Tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine takes on Oliver Nelson's arrangement of "A Kettle of Fish" with Herbie Hancock doing the honors on piano and Grady Tate booting things along in the drum chair. Checkout Oliver's marvelous "shout chorus" beginning at 3.27 minutes and repeated again at 3:44. Click on the "X" to close out of the advertisments.
Focused Profiles on Jazz and its Creators while also Featuring the Work of Guest Writers and Critics on the Subject of Jazz.
Thursday, April 19, 2012
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
A Review of Harlem Jazz Adventures: A European Baron’s Memoir, 1934-1969.
© -
Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.
“This book is not a
sociological or jazz-historical work; it is not a reference book on the
evolution of jazz over the ages. There are lots of those!
This is a book about my
adventures during many, and sometimes long, visits to the jazz capital of New
York ; about the thrill it has been to meet the
great and lesser jazz musicians and their friends. It had to be a happy book
about happy people and their music, and it is written by a happy man who is
happy because he has been lucky enough to get close to that world, even to live
the life he had, so to say, chosen as his own.”
- Baron Timme Rosenkrantz
Every time I’m the
least bit inclined to forget bassist and Jazz author Bill Crow ’s admonition that “Jazz should be fun,”
something comes along to remind me of the import of this remark.
Most recently, it
came in the form of Fradley Garner’s superb English adaptation of Timme
Rosenkrantz’s Harlem Jazz Adventures: A European Baron’s
Memoir, 1934-1969.
As these dates
denote, Mr. Rosenkrantz, a Danish baron, spent a good portion of his life in New York City when Jazz was first coming into existence
and he offers exciting and enthusiastic glimpses of this time-gone-by in the
thirty-six vignettes that comprises the chapters of his memoirs.
Each chapter is a
short essay and collectively they form an episodic stroll through the Jazz
clubs, theaters and gin joints of Harlem [and later 52nd Street]
during its heyday as the “must visit destination” for any Jazz fan.
Mr. Rosenkrantz’s
lovely stories are also a brilliant example of the power of one of William
Zinsser’s key points in his On Writing Well when he enjoins us
to “ … let the person speak to the reader in his own words.”
The very
manageable chapters and the cozy manner in which the stories contained in them
are told create a much welcomed first-person narrative at a time when many of
the books being published on the subject of Jazz are overly analytic and coldly
academic in nature.
Credit for the
engaging “tone and tenor” of Mr. Rosenkrantz’s memoirs must be given to Mr.
Fradley Garner for his brilliant English translation/adaptation which is
replete with a number of explanatory footnotes that help make the book even
more lucid.
And while Mr.
Rosenkrantz’s commercial Jazz ventures [record producer, record shop owner,
concert producer, Jazz club owner] ultimately failed causing him to comment –
“You can say I was born under an unlucky star if you want to.” – he’s quick to
also acknowledge: “But every so often that star shone brightly and made up for
all the sunshine that I slept through.” [p. 186].
Mr. Rosenkrantz
was to experience first-hand the old adage: “The best way to make a million
dollars in Jazz is to start with two million!”
Yet, it’s
difficult to feel too sorry for him, as based on the experiences he shares in
his book, Mr. Rosenkrantz met everyone who was anybody in the world of Jazz
during its formative years and had the time of his life while doing so.
If this book is a
testimonial to anything, it is to the fact that Mr. Rosenkrantz definitely knew
how to have fun with Jazz.
Judging from a
reading of Mr. Rosenkrantz’s anecdotes, tales and yarns, perhaps the book might
have been alternately subtitled: A Danish
Baron’s Book of Enchantments, Revelations and Amusements in The Land
of Jazz .”
Take for example
the title of the work’s very first chapter: Get
Off at 125th Street and God Be with You” which refers to the
warning given by his midtown Manhattan hotel clerk when Mr. Rosenkrantz’s asked
subway directions to uptown Harlem during his very first trip to New York in
1934.
“God certainly was
with” Mr. Rosenkrantz for over the next thirty-five years he was to meet and,
in many cases, become personal friends with Jazz luminaries such as Don Redman,
Chick Webb, John Hammond, Benny Carter, Billie Holiday, Adrian Rollini, Benny
Goodman, Willie “The Lion” Smith, Art Tatum, Fats Waller, Mezz Mezzrow, Eddie
Condon, James P. Johnson, Slim Gailliard and Slam Stewart, W.C. Handy, Stuff
Smith, Erroll Garner, Mildred Bailey, Bud Powell, and most especially – Duke
Ellington – whom he [I think] correctly refers to as “The King of Jazz.”
Among the book’s
many, other enchantments are the following stories from Mr. Rosenkrantz:
- “I'll never
forget that first 1934 visit to Harlem !
I walked upstairs
from the subway platform at the corner of 125th Street and Lenox Avenue and blinked twice as I stepped out on the
sidewalk. I felt as if I had entered another world. Huge neon signs blinked
around me and over me. Beckoning shop windows caught my eye. The traffic was
frightening. Music blared from every open shop door. You might think you were
standing on Times
Square , Piccadilly Circus , or—stretching the imagination—Vesterbrogade,
Copenhagen 's main street, except for the people
around you. They were all people of color. A solid mass of blacks, browns,
yellows, grays moved along the broad avenue with a swinging, rhythmic gait that
held this Nordic visitor in a trance. Their clothing was gay, their faces
animated, their voices rang in the February evening air, as they fairly skipped
along under the trees (now uprooted) on Lenox Avenue.
Following the
crowd, I walked up the street, past several big movie houses, and suddenly,
there I was standing in front of the Apollo Theater.
The Apollo was the
last variety theater in New York City . Here the colossal show goes on at ten in
the morning and runs nonstop until two the next morning—and to think I had
wasted nearly my whole first day in conversations, cafeterias, and clouds!
In the lineup were
the greatest black artists in the world—singers, dancers, comedians, strong
men and weak women, balancing acts, jugglers, and magicians. And the best Negro
bands of the day—plus, of course, a line of the prettiest and darkest chorus
girls this white man has ever seen.
And there was
nearly always a full house. The program ran over two hours and changed every
Friday. In between performances, they showed some Mickey Mouse films and
newsreels and a feature film, something with lots of action. The black
audience—and it's almost entirely black—demands action. Something has to
happen!
Still and all, the
films were so bad, I still believe they were chosen to empty the house. They
usually succeeded.
My first night,
there was a big revue with Don Redman's Orchestra as the main attraction,
costarring with the Mills Brothers, those fantastic tap dancers the Step
Brothers, and a funny, blues-singing comedian, Pigmeat Markham. He later gained TV fame on the Ed Sullivan Show….”
[pp. 14-15] …
- “And then Billie
Holiday came on. I shall never forget her, standing there in the dim spotlight.
Young and beautiful as a dream, her sensitive, full lips half open; those
almond eyes almost closed, as if she were having a blissful dream. Her voice
wasn't big, but it crept under your skin and stayed there. She sang like an
instrument—sometimes like the softest plea of a saxophone, sometimes like the
shrill command of a trumpet. Never had I heard anybody sing like this. You sat
there, almost clenching your fists in ecstasy. Her way of phrasing the words
was so different, yet so right. You instantly knew that this was the way a jazz
lyric should be treated. That voice clutched you like coiled fingers.” [pp.
43-44]
- “Anyone who knew
Fats loved him. He had a heart of gold. No one came to him in vain when they
were needy. No one could resist his always buoyant and contagious spirit. His
laugh could be heard for miles around.
I remember one of
our mutual friends, Adrian, a young Dutch composer of whom Fats was very fond. Adrian had come over to New York to try to make it as a composer and
arranger, but nothing was happening. To make ends meet, he had taken a job as a
wastepaper basket emptier in an office. One night, when the three of us were
together, Adrian started dreaming out loud. "If only I
could afford to rent a little piano, I could really start writing some tunes
and working on arrangements, and get out of that office. It's killing me!"
The very next
morning two moving men showed up at Adrian 's doorstep bearing a new grand piano. With
love from Fats. It had a great sound. I'm sure Fats had taken the time to
choose it personally. In fact, he came by often to play it himself, much to the
joy of everyone within hearing range on West 87th Street . At least Fats wasn't to blame for our
European friend never making it. "The Flying Dutchman" managed to do
a few arrangements and place them, but at last hearing, Adrian was still trying to get paid.” [p. 75]
And here are some
of the book’s revelations as recounted by Mr. Rosenkrantz:
- “C-R-R-R-R-R-R-ASH ! An ear-splitting drumroll unfolded into a
cymbal crash at the other end of the ballroom. Then the orchestra fell in,
heralding the arrival of a little hunchback drummer, the greatest in the world,
Chick Webb. Something happened to me I shall never forget, impossible to put
into words. Only to be felt. And I’ve learned a great drummer is to be felt
before he is heard. Chick seemed to turn a light on in me.” [p. 19]
- “Young Garner's
father was a singer who played several instruments, as did his older brother,
Linton. Erroll was an entirely self-taught musician who hit the keys when he
was three years old and never did learn how to read music. But he played like
no other pianist, and his flamboyant style was a delight to the ears. He would
start a ballad with a long, discordant introduction that didn't even hint at
the melody to come. At last when he swung into it, his left hand lay down
chords like a guitar, keeping up a steady pulse, while his right hand never
seemed to catch up, improvising chords or playing octaves that lagged way
behind the beat for the rest of the number. Just a pinch of Fats Waller added
spice.
I was fascinated
by this fellow's joyously swinging piano, and I sought him out while Louis
Prima was on. Erroll was anything but happy. He didn't know many people in New York and was downhearted. No one was interested
in listening to him—Louis Prima was the showman attraction. And Erroll was only
making forty dollars a week!
He told me he
thought he'd go home soon, as it seemed nothing was going to happen for him in New York . Somehow, I had to stop him. I invited him
home to 7 West 46th Street, showed him my rented Krakaur grand, and once he got
started, it was impossible to pry him off the bench. Little did I know at the
outset that he had a bad case of asthma and couldn't
sleep lying down!” [p. 176]
- “An odd
commentary on the vicissitudes of life is the fact that Ellington does not like
the business of getting from one place to another. He cannot sleep on trains,
ships, or in cars, and he especially dislikes flying. Constant traveling for
forty years has not changed him at all. Approximately 14,650 sleepless nights
account for those heavy bags under his eyes. Come to think of it, he doesn't
like to go to bed at home, either. Life fascinates him so much, it seems a
terrible waste of time. He just seems to thrive on not sleeping!
On the road, he
prefers to play cards with the bandsmen, very often winning all their loot—but
he is a gracious loser, too. Until recently, when he bought an apartment in a
skyscraper on New York 's Central Park West, Duke had a modest little flat on Harlem 's Sugar Hill. He fell for New York the first time he glimpsed the bright
lights—which, to his imaginative soul, were an Arabian Night's dream.
A born big-city
man, he has a deep-seated dislike for expanses of green grass, saying they
remind him of cemeteries. Can't bear any kind of outdoor sports; regarded the
walk down three flights of stairs in his old Harlem apartment as his daily constitutional;
laughingly describes himself as "a hot-house flower."
"You have to
be careful, Timme," he once told me. "There's nothing more dangerous
than fresh-air poisoning!"”[pp. 158-59]
The following
excerpts are examples of the book’s many amusements:
- “Pod's and
Jerry's, also known as the Log Cabin, at 133rd Street near the corner of
Seventh Avenue, was usually the last stop for uptowners and downtowners alike.
Here you could bump into celebrities like Tallulah Bankhead, Frederick March, Franchot Tone (or his mother,
playing drums), and other New York theater people and Tin Pan Alley types.
Many had been slumming at the Cotton Club, where they watched floorshows
featuring the Duke Ellington, Cab Galloway, or Jimmie Lunceford orchestras.
They'd show up in top hats and tails or dripping in ermines. As a rule, they
circulated incognito, wearing oversize sunglasses to make themselves unrecognizable,
which never worked nor was it intended to.
This scene
inspired Don Redman to write a tune, "Take Off Those Dark Glasses, We Know
Who You Are!" Confronted by one of those notables, Harlemites would chant
the melody.”[p. 27]
- “A few years
ago, Eddie Condon made a tour of the British Isles that is still remembered. With him he had his jug buddies
Wild Bill Davison and George Wettling. The tour turned into a contest of how
much liquor can be consumed while playing trad jazz. Who won I don't have to guess:
Eddie had no peers. But nobody seemed to mind, for this was a very special occasion—the
very first time the Brits had heard a stomp-down, sure-enough, live Dixieland
band….
Arriving in a
principal city, they were met early in the morning by the I press, who tracked
them to their hotel. They found Eddie in bed with the hangover of all time. He
could hardly move, but the interview was important, and the road manager let
the scribes in. Eddie lay flat on his back with his hat on. "Go on,
shoot!" he growled. Anything else he mumbled was lost as he faded away.
"Mr. Condon,
wouldn't it be better if you sat up a wee bit in bed, so we can hear what you
are saying?" ventured one of the chaps.
Condon's eyelids
stayed at half-mast as he cracked open his lips and croaked, "What the
hell do you think I am, man, an athlete?" [pp. 153-54]
- “The New York Herald Tribune [subsequently, The International Herald Tribune] once gave a luncheon in honor of Louis
Armstrong at one of the fashionable Paris restaurants. Many prominent people from
the literary world and theater were there, as well as music critics and
reporters from all over the continent. Louis had asked me to come along.
It was a typical
American luncheon with hamburger steaks and three different kinds of ice water.
I think Louis had a side order of red beans and rice, his favorite fruits.
There were many
speeches, and Armstrong was praised in as many different accents.
Then it was
Louis's turn to say a few words. Somebody had asked him what his greatest
thrill had been on this latest European tour. Louis answered:
"Last week we
were playing in Rome . We gave a great concert and those Italian cats went crazy. We
could’ve filled the Forum, no question about that, if they had repaired it!
Well, the next day my wife, Lucille, and I had a private audience with the
Pope. And it knocked us out, man! I told His Holiness about my music and about
my Swiss Kriss (a laxative), which moves me almost as much as the music, and he
was real great, you know?
"'What a
beautiful wife you have!' the Pope says. 'Do you have any children?'
"'No, Pops,'
I told him. 'But we're still working on it.' And do you know, the Pope fell
o-u-t!
And so did
everybody at the luncheon party.” [pp. 127-28]
Socrates once said
that “the unexamined life is not worth living,” to which, an acceptable
corollary might be: the unlived life is not worth examining.
No words could
form a better description of the “Jazz Life” lived by Baron Timme Rosenkrantz
as depicted in Harlem Jazz Adventures: A European Baron’s
Memoir, 1934-1969.
As Jazz approaches
the beginning of its second century, don’t miss you chance to read about what
it was like soon after it all began.
Sunday, April 15, 2012
Cannonball Revisited
© -
Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.
The editorial
staff at JazzProfiles couldn’t agree more with author Kenny Mathieson
when he states “ … that Mr. Adderley’s Music was full of exhilaratingly naïve
freshness and always swung hard.”
A case in point
can be found in the blistering solo Cannonball uncorks on the following video
which offers associative graphics from the crackerjack production team at
CerraJazz LTD in support of an audio track featuring The
Cannonball Adderley Quintet on bassist Sam Jones’ tune – Unit 7.
The solo that
Cannonball takes from 1:00 – 2:55 minutes is full of invention, dazzling
execution and breath-taking speed. Few Jazz alto saxophonists have ever played the instrument with such facility.
In what Mr.
Mathieson calls “a model of Jazz research and scholarship,” Chris Sheridan in
his Dis
Here: A Bio-Discography of Julian “Cannonball” Adderley observes:
“Unlike some jazz
musicians, Canonball’s style was a mirror image of his personality: large,
eloquent, outgoing and above all predisposed to the sunnier side of life,
despite a rare eloquence in interpretation of jazz's most basic material, the
blues. It was a sense of optimism in much of his playing that echoed that of
trumpeter Clifford Brown.”
Bassist Sam Jones
graciously allowed the name of his tune to be altered to Cannon’s Theme and you can hear it once again performed in the
following video tribute to Cannonball, this time with Yusef Lateef’s addition
on tenor saxophone making the group into a short-lived sextet [Charles Lloyd
had preceded him on tenor and flute].
After Cannonball
does the closing introductions, Yusef really gets it going on this version of
the tune with a rollicking solo beginning at 1:29 minutes.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
Quincy Jones: A Reminiscence
© -
Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.
“I remember
playing with Lionel Hampton—who was really the first rock 'n' roll bandleader,
even though he had a jazz background—and we were at the Bandbox in New York City , which was next door to Birdland. Clifford
Brown, Art Farmer and I were in the trumpet section. We had to wear Bermuda
shorts with purple jackets and Tyrolian hats, man, and when we played
"Flying Home," Hamp marched the band outside. You have to imagine
this—I was 19 years old, so hip it was pitiful, and didn't want to know about
anything that was close to being commercial.
So Hamp would be
in front of the sax section, and beating the drumsticks all over the awning,
and soon he had most of the band behind him. But Brownie and I would stop to
tie our shoes or do something so we wouldn't have to go outside, because next
door was Birdland and there was Monk and Dizzy and Bud Powell, all the bebop
idols standing in front at intermission saying, "What is this shit?"
You'd do anything to get away.
I was always on
the edge. Even as a kid in Seattle , we'd play anything, for strippers, for
comedy acts, while at the same time harboring our love for bebop. At that time
you didn't want to communicate, but then you had to get it out of you. Herbie
Hancock said he had the same problem. It's like that old Sid Caesar joke:
"We used to have radar in the band to let us know when we got too close to
the melody." It was that kind of attitude.”
Frank Alkyer and
Ed Enright, Downbeat – The Great Jazz Interview: A 75th Anniversary
Anthology, pp. 233-234.
Monday, April 9, 2012
Aboard the "S.S. Groove" with Cal Tjader
“The vibraphone invites overplaying almost by its very nature. … Unlike a horn player, the vibraphonist is unable to sustain notes for very long, even with the help of vibrato and pedal. The vibes invite overplaying to compensate for such limitations. Added to these difficulties is the fact that … [they are played with] a hitting motion powered by the wrists. With the mastery of a steady drum roll, the aspiring vibraphonist is already capable of flinging out a flurry of notes and, given the repetitive motions used to build up drum technique, the vibes player is tempted to lock into a ‘steady stream’… [of notes].
Tjader’s playing, however, was nothing like this. Although he was a drummer and percussionist by background, he seemed to draw on the instincts of a horn player in shaping his improvised lines. They did breathe.” [West Coast Jazz: Modern Jazz in California, 1945-1960, p.103].
“These disparate strains in his playing came out most clearly in his Jazz work. Where Tjader melded them into a melodic, often introspective style that was very much his own. Even when playing more high-energy Latin numbers Tjader kept a low-key demeanor, building off the intensity of the rhythm section rather than trying to supplant it. For the most part, he came across as an introvert on an instrument meant for extroverts.” [Ibid, pp.103-104].
Sunday, April 8, 2012
Paul van Kemenade and The Metropole Orchestra - FREEZE!
© -
Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.
For more than 30
years Paul van Kemenade has been one of the very active figures in the Dutch
world of Jazz and improvised music; first and foremost as alto saxophonist but
also as a band leader, workshop leader, composer and organizer.
Since 1979 he has
been leading his own formations and has written his own music. He has played in
different existing ensembles and has performed in various ad hoc formations.
In 1982 he founded his own quintet with which he is still performing both in
the Netherlands and abroad. He has not shied away from
playing in various musical disciplines and has organised the, by now, famous
festival "Stranger than Para ..noia".
Paul van Kemenade
can be heard on many records and CD's of which several have been produced under
his own name. He has won many prizes and in 2000 he was awarded the prestigious
Boy Edgar Prize for his contribution to Jazz in the Netherlands .
"I was very
honored to be invited by the Metropole Orchestra to realize a project with my
own compositions, which were orchestrated by two arrangers of my own choice and
performed by a symphonic orchestra and big band with 53 musicians.
This offered an
excellent opportunity for me to make my music symphonic. It has been a very
special and instructive experience and I would especially like to thank Jim
McNeely and Niko Langenhuijsen for their beautiful arrangements and the
Metropole Orchestra conducted by Vince Mendoza for its wonderful
performance."
The following
video features Paul’s composition “Freeze” as performed by Paul on alto
saxophone with The Metropole Orchestra conducted by Vince Mendoza. The
arrangement is by Jim McNeely with additional solos by the orchestra’s resident
guitarist, Peter Tiehuis and tenor saxophonist Leo Janssen.
Friday, April 6, 2012
Tuesday, April 3, 2012
Steve Lacy
"Back then you didn't have to be paid to play, and you didn't have to pay to get in to hear other people play. That was a golden age. Music was accessible and all the giants were on the scene, and there was a truth—the menu was much smaller than now. Everybody—all the different schools of players were active and in their peak. I worked with people from New Orleans, from Chicago, from Kansas City. These people were in their 50s and 60s, and then there were the young radicals, the experimentalists, and the traditionalists. You couldn't get away with any funny business. If there was a new bass player in town all the other bass players would come check him out. Everybody knew who could play and who couldn't. Now it's just a sort of flim-flam going on—most of the giants are gone really. But back then, it was a very beautiful time."
As quoted in Stephanie Stein Crease, Gil Evans Out of the Cool: His Life and Music [p. 219].
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