LP-756

James Moody - Cookin' The Blues




Released 1965

Recording and Session Information


Howard McGhee, trumpet; Bernard McKinney, trombone; James Moody, alto saxophone, tenor saxophone, flute; Musa Kaleem, baritone saxophone; Sonny Donaldson, piano; Steve Davis, bass; Arnold Enlow, drums; Eddie Jefferson, vocals
Jazz Workshop, San Francisco, June 1961

10955 Bloozey (unissued)
10956 Little Buck
10957 Home fries
10958 Disappointed
10959 It might as well be spring
10960 One for Nat
10961 Bunny Boo
10962 The Jazz Twist
10963 Sister Sadie
Moody Flooty

Track Listing

The Jazz TwistJames MoodyJune 1961
One For NatGene KeeJune 1961
Bunny BooJames MoodyJune 1961
Moody FlootyJames MoodyJune 1961
It Might As Well Be SpringRodgers & HammersteinJune 1961
DisappointedE. JeffersonJune 1961
Sister SadieHorace SilverJune 1961
Little BuckJames MoodyJune 1961
Home FriesGene KeeJune 1961

Liner Notes

BACK in 1946, James Moody made his first recording date. He was the featured tenor saxophonist with Dizzy Gillespie's big band on a number called Emanon. Moody was cookin' the blues — to a turn.

Almost twenty years later, Moody is back with Diz, and cookin' better than ever. In between. however, he was a band leader in his own right, as anyone who is aware of Argo Records well knows. Moody's bands have always been big little bands or little big bands, depending on how you look at it. They combined musicality and swing, and certainly knew how to play the blues. This 1961 edition, recorded live at The Jazz Workshop in San Francisco, is no exception. Here the band is heard in a supporting role, save a short solo by pianist Sonny Donaldson on The Jazz Twist. The stage is Moody's for the most part, except on the two selections in which his long-time buddy, singer Eddie Jefferson, steps into the spotlight.

When Moody went to Europe in the late Forties as a member of the Gillespie band, he decided to stay on the Continent. In France and Sweden, he became a recording star on both tenor and alto, his original instrument. When he returned to the United States in 1951, Jimmy continued to utilize both horns. Later in the Fifties, he added flute to his already heavy arsenal. In this album, he uses all three weapons to cook the blues.

Moody is very "vocal" on all his instruments but perhaps no place as much as on alto. His Jazz Twist solo, at a groovy medium tempo, gets into some screaming before it's finished. On the minor-key Home Fries, he does some hard wailing and crying. Even on It Might As Well Be Spring he imparts a bluesy inflection replete with a rowdy rooster crow.

His flute has a pleasing, beautifully-controlled, but never effete sound that is as azure as his other axes. Moody is flutin' the blues on only one track in this set and that's Moody Flooty. Once again he shows how to get a jazz feeling on flute without becoming hysterical.

Moody's tenor is never harsh but has an edge that bites and a center with plenty of guts and he fingers it with the same incredible facility that he brings to the smaller alto. James is a tough man at any tempo. As fellow saxophonist Allen Eager said to me, one night at Birdland, when we were enjoying James' playing, "He can do anything he wants to on his horn."

One For Nat has Moody in full flame and a short drum break by Buddy Enlow. Bunny Boo is in a rocking, finger-popping groove with the mood for Moody set by the walking Steve Davis and Enlow. Moody's Little Buck is a terse, swift, riffy blues with a Lester Young-ish beginning and a few hints of Pres in other places.

In abetting vocalist Eddie Jefferson's portrait of Horace Silver's Sister Sadie, Moody blows a particularly hot tenor chorus. This one swings all the way with Jefferson's words even taking in Blue Mitchell's trumpet solo from Silver's original version.

Jefferson was the first singer to write words to instrumental solos and perform them. "I started doing it back around 1938 or 1939," he told me. "I used to have a record player in my hotel room and just sing along with the records for my own amusement and for the cats who always hung around." Eddie's other solo in this set is Disappointed, based on Charlie Parker's Lady Be Good solo from Jazz At The Philharmonic. The first time Jefferson recorded this, he sang: "I got in trouble foolin' around with a pretty woman." This time he tells us: "I got in trouble feelin' around with a pretty woman." That's some fancy foolin'! Eddie's sense of humor is all over this one in a demonstration of how to make a sad story amusing. It's the only track in the album where Moody doesn't solo, but Jefferson takes good care of all the business. Elsewhere, it's all Moody, and he cooks the blues with the authority and élan of a musical Escoffier.

—IRA GITLER

LP-755

The Ramsey Lewis Trio - Choice!




Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Chicago, 1958

8795 Carmen

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Chicago, 1959

9185 Delilah

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Chicago, April 22 1959

9275 C C Rider

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Chicago, February 23 & 24, 1960

10065 Little Liza Jane

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Chicago, February 16 & 17 1961

10701 Hello, Cello!
10704 Blues For The Night Owls

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass, cello; Redd Holt, drums; Lew Douglas (dir, strings), Oliver Nelson (dir, reeds)
Bell Sounds Studios, New York, August 2+3 1962

11810 Memphis In June
11817 My Bucket's Got A Hole In It

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Universal Recording Studio, February 27-28 1963

12293 Look-a-here

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass, cello; Chris White, bass; Redd Holt, drums
RVG, Englewood, New York, August 20 1963

12559 Lonely Avenue

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass, cello; Richard Evans, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Ter Mar, Chicago, January 31 1964

12971 Travel On

Ramsey Lewis, piano; Eldee Young, bass; Redd Holt, drums
Bohemian Caverns, Washington D.C, June 4 + 6 1964

13261 Something You Got

Track Listing

Something You GotChris KennerJune 4 + 6 1964
Little Liza JaneArranged By – LewisFebruary 23 & 24 1960
Memphis In JuneCarmichaelAugust 2+3 1962
Travel OnEldee YoungJanuary 31 1964
DelilahVictor Young1959
CC RiderArr. Lewis, Young, HoltApril 22 1959
Lonely AvenueDoc PomusAugust 20 1963
Look-A-HereRamsey LewisFebruary 27-28 1963
My Bucket's Got A Hole In ItClarence WilliamsAugust 2+3 1962
Hello, Cello!Young, Lewis, HoltFebruary 16 & 17 1961
Blue SpringRamsey LewisFebruary 14, 15 1962
CarmenArranged By – Ramsey LewisApril 30 1960
Blues For The Night OwlsBernard, ThompsonFebruary 16 & 17 1961

Liner Notes

Success in the entertainment business is difficult to achieve and more difficult to hold on to. And for a jazz oriented group this is doubly true. The Ramsey Lewis Trio has managed to get a firm foothold on the cliffs of success and their steady, well-paced climb to the top gives every indication of a long reign of popularity. Ramsey, Eldee and Red have not "lucked up" on anything, they have worked hard to perfect a presentation that combines great musicianship and showmanship.

A pronounced characteristic of Ramsey's playing is the fact that everything he does is touched with at least a tint of blue. It is interesting to note that several of the "best of" tunes in this album are out-right blues or close relatives of the form. There is something eternal and universal about the blues — everyone seems able to relate to the soulful sounds.

How do you pick a baker's dozen "best" tunes from almost twenty record albums of one of your favorite instrumental groups? We tried and ended with an absolutely irreducible list of twenty-two titles. What to do? We decided to ask Ramsey Lewis which tunes are among those most often requested when the trio is performing throughout the country. In effect, you, the fans, picked the tunes in this album. So enjoy!

—Esmond Edwards

LP-754

Illinois Jacquet – Spectrum




Released 1965

Recording and Session Information


Russell Jacquet, trumpet; Illinois Jacquet, tenor saxophone; Patti Bown, piano; George Duvivier, bass; Grady Tate, drums; Candido Camero, conga drum
RCA Recording Studios, New York, April 29 1965

13905 Big Music
13906 Black Foot
13907 Blues for Bunny
13908 Blue Horizon

Ernie Royal, Jimmy Nottingham, trumpet; Illinois Jacquet, Buddy Lucas, tenor saxophone; Haywood Henry, baritone saxophone; Ed Stoute, piano; Billy Butler, Eric Gale, guitar; Leonard Gaskin, bass; Herbie Lovelle (d) Bert Keyes arr,conductor
RCA Recording Studios, New York, April 30 1965

13909 Goin' out of my head
13910 Spanish boots
13911 Elise
13912 I remember her so well
13913 Now and them

Track Listing

Goin' Out Of My HeadRandazzo / WeinsteinApril 29 1965
Spanish BootsDon MenzaApril 29 1965
EliseMichel LeGrandApril 29 1965
I Remember Her So WellHalletz / Coburn / EnglishApril 29 1965
Now And ThenOrtolani / NewellApril 30 1965
Blues For BunnyRussell JacquetApril 30 1965
Black FootRussell JacquetApril 30 1965
Big MusicIllinois JacquetApril 30 1965
Blue HorizonEdwin StouteApril 30 1965

Liner Notes

JAZZ IS A MAN AND HIS HORN. Jazz is a man like Illinois Jacquet. This giant of a musician has traveled many roads, exploring and forming never-to-be-forgotten sounds.

When I look back to the early forties, I recall the sounds of Lester Young, Don Byas, Chu Berry, Ben Webster and Illinois Jacquet. Then, if I move my musical calendar forward in time, my memory fills with the names of Stan Getz, John Coltrane, Allen Eager, Flip Phillips, Gene Ammons, et al. And Illinois Jacquet's name still holds strong. The man and his music moved with the times. Today, as well as yesterday, the Jacquet style, the Jacquet tone, is an oasis of jazz.

In this album you get "spectrum" of music, music contemporary with the demands of today's record buying public. On my all-night show in Miami Beach, the listeners want sounds with a beat, a Latin sound and pretty music. The young set who grew up on rock and roll now dig jazz, but they need to feel a beat. This album caters to the basic needs of a cross-section of the American jazz public.

The five tunes on side one were all arranged by Bert Keyes — one of the top Rhythm and Blues arrangers in New York City. Bert's charts always emphasize strong rhythm and in these the beat is cooking throughout. The tunes on this side were chosen from a variety of bags. "Goin' Out Of My Head" was a big R&B hit for Little Anthony and the Imperials; "Spanish Boots" is a jazz composition of compelling force, and the other three compositions are from recent movies. Jacquet's robust tenor sax makes every track a personal triumph — now playing the melody straight, now weaving around and through the chord structure of a piece with tasty inventions.

Side two is more conventional — at least as far as instrumentation is concerned. Here, Illinois and his trumpeter brother, Russell, collaborate with a really broiling rhythm section. Patti Bown on piano, George Duvivier on bass, drummer Grady Tate, and conga drummer Candido lay down such a groovy foundation that you'd have to have advanced rigor mortis not to feel the excitement.

Russell Jacquet has worked in his brother's bands off and on since the forties, but now they live in opposite parts of the Country — Illinois in New York, and Russell alternating between Texas and Calitornia. Russell flew to New York specially for the session and it was swinging reunion.

Patti Bown. a young lady who plays a whole lot of piano keyboard, shares the solo space with Illinois and Russell and she makes sparks fly.

But Illinois Jacquet is the star. He is all "pro" and his horn is an instrument for creating musical joy. SPECTRUM is Illinois' fourth ARGO album; each has presented him in a different setting and he's come through like a champ each time.

—ALAN ROCK
THE ONLY JAZZ VOICE
WMBM AM & FM
MIAMI HEACH, FLORIDA

LP-759

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