LP-751

Ahmad Jamal – The Roar Of The Greasepaint - The Smell Of The Crowd




Released 1965

Recording and Session Information


Ahmad Jamal, piano; Jamil Nasser, bass; Chuck Lampkin, drums
Nola Penthouse Studio, New York City, February 24+25 1965

13788 Who can I turn to?
13789 That's what it is to be young
13790 This dream
13791 The beautiful land
13792 Look at that face
13793 Where would you be without me?
13794 It isn't enough
13795 My first love song
13796 Sweet beginning
13797 A wonderful day like today
13798 Feeling good

Track Listing

Look At That FaceBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
Where Would You Be Without Me?Bricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
It Isn't EnoughBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
Who Can I Turn To (When Nobody Needs Me)Bricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
Sweet BeginningBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
The DreamBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
Feeling GoodBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
My First Love SongBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
A Wonderful Day Like TodayBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
That's What It Is To Be YoungBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965
The Beautiful LandBricusse/NewleyFebruary 24+25 1965

Liner Notes

BEFORE it arrived on Broadway, The Roar Of The Greasepaint—The Smell of the Crowd already had achieved a singular series of triumphs. Not only was it a spiraling hit on the road, but there were also more than fifty recordings of songs from the score (a pre-Broadway testament of optimism that exceeded even the welcoming trumpets that greeted Hello, Dolly! and Fiddler on the Roof), This album of Anthony Newley's and Leslie Bricusse's songs, however, is a distinctive tribute because the musical temperament and style of Ahmad Jamal are particularly suited to the Newley-Bricusse way of looking at life and reflecting what they see and hear in music.

Their previous American conquest was Stop the World—I Want To Get Off, a wry, poignant, irreverent morality play about the circular frustrations and self-evasions of a man "making it" in the 20th century jungle. The Roar of the Greasepaint—The Smell Of the Crowd is both a more astringent and more hopeful exploration of the game of life, At first, in an ingenious gameboard of a set, two figures are seen at the play of existence. Sir (Cyril Ritchard) represents those in power, whose basic characteristic is the over-riding desire to maintain power. Cocky (Anthony Newley) speaks for most of the rest of us — those without power or with such little power that we cannot really be in full charge of what hapens to us.

Evety time it app that Cocky may win a game, Sir changes the rules. I will not spoil your fun by detailing the rest of the plot, except to say that as new figures ppear, Cocky sees that there are other ways than his own passivity to counteract Sir. One can assert oneself; one can even refuse to play if the game is rigged. And finally, Cocky learns that he too can make his own rules so that Sir will have to learn to co-exist on equal terms rather than to dominate as if his power were a law of nature. It isn't.

The essentials of the Newley-Bricusse writing style — and of Newley's remarkably evocative skill as a performer — are disciplined simplicity, clarity of design, resiliant wit and a superb sense of timing. Without trying to make Jamal the image of them, it is nonetheless true that those same qualities describe Jamal's way of making music. Furthermore, Jamal himself is a contemplative, arching observer of the way we live now. He has strong feelings about the way things ought to be and could be and, like Newley and Bricusse, he has a firm sense of who he is and what his capacities are.

Accordingly, Jamal and this score fuse easily. Throughout, there are the immediately identifiable Jamal insignia — the plastic use of space; the lithe beat, the graceful humor and the sense of power in reserve. The propulsive force is there, as in sections of "Sweet Beginning" and "Feeling Good". He has supple sense of dynamics, and therefore, he is capable of varying gradations of climax. He swings without strain and with both subtlety and sensibility.

Tne softly glowing lyricism that is a fundamental element of Jamal's style is in evidence on every track, from the luminosity of "Where Would You Be Without Me?" to the aura of unfolding surprise he brings to "That's What It Is To Be Young". Chuck Lampkin and Jamil Nasser meanwhile provide Jamal with a crisply moving foundation on which he can play with time.

The album underlines the consistency of Jamal's firmly personal approach to music. Beginning in 1958 with his recording of a performance at Chicago's Pershing Hotel (Argo LP-628 & LPS-628), Jamal has experienced widening public delight in his work. He does not fall into any conveniently categorical "bag." He is, in sum, himself.

What Jamal has to offer musically - as in the recording — is refreshingly personal on its own terms. I mean his clarity, essentially sanguine view of life and his grace. And when you want to conjugate the possibilities of the kinds of kicks that come on a spring day, the Jamal microcosm is one place to visit. He is a singular part of today's roar of the greasepaint and smell of the crowd.

—NAT HENTOFF

LP-750

Ramsey Lewis Trio & Jean DuShon - You Better Believe Me




Released 1965

Recording and Session Information


Ronald Wilson, alto saxophone, flute; Ramsey Lewis, piano; Roland Faulkner, guitar; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums; Jean DuShon, vocals
Universal Recording Studio, Chicago, December 19 1964

13637 Who can I turn to? [When nobody needs me]
13638 Night time is the right time
13639 Something you got
13640 He was too good to me
13641 Goodbye lover, hello friend
13642 You'd better believe me

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass,cello; Cleveland Eaton, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Universal Recording Studio, Chicago, January 14 1965

13667 Corcovado [Quiet nights]
13668 Tain't nobody's business if I do
13669 Let it be me
13670 It had better be tonight
13671 My coloring book
13672 I'm beginning to see the light

Track Listing

You'd Better Believe MeBuddy JohnsonDecember 19 1964
Who Can I Turn ToBricusse / NewleyDecember 19 1964
Night TimeJoe BaileyDecember 19 1964
Something You GotChriss KennerDecember 19 1964
He Was Too Good To MeRodgers / HartDecember 19 1964
Goodbye Lover, Hello FriendNorman Newell / Micharl CarrDecember 19 1964
Corcovado (Quiet Nights)Antonio Carlos Jobin / Gene LeesJanuary 14 1965
Ain't Nobody's BusinessWilliam YorkJanuary 14 1965
Let It Be MeBecaud/Delance/CurtisJanuary 14 1965
It Had Better Be TonightMancini/Mercer/StaseraJanuary 14 1965
My Coloring BookJohn Kander/Fred EbbJanuary 14 1965
I'm Beginning To See The LightHodges/George/Ellington/JamesJanuary 14 1965

Liner Notes

IF YOU want a good album, don't buy this one, because it's great — and "YOU BETTER BELIEVE ME"! The combination of the swinging Ramsey Lewis Trio and remarkable Jean DuShon — augmented on some tracks with flute, guitar aed sax — marks a departure for the Trio and a new high in listening pleasure for you.

Jean DuShon is making her second recorded appearance on ARGO. Her first album, which rapidly drew rave reviews and many plays from disc jockeys throughout the country, was recorded bast summer. This album can only help to add to the well-deserved praise and recognition that her first ARGO effort won for her.

Youngest of twelve children, whose parents died when she was only five, Jean attended the Detroit Conservatory of Music and began her professional career at the age of 15. In 1960, she made that legendary trip to New York with the Lloyd Price Band and since then has sung with the Cootie Williams group and the ever-popular Fats Domino aggregation. Finally, only a few months ago, she cut herself loose and began making solo appearances after gaining the valuable musical experience that only singing in front of a band can give a vocalist.

As for Jean's singing ability, just try on "Who Can I Turn To" size. There can be no doubt after the first few bars that Jean has an unusu depth and quality to her voice — and that she doesn't employ the gimmicks that have come to be standard equipment with almost every female vocalist singing today. Jean possesses an almost uncanny ability to get inside the lyric and project all the emotion, all the feeling, all real meaning — and more — that the composer meant it to have.

On this, her second ARGO outing, Jean also does a mose competent job of letting you know immediatelv that she can't be type-cast as just a ballad singer. She adequately proves this on the swinging "Something You Got" which is only recommended to the listener when all doors and windows are locked and the right person is there to share Jean's mood with you. "You'd Better Believe Me" certainly can't hurt you either, for that matter, and Jean's emotionally-packed "He Was Too Good To Me" pours a whole new supply of fuel into this great "torch" tune. If you've survived all of this emotionally, don't miss Jean's "Night Time" and a rather swing rendition of "Goodbye Lover, Hello Friend". Jean in the parlance of the trade, is "too much" and a most welcome addition to a world full of women who either rely on vocal tricks or who try to sound like someone they aren't and can never hope to be.

Backing up Jean on this album is the fabulous Ramsey Lewis Trio — and what words can describe them adequately. I think that Ramsey said it best himself several ARGO albums ago when he wrote that "After fourteen years of playing together, our trio is very close to achieving something that every group of musicians strives for. That is, to be able to think and play as one."

Ramsey, Red Holt on drums, and Eldee Young on bass and cello, have reached a point of perfection rarely touched by any jazz instrumental group. Having played together for so many years, their performance as a group is sometimes beyond belief. Their individual solos — be it funk, progressive or commercial jazz — continue to reach new heights of swinging excellence. Perhaps the best way to express it is for you to take your own hands and tightly intertwine your fingers — for that's the way they think, play, and perforrn, closely knit and almost as one.

If you've been hiding in a cave or for some reason havcn't heard this group before, treat yourself to the Trio's fresh approach to "Quiet Nights". Their rendition of this current favorite gives the tune a whole new flavor, a brand new feeling. Then there is the swinging romp through "It Had Better Be Tonight" which can only leave you breathless at best. When you hear "My Coloring Book", "Let It Be Me", or "Ain't Nobody's Business", you know that Ramsey, Red and Eldee are not only performing great music — they are enjoying themselves to the fullest.

Finally, you are again treated to another of those unique musical experiences as Eldee Young embraces his cello for a revival of that great oldie, "I'm Beginning To see The Light".

If vou haven't seen "the light" by the time you've reached this point with the Ramsey Lewis Trio, you're in big trouble. Ramsey, Red, Eldee and something new and great called Jean DuShon have said it all right here in this album. I think you'll their message.

-CHUCK TAYLOR

LP-749

Baby-Face Willette - Behind The 8 Ball




Released 1965

Recording and Session Information


Gene Barge, alto saxophone; Baby Face Willette, organ; Ben White, guitar; Jerrold Donovan, drums
Ter Mar, Chicago, November 30 1964

13576 Behind the 8-Ball
13577 Song of the universe
13578 Just a closer walk
13579 Roll 'em Pete
13580 St. James infirmary
13581 Amen
13582 Sinnin' Sam
13583 Tacos Joe

Track Listing

Behind The 8 BallRoosevelt WilletteNovember 30 1964
Song Of The UniverseRoosevelt WilletteNovember 30 1964
AmenRoosevelt Willette, arrNovember 30 1964
Tacos JoeBennie WhiteNovember 30 1964
Roll 'Em PetePete Johnson, Joe TurnerNovember 30 1964
Just A Closer WalkRoosevelt Willette, arrNovember 30 1964
St. James InfirmaryJoe PrimroseNovember 30 1964
Sinnin' SamNesbitt HooperNovember 30 1964

Liner Notes

IN ALL FAIRNESS to potential buyers of this new album by Baby-Face Willette, BEHIND THE 8 BALL, it should be stated that this critic is partial to jazz organists and jazz pianists. But that very partiality tends to make me far more critical in evaluations of performances or albums by artists in those two fields.

Artists in both the aforementioned categories tend to be (if you'll pardon the over-used expression) a dime-a-dozen. During my years of affiliation with show biz, daresay I've heard literally hundreds of jazz organists, ranging from the nationally known 'name' artists to the average run-of-the-mill cocktail lounge entertainer. In far too many instances, there is such a sameness of technique it is virtually impossible to distinguish one from the other, and I frankly confess I would hate to be subjected to the blindfold test that is sometimes applied to cigaret or wine sampling.

Such, I am happy to report, is not the case With Baby-Fare Willette's playing.

In fact, to be candid, this album could be summed up in three words:
It has SOUL!

To most jazz fans and record collectors such a summation is enough and they know exactly what I mean. But to less knowledgeable or new record buyers, I might use other words which would be more readily understandable. Such as — It's groovey — It swings — It has toe-tapping rhythm. Call it 'instant' rhythm reaction if you like. Or (tho it's somewhat dated by now what with the Frug, the Jerk, et cetera), I could say it has Twistin' rhythm. But however one puts it, it all boils down to one summation and that simply is that Willette is an extraordinarily gifted jazz organist. So fine that one can almost SEE his footwork on the organ while listening to this album. Even more remarkable, tho, is the 'strumming' technique that is peculiarly Willette's own. He does not hold or pound a note or chord as do so many jazz organists today.

BEHIND THE 8 BALL is Willette's second album on the ARGO label and to me, it is a distinct improvement Over his first. That's saying something! On this album he has kept Ben White on guitar and now has Jerold Donavon on drums.

Willette kicks off this album on Side 1 with the title tune, a fairly brief number, and then swings into the lengthier "Song Of the Universe". Third track is a truly swinging version of "Amen", a popular number which is bound to bring instantaneous rhythmic reaction from listeners. Guest artist Gene Barge takes a fine solo on this, the only tune on which he appears. Baby-Face concludes with an especially fine version of "Tacos Joe".

On Side 2, Willette comes on strong with "Roll 'Em Pete" and immediately gives way to some fine guitar by White. So excellent is Willette's aforementioned 'strumming' technique that at times it is almost impossible to tell whether one is hearing Willette or White; each complements the other so effectively that it is a perfect blend. Many of the passages in "Roll'Em Pete" strike me as a complete give and take, back and forth affair between Willette and White with Donavon's drum supplying perfect rhythm.

In the second number, "Just A Closer Walk", Willette offers more concrete proof (if such is needed) of the relationship between the so-called church gospels and modern jazz. For 'Just A Closer Walk" is indeed a jazz version of that well-known church hymn. But before you label that sacrilegious, let me hasten to add that Willette's talent and jazz interpretation gives it the clasp-hands-and-sway rhythm that was always basically in this beautiful tune, proving again the undeniable affinity between gospels and jazz. Other organists have attempted this demonstration but none has shown the evolution quite so strikingly as has Willette in this particular number.

BEHIND THE 8 BALL is an album I would wholeheartedly recommend you add to your collection. Also would I recommend to some of the fine jazz spots in San Francisco (certainly a jazz-orientated city) that they give serious thought to booking Baby-Face Willette and his group in this city in the near future.

—GENE ROBERTSON
"On The Beam"
SAN FRANCISCO SUN REPORTER

LP-759

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