Phil Woods once described the late baritone saxophonist, Pepper Adams, as "a bebopper right down to his socks."
I guess it takes one to know one.
In all the years I've been listening to this music, I've never heard a more consistently, electrifying soloist than Philip Wells [Phil] Woods .
Be sure and stick around to checkout some of the newly added playlist at the end of this posting.
I guess it takes one to know one.
In all the years I've been listening to this music, I've never heard a more consistently, electrifying soloist than Philip Wells [Phil] Woods .
© -Reprinted with the permission of Gene Lees ; copyright protected; all rights reserved.
“Phil Woods sometimes refers to himself as Dubois. He is more than half French by ancestry. His father changed the name from Dubois. The rest of Phil is Irish.
When I played one of Phil's records for a friend whose main experience of music was country and western, she said, "Oh yes—he cares." And so he does. Phil's wife Jill (whose brother, Bill Goodwin, is the drummer in Phil's group) once said to me, "Phil's angry about all the right things."
And so he is. He gets angry about indifferent musicianship, politicians, racism, injustice in all its forms, and any failure to render to jazz and its past masters the respect he thinks they deserve. Phil manages to combine in his brilliant alto playing an improbable combination of ferocity and lyricism. Phil once said pointedly that his influences were "Benny Carter, Johnny Hodges, and Charlie Parker, in that order." He has assimilated all his influences to become utterly distinctive, one of those people you can identify in two or three bars, sometimes in one assertive phrase.
Phil graduated from Juilliard as a clarinet major. He still plays the instrument occasionally, and always beautifully. But he has specialized since early days in alto saxophone, on which he achieves a huge tone. He has played with absolutely everybody of consequence in jazz, in every imaginable context, and has recorded with Benny Carter and Dizzy Gillespie, two of his major heroes. He is an intriguing composer and, as a soloist, inexhaustibly inventive.
One of Phil's early idols was Artie Shaw, on whose work he modeled his own clarinet playing. It was my pleasure to introduce Phil to Artie, who began his professional career on saxophone, at a party after one of Phil's concerts. Also at that party was the fine tenor saxophone player Eddie Miller. When Phil had gone off in the crowd of his admirers, Shaw said to me, "I've heard them all. All. Phil Woods is the best saxophone player I ever heard." And Eddie Miller warmly agrees.
Phil is completely uncompromising. He dislikes amplification, and will not allow microphones on the bandstand. Though he was a successful studio musician in New York in the 1960s, he has since then declined to play anything but jazz, and only on his terms. He tours with a quintet that usually contains a second horn, whether trumpet or trombone. Tom Harrell is one of the alumni of his group.
I don't wish to make Phil sound forbidding. He isn't. Indeed, he's terribly funny and a delight to be with. But Jill got it right; I know no one on this earth with more integrity than Philip Wells Woods.”
The following playlist features Phil in nine, different settings. Strap-in and enjoy. Phil always comes to play.
The following playlist features Phil in nine, different settings. Strap-in and enjoy. Phil always comes to play.
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