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Showing posts with label 1950. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1950. Show all posts

1950 - July 29

The Cool Britons - July 29 1950

 

Leonard Feather: New Sounds from the Old World Liner Notes: BLP 5019 

This LP disc is unique in several respects. For the first time on any record, it presents a compact and complete picture of the best in modern jazz from the two European countries that have taken an undisputed lead, over all others outside the United States, in developing first-class talent in this field. For the first time it combines in one comprehensive LP the best in writing, in thinking and performing, that the brilliant young stars of Great Britain and Sweden have given the jazz world. 


No less remarkable [than The Swinging Swedes] is the swinging spirit of the all-star British groups under the leadership of Johnny Dankworth. Born in London in 1927, Johnny extracts his mellifluous tone and modern style from a plastic saxophone, an idea that has since been copied by several top American jazzmen. On the first two tunes, Birdland Bounce, Leapin' in London, Johnny conducts the winners of a poll conducted among readers of the English weekly Melody Maker, playing two of his own arrangements. The other two numbers, Tea for Me, Cherokee, are played by Johnny with his own combo, which was elected the country's No. I small band in the poll. Since Johnny was also voted No. 1 alto man and top arranger, the four performances present him in each of the award-winning facets of his victory. 


Several of the men heard here have recently formed bands of their own, among them Jack Parnell and Ronnie Scott; and several, including Charlie Short and Tony Kinsey, were specially hired to accompany such visiting American stars as Lena Horne and Benny Goodman during their visits to Great Britain. 


All in all, the performances in this double-header might well be described by one of the Swedish titles; they are, in every respect, the cream of the crop. 


The Johnny Dankworth Seven and Orchestra... 
 

Johnny Dankworth formed the Seven in 1950. It came about as a result of of trumpeter Leon Calvert and trombonist Eddie Harvey sitting in with the Johnny Dankworth Quartet at Club Eleven. This made Dankworth realise the possibilities of a four horn group playing music along the lines of the Miles Davis band. 
 

The original personnel was Dankworth (alto), Jimmy Deuchar (tpt), Don Rendell (tenor), Eddie Harvey (tmb), Bill Le Sage (pno), Joe Muddel (bs), Tony Kinsey (d). Muddel was soon replaced by Eric Dawson and in 1952 Eddie Blair replaced Jimmy Deuchar and Eddie Taylor replaced Tony Kinsey. The group was successful and lasted until 1953 when it was disbanded on the formation of Johnny Dankworth's big band. The band played neat, at types complex, musical arrangements and featured solos from all the musicians. 


The Johnny Dankworth Seven

Down Beat 25 March 1953 Volume 20 Issue 6 

New Sounds from the Old World is the apt title of this LP, which puts the best British and Swedish jazz back to back. British titles are eloquent testimony to the triple talents of Johnny Dankworth, as alto man and arranger on all four sides, leader of the bigger group of Melody Maker poll winners on the first two numbers and of his own award-winning combo on the last pair. They also show off a fine trumpet man, Jimmy Deuchar, Ronnie Scott’s tenor, several other confident soloists, and rhythm section work that’s most effective on Bounce, the best item of the bunch.   


Leased from Esquire Records





Session Information 

Jimmy Deuchar, trumpet; Eddie Harvey, trombone; Johnny Dankworth, alto sax; Don Rendell, tenor sax; Bill LeSage, piano; Eric Dawson, bass; Tony Kinsey, drums. 

London, England, July 29, 1950 

 

M-7-116, Seven Not Out (as Tea For Me), Blue Note 1612, Blue Note 5019 

M-7-117, Cherokee, Blue Note 1612, Blue Note 5019 

1950 - April 19

Sidney Bechet's Blue Note Jazz Men - April 19 1950 

 

Max Harrison - The Complete Blue Note Recordings of Sidney Bechet - Mosaic Records MR6-110 

It is a welcome surprise on the last [Wild Bill] Davison session to find [Joe] Sullivan at the piano. He takes a good, short solo in COPENHAGEN and backs Archey well; the latter, though not a great ensemble trombonist, is a useful soloist. CHINA BOY is another piece that was long in Bechet's repertoire and it is instructive to compare this reading with the Bechet-Spanier Big Four version of a decade earlier. The soprano saxophone solo on the Blue Note, as in COPENHAGEN, almost invites comparison with a controlled volcanic explosion, were such a thing possible. In fact the solo strength of this edition of the Blue Note Jazzmen is impressive, yet the band's collective sound is again less distinctive than that produced on other Bechet dates, including the first two with Davison. Partly to contradict this, it should be said that the opening and closing ensembles of both versions of RUNNIN' WILD are very hot, not least as a result of Davison's efforts. Ensembles aside, Bechet solos continuously in both readings, and there is little to choose between them. The fact that, as noted earlier, he was always so sure of what he wanted to do means, despite the continuing spontaneity of his playing, that alternative takes usually offer few surprises. There is more excellent Sullivan on the hitherto unavailable I AIN'T GONNA GIVE NOBODY NONE OF THIS JELLY ROLL. He does little that is predictable, and the same goes for Bechet. Archey sounds as if taken off-guard at the start of his solo. The second take has less Sullivan, and Davison comes in briefly, ahead of Bechet; and this time the trombonist is ready. Yet another ardent soprano saxophone solo occurs in MANDY, MAKE UP YOUR MIND, the earlier part sensitively backed by Sullivan, the latter by sustained brass chords. Again the leader solos throughout between the opening and closing ensembles. Like COPENHAGEN, SHIM-ME-SHA-WABBLE has strong dixieland associations, yet Sullivan and Bechet make it their own, with a rather good Archey passage separating them. 


Down Beat 1950 Blue Note ad

Dan Morgenstern – Hot Jazz on Blue Note CD Liner Notes   

Mandy, Make Up Your Mind, a 1924 pop tune not to be confused with Irving Berlin’s “Mandy” (as Gunther Schiller did when discussing the Henderson band’s version with Armstrong in his marvelous book Early Jazz), was memorably waxed by the Williams Blue Five, with Louis on hand and Bechet taking his only solo on the rarely heard sarrusaphone. He sticks to the soprano in this 1950 version, which he dominates, clearly enjoying himself. Wils Bill’s too far back in the mix here, but it almost doesn’t matter: this is Sidney’s show. Slick jones (this time partnered by Pops Foster) again proves he’s underrated, and pianist Joe Sullivan pops up for the first time. 


China Boy is a 1922 poptune - “Oriental” subjects were the rage then, what with Paul Whiteman’s million-selling 1920 disc of “Japanese Sandman.” This 32-bar ABCD tune has interesting harmony and was a great favorite of Bechet’s. His 1940 version with the Bechet-Spanier Big Four is definitive, but this one’s good to have. Joe Sullivan’s on board – he was on the McKenzie-Condon Chicagoans date with Teschemacher and was featured on Red Nichols’s 1930 Brunswick, both with Gene Krupa – and takes the first solo with lots of panache. Then Sidney gets in the middle and starts to ride. Four choruses later, he’s in the winner’s circle. 

Shim-me-sha-wabble is one more dance tune, written in 1917 by the productive Spencer Williams. It’s a multi-strainer: 16-bar verse, 8-bar interlude. It was put into the jazz repertory by the New Orleans Rhythm Kings in 1923. We haven’t heard from Bechet for a while; he has fun with this one, leading the verse and not giving Will Bill much elbow room on the chorus. But he steps aside for Joe Sullivan (who was on a great 1930 Red Nichols record of this tune) and Jimmy Archey. Then Bechet solos with a very well centered sound and a happy feeling, and rides on out. 


Blue Note Sale February 1950

Leonard Feather – BLP 1203/1204 Liner Notes 

Copenhagen, the one the Wolverines recorded in 1924, has some solo work by Wild Bill, Jimmy Archey and Joe Sullivan with a climactic soprano sax buildup. Nobody Knows You (When You're Down And Out) is a song collectors will remember from the Bessie Smith version in 1929; Wild Bill, Art and Sidney all have some warm emotional moments with its attractive chord changes. 


China Boy, associated with Joe Sullivan ever since he recorded it with McKenzie and Condon's Chicagoans in 1927, swings through Joe's solo to a superbly built-up series of Bechet choruses. Shim-Me-Sha Wabble, a Spencer Williams original, probably antedates the better known Muskrat Ramble and has a chorus based on a similar harmonic sequence, plus a minor-key verse. 




Art Hilgart – Runnin' Wild 1998 CD Reissue Liner Notes 

Wild Bill Davison (1905-1989) got his nickname from a poster at a Chicago club where he was playing, but it didn't stick until the 190s. The name fit the raw ebullience of his cornet playing and it also fit his personality — he was a crude womanizer and a kleptomaniac, and although he didn't show symptoms of alcoholism, he drank more than a fifth of whisky or gin every day. He was born in Defiance, Ohio and was raised by his grandparents in the basement of the Carnegie library where his grandfather was custodian. He took up the cornet as a child, and when he began getting paying work, was advised by a school counselor to drop out. His career was almost entirely one of drift. He played around Ohio until 1925, when the band he happened to be with landed a job in Chicago. Davison stayed there until a 1933 lob offer in Milwaukee, which became his base until 1941 when a fan who was also a wealthy widow offered to fund a move to New York. Within weeks of his arrival, he was invited to sit in at Nick's and Nick [Rongetti of the Village Club) hired him on the spot. He became a Condon regular, performing and recording as sideman or nominal leader. When clubs were no longer a steady source of income, he played concerts and festivals around the world, doing so until his death. 


Down Beat April 20 1951 Volume 18 Issue 8 

George [Hoefer]: This, the first 331/3  micro 10-incher in the Blue Note catalog, is a collection of sides from three recording dates involving different personnel. A parlor game could easily be made up of guessing which instrumentalists are accompanying Bechet-Davison on each side as they are played. The disc as a whole is not exciting, due to a lack of cohesion between the individual sides and| between the artists on the various sides. There are interludes | by Davison on Fidgety and Kate, Jimmy Archey’s trombone on Shim-Me, Sullivan on Copenhagen, and China Boy, and Sidney’s soprano with Hodes’ blues piano on Nobody. 





10" albums BLP 7001 and BLP 7014



12" albums BLP 1203 and BLP 1204


Session Information 

"Wild Bill" Davison, cornet; Jimmy Archey, trombone; Sidney Bechet, soprano sax; Joe Sullivan, piano; George "Pops" Foster, bass; Wilmore "Slick" Jones, drums. 

WOR Studios, NYC, April 19, 1950 


BN376-4, Copenhagen, Blue Note 572, BLP 7001, BLP 1203 

BN377-1, China Boy, Blue Note 573, BLP 7001, BLP 1203 

BN378-0, Runnin' Wild (alt) 

BN378-1, Runnin' Wild, Blue Note BLP 7014, BLP 1204 

BN379-0, Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None Of My Jelly Roll (alt) 

BN379-2, Ain't Gonna Give Nobody None Of My Jelly Roll, Blue Note BLP 7014, BLP 1204 

BN380-2, Mandy, Make Up Your Mind, Blue Note BLP 7014, BLP 1204 

BN381-2, Shim-Me-Sha-Wabble, Blue Note 572, BLP 7001, BLP 1203 

1956 - March 12

Kenny Burrell – March 12 19 56     Leonard Feather: Kenny Burrell Volume 2 Liner Notes   KENNY BURRELL is a guitarist summa cum plectrum. H...