blending of the Coltrane-modern school and the straight-ahead, it's-got-to-swing philosophy.

As this album demonstrates, Oliver plays a "lotta" tenor sax. However, most of his current reputation as a musician is based not on his performance as an instrumentalist, but on his abilities as a composer and arranger. After his first few arranging assignments the word spread that a fresh and important talent was on the scene and Oliver was soon swamped with assignments. He wrote for Brook Benton, Benny Goodman, Ray Charles, Jimmy Smith, Art Farmer, Maynard Ferguson and as the expression many more."

The Nelson tunes and arrangements are highly regarded by musicians because they are always challenging and interesting. His harmonies are fresh and often surprising and he makes effective use of shifting rhythmic patterns and the interplay of orchestral sections.

But other arrangers are capable of intriguing their fellow musicians. Oliver's work is valuable because it has also succeeded in pleasing the general public — the untrained listeners who want to be entertained and not educated—and I think Oliver achieves this by always having his arrangements swing in a forthright way. The swing isn't implied, it's there!

This album was recorded in Chicago with the band that Oliver Nelson brought from New York for a concert presented by jazz DJ, Daddy-O Daylie, (Two exceptions are the Chicagoans, Arthur Hoyle and Kenny Soderblom.)

As is normally the case with Nelson's music, the challenges presented made the musicians function at top effciency and there was a festive, enthusiastic atmosphere in the studio.

In addition to Oliver's excellent tenor work, this LP has several fine solos by members of the orchestra. Patti Bown has some wonderfully "aggressive" solos on HOBO FLATS, POST NO BILLS, DAYLIE'S DOUBLE and TEENIES BLUES. Jerome Richardson's "growl" flute solo on POST NO BILLS is a high-point in the LP and Phil Woods' alto solos on POST NO BILLS and THREE PLUS ONE are as brilliant and arresting as a view of the Northern Lights.

I won't attempt a tune by tune summary of the album, but in addition to the solo highlights I've already mentioned, I'd like to emphasize the following:

Nelson's "vocal" tenor exploration of Billy Taylor's A BIEN TOT and his own TAKE ME WITH YOU points up why the tenor saxophone has been called the instrument that most closely resembles the human voice.

The Ravel-like building of the band behind Oliver's tenor soliloquy in TAKE ME WITH YOU

Let it be noted that DAY LIE'S DOUBLE (named for the above mentioned Daddy-O Daylie) was composed by Oliver's talented wife, Audrey.

THREE PLUS ONE — a socko, curtain-raiser type of tune, reminiscent of the type of things the swing era bands used to open their sets with; is a virtuoso arrangement that would have taken most merely competent musicians days to master, but the super-pros in the band gobbled it up.

The beautiful Ellingtonish mood of LAZIE KATE...

The wild things that happen in the arrangement of TEENIES BLUES.

Chicago trumpeter Hoyle's fiery solos on THREE PLUS ONE.

This then is some of the latest work of Oliver Nelson, who has been called "fantastic" and "fabulous". We call him 'FANTABULOUS"

Esmond Edwards

LP-736

Budd Johnson – Ya! Ya!




Released 1964

Recording and Session Information



Budd Johnson, tenor saxophone; Al Williams, organ; Richard Davis, bass; Belton Evans, drums
Sound Makers Studio, New York, January 20 1964

12933 When hearts are young
12934 The revolution
12935 Big Al
12936 Exotique
12937 Where it's at

Budd Johnson, tenor saxophone; Al Williams, organ; George Duvivier, bass; Belton Evans, drums

12938 Come rain or come shine
12939 Ya ya
12940 Tag along with me
12941 Chloe [Song of the swamp]

Track Listing

Ya! Ya!Budd JohnsonJanuary 20, 21 1964
Come Rain Or Come ShineJohnny Mercer & Harold ArlenJanuary 20, 21 1964
Big AlBudd JohnsonJanuary 20, 21 1964
ExotiqueEsmond EdmondsJanuary 20, 21 1964
The RevolutionBudd JohnsonJanuary 20, 21 1964
Tag Along With MeBudd JohnsonJanuary 20, 21 1964
ChloeN. Moret & Gus KahnJanuary 20, 21 1964
When Hearts Are YoungRomberg, Goodman, WoodJanuary 20, 21 1964
Where It's AtE. HerbertJanuary 20, 21 1964

Liner Notes

THE music we today call JAZZ has many facets, many styles, many young striving blowers and fortunately, quite a large corp of creative unhampered instrumental giants.

The featured tenor saxophonist of this album is one of these creative giants. Budd Johnson's career has spanned virtually all of the many styles that have controlled Jazz for one period or another. He has been and is still master of them all. Up till now, the most important segment of the medium that had Budd Johnson as an active practitioner was the pre and early Bebop era. His playing and arranging helped the big swing-entrapped Earl Hines band to begin an important musical change — a change that has never been improved upon (because everything that came after it was based upon it)!

Much of the frantic "free form bag" now extant is merely another feverish attempt to get away from the Bebop forms. The most successful ventures in this direction are being accomplished by the more mature players. Budd Johnson is one of these.

His previous Argo album, "French Cookin'", (721), had him backed by a conventional bass, piano, guitar, drums, plus an augmented Latin percussion section. This album gives Budd a little more blowing room with less of an arranged framework. Here he is accompanied and aided by Al Williams, organ; Belton Evans, drums; and alternating bassists George Duvivier and Richard Davis.

From the opening "work song" type bass figure followed by the squiggly-wiggly type organ figure you can readily feel the non-frantic blues-walking groove on the album's opening title tune, "Ya! Ya After stating the captivating theme Budd lays out till the organ solo swings him in with his own intense message.

"Come Rain Or Come Shine", has always been a beautiful blowing ballad. Budd treats the first chorus tenderly, then doubles it up for his 'blowing' segment. The bridge of the initial chorus is played especially pretty, theatre organ style, by Al Williams.

Bass and drum set the tempo for "Big Al" with Budd coming in blowing with no apparent theme in front. As the tune moves along, however, a very definite set of chord patterns assert themselves until the organ and tenor are playing a two-part invention.

The final selection on Side 1, "Exotique", is just that. Its unhurried theme and feeling remind me of Illinois Jacquet's Argo hit, "Bonita". Budd's style here is sort of "hot, clipped and urgent". Richard Davis' 'orientale' bowed solo in quarter tones is certainly a shocker the first time you hear the record. But as you listen to it repeatedly, it grows into an irresistible statement of great beauty.

Undoubtedly a paraphrase on the "free form bag" mentioned earlier, side two's opening tune is titled, "The Revolution". And also, as we said before, it seems that the most successful ventures into this type of playing are being executed by the more mature musicians. This tune is written utilizing the general interval sounds made by most of those involved with the form. How can you have written free form? I suppose the same way we've evolved "written jazz". Anyhow, Budd jumps into his free solo with a groan and proceeds to develop within the tune's structure, a fine feeling and meaning. All revolutions should be as painless!

"Tag Along With Me", is just that, a series of tags used as the central sounding board for the improvisations, instead of as an ending to a tune. This device lends itself most happily to bouyant type ideas and has been made most famous by the tandem team of Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt. Lester Young, in the '40's began using this style for endings in a more restrained manner, and Budd Johnson on this one really evokes the "Prez" image.

"Chloe", is given a slow bongo beat treatment in a sort of bounce style, with Budd making the major call for this lost swamp girl.

A bright and happy coutrast to the preceding tune follows, "by the name of" "When Hearts Are Young". Al Williams' organ is thoughtfully restrained as Budd builds in a flowing singing manner a solo that sounds as if it should go on forever. It almost does, but is finally faded out with the band still playing.

The closer is a statement of definiteness with no argument permitted, "Where It's At". It's just a strong moving blues in a gutter groove. Like here's the whole message right now!

I don't really believe this is the most important Jazz album ever made. Nor do I believe Budd Johnson thinks this. The claim here is that it is the latest recorded example of the continuing creativeness and melodic inventiveness of one of the under-rated saxophone giants of yesterday, TODAY, and undoubtedly, tomorrow. Those who have been championing the talents of Budd Johnson for quite a while are singularly impressed with his current work and are convinced that the greatest part of his career is only now just beginning.

It's all right here in the grooves of this album for you to hear and appreciate. Don't disappoint your inner ear.

JOE SEGAL

LP-759

Lou Donaldson – Musty Rusty Released 1965 Recording and Session Information Bill Hardman, trumpet; Lou Donaldson, alto saxophone; Bil...