Thursday, November 30, 2017

Video: Woody Herman, 1964

Hqdefault
In July 1964, the Woody Herman Orchestra appeared on the BBC2's Jazz 625 TV show. The show's title referred to the number of lines it used on the UHF frequency. The band put on a sterling performance, showcasing punchy trumpets, swinging trombones and swaying reeds. There also was was plenty of solo heat. The band included Bill Chase and Billy Hunt (tp); Phil Wilson and Henry Southall (tb); Sal Nistico and Joe Romano (ts); Nat Pierce (p); Chuck Israels (b) and Jake Hanna (d).

Here's over 55 minutes of Woody Herman in London in 1964...



from JazzWax http://ift.tt/2ituvBY

Wednesday, November 29, 2017

Video: Bill Evans in Umbria

Screen Shot 2017-11-29 at 7.18.29 PM
On July 19, 1978, pianist Bill Evans was at the Umbria Jazz Festival in Terni, Italy. He was accompanied by bassist Mark Johnson and drummer Philly Joe Jones. A few weeks ago, 28 minutes of the trio playing that night was uploaded to YouTube. The songs are The Peacocks, Theme From M*A*S*H, Midnight Mood, Nardis and an incomplete Solar, featuring alto saxophonist Lee Konitz.

Screen Shot 2017-11-29 at 7.18.04 PM
Here's the Bill Evans Trio, with Evans's right hand in extraordinary form that night, though his playing was a bit rushed and percussive...



from JazzWax http://ift.tt/2k9AiNl

U.S. Department of Labor Fines US Environmental Inc. for Safety Violations and Proposes Penalties Totaling $333,756

Nov. 29, 2017 U.S. Department of Labor Fines US Environmental Inc. for Safety Violations and Proposes Penalties Totaling $333,756

from OSHA News Release http://ift.tt/2zRuyPe

Tuesday, November 28, 2017

Leo Richardson: The Chase

Aaaaaa
News this week that Britain's Prince Harry's will marry American actress Meghan Markle in May isn't the only good word about British-American relations. Yesterday, I listened to British tenor saxophonist Leo Richardson's new album. It pays tribute to American hard bop. I'm happy to report that the musical coupling is a perfect match.

Screen Shot 2017-11-28 at 8.20.41 PM
Released on Britain's Ubuntu label, Richardson's The Chase is loaded with hard-charging blowing. On the album, Richardson is joined by pianist Rick Simpson, bassist Mark Lewandoswki and drummer Ed Richardson, with special guests Quentin Collins on trumpet and Alan Skidmore on tenor sax. These guys have done their listening, especial Richardson. Not only are Richardson's eight originals in the tradition of hard-bop greats, the group also has all of the jazz style's peppery nuances down.

For hard bop to sound authentic, you need the drummers' taut push, the piano's funky tossing and turning, the paper-thin gap between horns playing in unison, a blues feel and an irrepressible collective energy and synchronicity. And solos must be muscular and hair-raising, not rambling wheel-spinners or banal back-peddling lines.

MMBST-84227-2
To my ears, the album's opener, Blues for Joe, channels Joe Henderson's fleet, robust saxophone on albums like In 'n' Out and Mode for Joe. Richardson tears it up, zipping through his solo with plenty of soul and zest.

Demon E is a slinky tune and may be a tip of the hat to Booker Ervin, based on Richardson's strong wailing throughout. He's joined by Collins on trumpet.

Hankmobley
On The Curve, Richardson seems to have Hank Mobley's Caddy for Daddy in mind or Henderson's funk on Una Mas. A big swagger with boogaloo riffs.

81ZvNgHO9nL._SL1371_
The Chase
isn't the bop warhorse by Dexter Gordon and Wardell Gray in the late 1940s but a ferocious song by Richardson with Collins aboard. The pairing here reminds me of Freddie Hubbard and Tina Brooks on Hubbard's Open Sesame. A stunning piano solo by Simpson. 

Elisha's Song is a beautiful, introspective ballad with a Johnny Griffin approach on the saxophone.

Mambo opens with an extended bass solo by Lewandoswki. Despite the song's Latin title, the minor-key tune has more of a North African flavor, with a Sonny Rollins attack by Richardson.

R-2132346-1352238905-2689
Silver Lining
has the melody line and sophisticated harmony of a Horace Silver original.

Mr. Skid features Richards and Skidmore battling it out, giving their saxophones a Coltrane workout.

Richardson is the son of bassist Jim Richardson, who recorded with Chet Baker in London in 1979 and 1983. Listening to this album, it's hard to keep the feet still. While the flavor is Blue Note, the execution is pure Richardson and his group of superb musicians. The hard bop is so authentic you keep waiting for one of drummer Art Blakey's press rolls.

JazzWax tracks: You'll find Leo Richardson's The Chase (Ubuntu) here.

You'll also find the album at Spotify.

JazzWax clip: Here's the title track, which includes a terrific solo by drummer Ed Richardson...

The Chase

       


from JazzWax http://ift.tt/2igTPuT

U.S. Department of Labor and Pottery Manufacturer Reach Settlement Agreement Following Worker Fatality

Nov. 28, 2017 U.S. Department of Labor and Pottery Manufacturer Reach Settlement Agreement Following Worker Fatality

from OSHA News Release http://ift.tt/2BiIiin

Monday, November 27, 2017

Tubby Hayes: Back in Town

TH-1 copy
While performing in New York in June 1962, British tenor saxophonist Tubby Hayes had an opportunity to record for Smash, Mercury's newly formed jazz subsidiary. Smash was run by Shelby Singleton, a Mercury executive with pop sensibilities. What was remarkable about the resulting album, Tubby's Back in Town, are the musicians selected for the recording session.

R-3053428-1313512776
The album features Tubby Hayes (ts and vib), James Moody (ts and fl), Rahsaan Roland Kirk (ts, nose-fl, cl, manzellon and stritch), Walter Bishop, Jr. (p), Sam Jones (b) and Louis Hayes (d). Moody was under contract to Argo at the time, so he was listed on the Smash release as "Jimmy Gloomy." Kirk was a Mercury recording artist.

R-713285-1248561891
The three tenor saxophonists were deftly melodic but also fierce heat-seekers. The supporting trio is equally superb, particularly Bishop, a stand-out bop pianist with a strong keyboard attack who has slipped under the radar of late.

TH-3 copy
The tracks are John Lewis's Afternoon in Paris, Kirk's I See With My Third "I," his Lady "E," Sonny Stitt's Stitt's Tune and a medley of three standards—If I Had You, Alone Together and For Heaven's Sake.

On Afternoon in Paris, Hayes plays vibes while the introduction and ending are played by Kirk on tenor sax and manzello simultaneously.

On I See With My Third "I," Moody and Kirk open playiing flutes in unison. Moody takes the first flute chorus, with Hayes playing vibes followed by Kirk's flute chorus.

5ba9a151362da4924ee8f853c9618b3b--lp-cover-roland
On Lady "E," Kirk plays the first two notes on manzello and tenor sax simultaneously with Hayes and Moody responding on tenor saxes. Kirk takes the first tenor solo. Next comes Hayes and then Moody.

Stitt's Tune opens with four horns. Then Hayes takes the first solo. Kirk follows on tenor and ends his segment by playing two horns. Moody goes last on tenor sax.

On the medley of ballads, each saxophonist is showcased. Moody plays on If I Had You, Hayes follows on Alone Together and Kirk finishes with For Heaven's Sake.

Screen Shot 2017-11-27 at 8.50.42 PM
This album marks the first and only time Hayes recorded with Moody and Kirk. Hats off to the genius who conceived the project, brought these musicians together and decided who would play when. The entire package is masterful.

JazzWax tracks: Tubby Hayes's Tubby's Back in Town (Smash) can be found integrated into Tubby Hayes. England's Foremost Tenor Sax Meets U.S. Jazz Greats. Tubby the Tenor / Tubby's Back in Town / Boston '64 here.

JazzWax clip: Here's Afternoon in Paris...

Afternoon in Paris

A special thanks to Doug Paterson.



from JazzWax http://ift.tt/2iZbZhP

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Chris Connor: Atlantic Singles

Screen Shot 2017-11-26 at 9.21.32 PM
Scrambling to avoid being caught short when the pop album format expanded in 1955 from 10 to 12 inches, Atlantic rapidly began adding singers to its artists rostet. In '56, the label signed Chris Connor after she left Bethlehem Records. She would go on to record 15 superb albums for Atlantic, including the remarkable Sings the George Gershwin Almanac of Song.

When I interviewed Chris in 2008, she told me she had full control of the song selection at Atlantic, often spending hours at Colony Records in New York's Brill Building running her fingers through boxes of sheet music to find great little-known songs.

Screen Shot 2017-11-26 at 8.08.23 PM
Lesser known are her 45s for Atlantic. Now all 24 sides have been collected on Chris Connor: The Complete Atlantic Singles 1956-1960 (Blue Moon). By now, long-time JazzWax readers know that Chris is my favorite jazz singer. My preference takes nothing away from Ella Fitzgerald, June Christy, Sarah Vaughan, Anita O'Day, Dinah Washington, Julie London and plenty of others. I just find that Chris's voice and what she does with a song speak to me. I love her tissue-dry huskiness and hip approach on a melody.

4035ab186f34d135755ae422736ae2cd--classic-jazz-all-that-jazz
When I told her so during our phone conversation back in 2008, she was taken aback. Chris never made it into the A-league on pop-jazz singers, and I'm sure she was painfully aware that she wasn't promoted as smartly or as aggressively as June Christy and other contemporaries.

Screen Shot 2017-11-26 at 9.25.41 PM
Put on a recording of Chris singing a ballad and you find yourself with the hippest voice on vinyl. And if you get where she's coming from, you'll hear an extra dimension that transcends the narrative spelled out in a song's lyrics. It's a place where emotional suffering and joy intersect with reedy intonation and urbane cool. The songs seem almost whispered to you on a rainy night.

MI0000200161
On this collection, Chris is featured with a glam collection of arrangements by Ray Ellis, Herbie Ellis, Richard Wess and Stan Applebaum. Not all of the singles are perfect, largely because arrangers seem to have been torn between Chris's unique approach and what Atlantic wanted to achieve on the radio and in jukeboxes. Songs that work best are Go 'Way From My Window, Past the Age of Innocence, Time Out for Tears, I Won't Cry Anymore, Misty, Invitation and Leiber and Stoller's I Only Want Some. And my favorite, Circus, which Art Blakey and the Jazz Messengers recorded in 1961. Many of these singles feature Percy Faith-like choirs found on many of Johnny Mathis's records of the period. That was Atlantic's doing.

Screen Shot 2017-11-26 at 9.34.46 PM
Chris Connor died in 2009. You'll find Part 1 of my five-part interview with her in 2008 here. To find subsequent parts, simply scroll up to the top of the post and look above the red date, where you'll see a link.

JazzWax tracks: You'll find Chris Connor: The Complete Atlantic Singles 1956-1960 (Blue Moon) here or here.

JazzWax clips: Here's Misty in 1959, with Herbie Mann and His Afro-Cuban Band...

Misty

Here's Past the Age of Innocence in 1956, arranged by Ray Ellis...

Past the Age of Innocence

Here's Circus, with an uncredited arranger and orchestra in 1958, though I suspect the arranger was Mundell Lowe...

Circus

And here's Art Blakey's version of Circus in 1961 after hearing Chris's...



from JazzWax http://ift.tt/2Bqq8Mo