LP-740

James Moody - Comin' On Strong




Released 1964

Recording and Session Information



James Moody, tenor saxophone, alto saxophone, flute; Kenny Barron, piano, organ; George Eskridge, guitar; Chris White, bass; Rudy Collins, drums
Ter Mar, Chicago, September 16 1963

12704 I've grown accustomed to her face
12705 Zanzibar
12706 Sonnymoon for two
12707 Dizzy
12708 Ole [For the gypsies]
12709 Please send me someone to love
12710 Autumn leaves
12711 Fly me to the moon (In other words)

Track Listing

In Other Words (Fly Me To The Moon)Bart HowardSeptember 16 1963
DizzyJames MoodySeptember 16 1963
Autumn LeavesD. Kozma, J. Mercer, A. PrevertSeptember 16 1963
OleDizzy GillespieSeptember 16 1963
Sonnymoon For TwoSonny RollinsSeptember 16 1963
I've Grown Accustomed To Your FaceAlan Jay Lerner/Frederick LoeweSeptember 16 1963
ZanzibarEsmond EdwardsSeptember 16 1963
Please Send Me Someone To LovePercy MayfieldSeptember 16 1963

Liner Notes

IN MANY WAYS, the title of this album is unnecessary. Comin' On Strong is the way James Moody does things musically. Moody has contributed too much to jazz and to the general dignity of the jazz business to have it any other way.

Moody the musician is a product of bop era. The wages of those years were destructive to many of its participants, yet Moody remains. The quality of the music produced by many members of the then avant-garde movement has been variable, yet Moody's is consistently excellent. Many men have shifted their musical conceptions to take advantage of this fad or that craze. yet Moody, (if necessary), will take music and fit it to his conception. Musicians have taken up new instruments to give them added versatility and their musical personality changes to suit the demands of the instrument; yet Moody plays alto, tenor and flute in a style that is distinctly his own.

Moody has a history of producing unique musical performances. Moody's Mood For Love is a classic ballad performance, but slow pieces are a small part of his repertory. A list of his outstanding works Will number pieces as diverse as NJR. Hey Jim , Disappointed, The Strut, Last Train From Overbrook, Darben the Redd Foxx, With Malice Towards None and Workshop. HoW many men can claim such a huge collection (still only partially accounted for here) of musical successes?

Moody has also given a good deal of inspiration to young musicians. During the period when he led a septet he featured men such as Babs Gonzales, Johnny Coles, Eddie Jefferson, Gene Kee and Clarence Johnston. Moody also used the compositions of talented musicians like Quincy Jones, Benny Golson and Tom McIntosh while these men were largely unknown to the general public.

Moody the man has suffered some untimely misfortunes during his 20 years as contributing jazzman. The year 1938 is one he would like to forget. Too many bottles of cheap wine threatened his career but Moody committed himself to Overbrook Hospital in New Jersey and came back.

In the summer Of 1961, Moody took his group to The Five Spot in New York after an appearance at the Newport Jazz Festival and things were good until the club was closed by the police and the band was out of work. Moody, however, went to Chicago where he shared the bandstand for a couple of weeks with three other saxophonists; Gene Ammons, Dexter Gordon and Sonny Stitt. The performances of these men during their stay at McKies DJ Lounge shook the very foundations of the Chicago Jazz world and people still talk about it three years later. Lesser men could not have made it yet Moody did.

For the last two years, Moody has been an associate of John Birks Gillespie. Now Moody concentrates more on alto and flute; although tenor was the horn he played when he was a member of Mr. Gillespie's first big band in the middle 1940's. The fine interaction between Moody and Diz has been evident from the very beginning of their latest relationship. Moody is the ideal compatriot for Dizzy because his shy manner meshes with the leader's extrovert personality. The result is nightly demonstration of musical and social common sense.

In this album, Moody is assisted by the Gillespie rhythm s«tion of Kenny Barron, Chris White and Rudy Collins and Chicagoan George Eskridge on guitar. As with each Moody release. the listener gains a little more insight into the musical personality of the man. In this case, it is two Latin pieces, Ole and Zanzibar, that reveal another facet of his versatility. Zanzibar was written by Esmond Edwards, the man responsible for the making of this album and I think the listener will agree that With works like Zanzibar coupled with Bonita and Desert Winds (recorded by Illinois Jacquet), jazz may have found its answer to Prez Prado.

Moody has also contributed an original to the date. It is a line entitled Dizzy and during the course of its performance, one can enjoy an affectionate portrait of our number one trumpeter and presidential candidate.

Moody has always brought to his ballad performances a unique interpretative powers and in this collection, Fly Me To The Moon and I've Grown Accustomed To Your Face are fine examples.

COMIN' ON STRONG?: OF COURSE. Anything else would be an insult to the man.

Bob Porter
Editoe, "The Digger"

LP-739

Baby Face Willette - Mo-Roc




Released 1964

Recording and Session Information



Baby Face Willette, organ; Ben White, guitar; Eugene Bass, drums
Ter Mar, Chicago, 27 March + 2 April 1964

13142 Dad's theme
13143 Misty
13144 Bantu penda
13145 But not for me
13146 Sight in darkness
13147 Mo-roc
13148 Unseen and unknown
13149 Zip five

Track Listing

Mo-RocRoosevelt Willette27 March + 2 April 1964
Bantu PendaRoosevelt Willette27 March + 2 April 1964
Dad's ThemeRoosevelt Willette27 March + 2 April 1964
But Not For MeGeorge & Ira Gershwin27 March + 2 April 1964
MistyErroll Garner & Johnny Burke27 March + 2 April 1964
Unseen And UnknownRoosevelt Willette27 March + 2 April 1964
Zip FiveRoosevelt Willette27 March + 2 April 1964
Sight In DarknessRoosevelt Willette27 March + 2 April 1964

Liner Notes

THE MUSIC on this album offers strong cvidcnce of the versatility-and-greatness of Roosevelt "Baby Face" Willette. This versatility and greatness is divided into two levels, first as an instrumentalist, second as a composer.

As an instrumentalist, "Baby Face" exploits a highly rhythmic and "funky" organ sound, a sound that today is extremely popular with the record buying public, including both lovers of Rhythm and Blues and Jazz.

As a composer, all of the original tunes in the album were composed by Willette. The others, "Misty", the Errol Garner classic, and "But Not For Me" are by now jazz standards.

Roosevelt "Baby Face" Willette was born on September 11, 1933 in Little Rock, Arkansas. Like many of today's top jazz organists, He got his start playing in church. He is no newcomer to the jazz organ scene. Among earlier dues he has paid were stints with the great Joe "The Honeydripper" Liggins and "Big" Jay McNeely.

After years of traveling on the road, experiencing the pros and cons of a musician's life socially, economically and musically, Willette decided to make it on his own, and formed a trio. The group as represented on this record was formed in the fall of 1963.

The organ of Roosevelt "Baby Face" Willette is unique. It jolts with the unexpected and the new. It has something to say and uses every resource to interpret its message. Willette's organ is ingenious — gifted with musical expression — listen now to ROOSEVELT "BABY FACE" WILLETTE...

The set opens with MO-ROC, a tune which is named in short for Chicago's Moroccan Village where "Baby Face" is currently employed. Willette's driving solo sets the mood for Ben White's "cooking" guitar on this track.

In Swahili, which is an African language, BANTU PENDA means "Black Love". This track features mellowness involving contrasting elements of these two instruments, the organ and guitar.

DAD'S THEME, "Baby Face" asserts, "is a tune that was dedicated to my father who died recently". Again the soulful organ of Willette is establishing new pitches, more funk and harmony. The marching togetherness on this is beautiful.

The much recorded "BUT NOT FOR ME" has good melodic lines. Willette plays through the tune in a provocative manner, then tosses the feature spot to Ben.

An African female witch doctor was in mind when Willette recorded UNSEEN AND UNKNOWN. Notice the blending of harmonics on this one. The screaming, which connotates the voicings of the witch doctor, also enhances this set.

ZIP FIVE, another Willette original, begins with a swinging, grooving, rollicking beat. Freedom of expression is dominant here. Throughout the whole 'grooving" affair, the listener will not only get a chance to hear the tremendous virtuosity of the Willette organ, but to "dig" Ben White and Eugene Bass in a secondary but forceful role "wailing" and "pushing" the set to a successful conclusion.

Rounding out this tastily prepared album, the trio indeed reaches the essence of musical compatibility on SIGHT IN DARKNESS. Here Willette's organ and White's guitar concur ideas. On this, as well as throughout the album the skinmanship of Eugene Bass is very much appreciated.

Looking over the whole session, all of the charts on this album, which is "Baby Face" Willette's first album for Argo, you will find one of the most spirited and original organists in the "World of Jazz" today — Roosevelt "Baby Face" Willette.

Tom Reed
"THIS IS JAZZ"
KPRS FM
Kansas City, Missouri

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-759

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