Except for the 12-bar structure of the tune, there's really nothing "blue" about this performance by trombonists J.J. Johnson and Kai Winding. On the contrary, accompanied by pianist Bill Evans, bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Roy Haynes, the solo work by Jay and Kai on this video is guaranteed to put a smile on your face. Music from a time [1960] when Giants Walked The Earth.
Focused Profiles on Jazz and its Creators while also Featuring the Work of Guest Writers and Critics on the Subject of Jazz.
Tuesday, August 7, 2012
Friday, August 3, 2012
Kenny Clarke: No Flash, Man.
© - Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all
rights reserved.
“Of all the rhythm section instruments, the
drums are the most difficult to learn from books and even records. With drums,
you have TO BE THERE … one has to see and feel the music, more so than for
other instruments whose techniques could more easily be assimilated by studying
available recordings …
.”
- Dave Liebman, Jazz saxophonist and composer
‘He had one cymbal; it wasn't
very big. We used to call it the magic cymbal because when somebody would sit
in on drums and use his set, it would sound like a garbage can. But when he
played it, it was like fine crystal. He kept the cymbal level like a plate and
played with a short, side-to-side wrist motion. It was a very graceful thing to
watch.”
- Dick Katz, pianist
“Kenny Clarke virtually
invented modern jazz drumming, as the first player to use the ride cymbal for
timekeeping and the left hand and right foot for accents, as early as 1937 when
he was with the Teddy Hill band.
One of the top figures in
be-bop's development, he is responsible in some way, shape and form for the way
every percussionist plays today.
- Dr. Bruce Klauber
“What he did made the most
complex things sound simple. This was his genius. He was an absolute monster. I
loved him to death.”
- Grady Tate, drummer
For those of you
with a literary bent, the “Flashman” allusion in the above subtitle does not
refer to the Rugby bully in Tom Browne’s School Days, nor to the
fictional continuation in the novels by George MacDonald Fraser of what may
have happened to Tom after he was expelled from Oxford in disgrace.
Rather, it refers
to Kenneth Spearman Clarke, who is almost universally acclaimed as the father
of modern Jazz drumming.
In
Drummin’ Men: The Heartbeat of Jazz – The Bebop Years ,Burt Korall
noted in summarizing a key element of Kenny’s style:
“… the
Clarke-Boland Big Band albums – a laudable legacy – contains some of his most
inspiring performances. Playing softer than most drummers in a large ensemble,
feeding the surge, doing the work of the great accompanist he has always been,
Kenny Clarke consistently proved that flash
is totally irrelevant.
My early years in
the World of Jazz drumming were pretty much as described by Dave Liebman in the opening quotation: full of
observations and an incessant flow of questions to any drummer I could get
within two feet of.
I mean, you gotta
be young and very naïve [stupid?] to pump Stan Levey full of questions. Stan
was a bear of a man who hated, and I mean absolutely hated, to talk about
technique, basically because he was self-taught and very self-conscious of the
fact that he was limited in “drum-speak.”
He shouldn’t have
been because what I found out later from many other teachers who were a lot
more conversant with the language of drums was that Jazz drumming can be
learned, but it really can’t be taught.
Not surprisingly,
as a young drummer, I was caught up in the flash associated with the
instrument.
I mean, faster was
better, louder was better. My motto became: “Play every lick you know in the
first four bars of every tune.”
It got so bad that
one night I inserted Art Blakey‘s famous press roll after the 4th
opening note of the ballad, Laura,
coming down with a cymbal crash on the 5th. It was a trio gig and
the piano player got up and walked off the bandstand!
The man who saved
me from myself and from inflicting any more of this kind of pain on others was
Bill Schwemmer, a gracious and soft-spoken man, who somehow found himself in
the role of my first drum teacher.
Bill was newly
married and lived in a modest little house in Santa Monica . I
drove down to his place, set-up my drums and turned on the “flash.” After a few
minutes, he signaled me to stop and to listen to an LP that he had on his
turntable.
I didn’t touch the
drums again that day.
The album was Walkin’
The Miles Davis All-Stars [Prestige P-7076;OJCCD-213-2].
After we had listened to the
opening track, a 13:26 minute version of Richard Carpenter’s Walkin’, Bill asked me what I had heard in
drummer Kenny Clarke’s playing and I responded that “He hadn’t played anything;
he just kept time.”
Bill loaned me the
LP and also his copy of Miles Davis and The Modern Jazz Giants [Prestige
P-7150; OJCCD-347-2] and suggested that I try to spend as much time as possible
listening exclusively to them.
He specifically
suggested that I concentrate on Kenny Clarke’s ride cymbal beat.
Thanks to Bill,
Kenny Clarke changed my life [and probably saved it, too, from irate piano
players].
It was almost as
though Bill had become a Zen drum master who had imposed a insoluble
intellectual problem for me, kind of like the “What’s the sound of one hand
clapping” or “What was your true nature before your mother and father conceived
you” koans or riddles that Zen is famous
for.
The quest to find
a way to solve the riddle of Kenny Clarke has continually been with me since
Bill Schwemmer first posed it and I have taken great delight over the years in
finding how others have explained what makes Kenny’s drumming so special.
It does begin with
Kenny’s ride cymbal beat which many have tried to copy, but very few have
mastered.
Here are some
descriptions of how other musicians perceived it, as well as, Kenny's special qualities as a drummer.
Jake Hanna
[drummer]: “It sounds like a straight line—"1-1-1-1." But the skip beat
is in there—but very light. The Miles Davis records with Kenny Clarke were the
first things I heard where the rhythm section sounds as if it's airborne,
Nobody's doing anything. Kenny puts his left hand in his pocket; the bass and
piano also are into a sparse thing. And they're off the ground.”
Burt Korall
[drummer, author]: “Clarke's right hand is truly blessed. Playing on a
relatively small ride cymbal—very likely a seventeen-inch Zildjian—set flat, he
makes magic with his wrist and fingers, and the time unfolds as naturally as a
flower in spring.”
Dick Katz
[pianist, author]: “I didn't really pay much attention to Kenny Clarke until
one day in 1953 or 1954. I was riding in the car and a record came on the
radio—a tune from one of the first MJQ albums. I damn near fell out of the car.
I had never heard a cymbal beat like that in my life.
When we worked
together at the Cafe Bohemia in Greenwich Village in 1955, I got a chance to see just how Kenny played on the cymbal.
He held his arm straight, horizontal over the cymbal, and used this
side-to-side wrist motion. The way he used his left foot also was quite unusual.”
Ed Shaughnessy
[drummer, percussionist]: “A good deal of the time, Kenny closed the hi-hat
lightly, four beats to the bar. accenting "2" and "4"
slightly. He was very skillful. It took quite a bit of control of the left foot
to make it work just right. Kenny's time technique was in direct contrast to
what most of the other drummers were doing. They closed the hi-hat hard, on "2"
and "4," to push the pulse along. What Kenny did was quite
sophisticated—remember, it was the 1940s.”
Interestingly,
Georges Paczynski begins the second volume of his prize winning Une
Historie De La Batterie De Jazz with a feature on Kenny Clarke under
the subheadings - L’Histoire de la Cymbal
Ride and Un Art de L’accompagnement –
two phrases which neatly sum up Kenny Clarke primary roll in Modern Jazz
drumming.
Kenny Clarke’s
approach to drumming was marked by “clarity, economy and unity of conception
[Burt Korall].” Kenny didn’t play the drums, he accompanied others on
them.
Since so much of
what was Kenny Clarke’s style of drumming was encapsulated, the editorial staff
thought it might be fun to honor the memory of this pioneering musician with a
series of short quotations by other Jazz players who worked with him over the
years about his significance.
Perhaps, the place
to start would be with the manner in which Kenny viewed his own approach to
Jazz drumming.
“I never was a
soloist. I thought it was stupid. I concentrated on accompaniment. I always
thought that was the most important thing. I stuck with that. And I think that's why a
lot of musicians liked me so much, because I never show off and always think
about them first.”
Jimmy Gourley
[guitarist based in Paris for many years]: “I had a seventeen-year tenure with Kenny. He got
a beautiful, musical sound on the instrument and played for the music, the
soloists. He was the best drummer I ever heard or worked with. Just about
everyone performed on a higher level when he was back there on drums. He locked
in behind you, and his tempo remained unchanged from beginning to end. That's
tough, believe me. You could count on him in every circumstance.”
John Lewis
[pianist, on Kenny with Dizzy Gillespie’s 1948 big band]: “Clarke's head was
really in the music, his senses very much alive. He hit hard with the band,
enhancing its sound and impact. He danced and decisively punctuated on the bass
drum. Openings in each arrangement were imaginatively filled. His conception
and execution of what was central to each arrangement made for rare performance
unity.”
As a participant
in one of three influential Miles Davis Birth of the Cool sessions for Capitol, he played with
a memorable nine-piece group—a miniature of the Claude Thornhill band—on Gerry
Mulligan's "Venus de Milo," John Carisi's "Israel," John
Lewis's "Rouge," and the Miles Davis-Gil Evans collaboration
"Boplicity." Clarke's work on this project—and many others during
this period—brought together, in appropriate ratio, intelligence, emotion, and
instinct. He quietly gave the music a sense of design and swing.
John Carisi
[trumpet player, composer-arranger]: “The most important thing that Kenny
Clarke did was to involve himself in the color aspects of drumming. Another
thing. Kenny’s time was really something; you
could sit on it! Keeping your own time wasn’t necessary. You just stayed
with him.”
Walter Bishop, Jr.
[pianist, composer]: “His name was one that rang among drummers. I was
impressed by the way he conducted himself on and off the bandstand. He was my
role model when I was coming up. There was something classy and very likeable
about Kenny, his deportment, his image. Bebop and all who played it were
struggling with image.”
Rudy van Gelder
[recording engineer]: “I benefited from his expertise. He was so subtle,
delicate, musical. He just knew how to hit the drums to make them sound
beautiful and make life great for me.”
Billy Higgins
[drummer]: “I really liked the sound Kenny
Clarke got out of his instrument. He was not only an accompanist, he integrated
the drums into music.”
Benny Golson
[saxophonist, composer-arranger]: “The thing that was outstanding about Kenny
Clarke was his ability to swing at any tempo. There are many drummers who are
good time-keepers – but it’s not the same thing. I can’t conceive of Kenny
Clarke playing and not swinging. It was an intuitive thing.”
Benny Bailey
[trumpet player]: “He was a neat, clean player and if you hear him on record,
you know immediately that it’s him. There are not too many drummers who are
that identifiable.”
Ray Brown
[bassist]: “As a drummer he was totally distinctive – you can always recognize
Klook [Kenny’s nickname] immediately; his style and his sound were as personal
as a human voice.”
Donald Byrd
[trumpet player]: “Kenny was the bridge between swing and bebop. He was the
first bebop drummer and a fantastic musician. … Kenny was the drummer who
turned everything around. And his time was impeccable.”
Joe Wilder
[trumpet player]: “The thing that impressed me most about Kenny was that he was
one of the first guys I heard play a drum solo in which you could follow the
melody; you could hear by what he was doing that he always had the melody in
mind, and you could always tell where he was in the tune.”
Ronnie Scott
[tenor saxophonist and club owner who performed with Kenny in the Clarke-Boland
Big Band]: “It didn’t matter what the
tempo was, he always swung. He had incredible poise and a marvelous sound. You
can always recognize that cymbal beat.”
Horace Silver
[pianist, composer-arranger]: “Way back when, during an intermission break I
asked him – “Klook, how did you get your style, the unique way you play?’ And
he said: ‘When I was living in Pittsburgh , as a young guy I used to practice all the
time with this bass player who kept telling me to stay out of his way. That’s
how I developed my style because he was always on my back about staying out of
the way.
Kenny Drew
[pianist]: “Kenny had a fantastic musical concept and was his own special kind
of drummer. His swing and the lightness of touch were his own. He could make
music swing like nobody else and he had a feel for the dynamics that gave a
great lift to the music.”
Milt Jackson
[vibraphonist]: "He was one of the most swinging drummers I ever met. He had a
perfect concept of swing – and that’s what Jazz is all about. When he played
behind you it was inspirational – he made you play the best you possibly
could.”
Pierre Michelot
[bassist]: “I worked with Kenny regularly over a period of fourteen years. When
we played together we achieved a kind of creative complicity that made it so
satisfying. He would have this marvelous smile on his face and he would give a
little wink from time to time to indicate – On
est bien, on est heureux; tout va bien. [literally “It is good; it is
happy; all is well;” figuratively “It doesn’t get any better than this.”].”
Shelly Manne
[drummer]: “I can always recognize him, in whatever company, just by the sound
of his cymbal. A true master.”
Gigi Campi
[producer and organizer/sponsor of the Clarke-Boland Big Band]: “Father Klook –
I called him that because there was always a reassuring, paternal element about
his presence. He was so well-balanced – both as a man and as a drummer. He
became part of the drums when he sat behind them. To me he was, by far, the
greatest drummer ever. I don’t know anybody who could play the cymbal like he
did.”
Francy Boland
[pianist, composer-arranger and co-leader with Kenny of their big band]: “He
was very special.”
Grady Tate [drummer]:
“What he did made the most complex things sound simple. This was his genius. He
was an absolute monster. I loved him to death.”
Over the years, my
main observation of Kenny was that he was able to cut through the murky process
by which a drummer and the horn players build a bond of mutual trust.
The currency of
this trust is listening.
Jazz musicians
need to believe that their drummer understands what they are doing, and that
their drummer will do what’s necessary to help their individual efforts make a
difference.
The drummer needs
to live in the music, listen and contribute so that it feeds back into how the
horn players hear each other.
While it can be
awe-inspiring to watch technically gifted drummers spin their magic on the
instrument, when it comes to laying it in there and making it happen, no Jazz
drummer has ever done it better than Kenny Clarke. No flash, Man, indeed!
The editorial
staff at JazzProfiles is indebted to the following as the source for the
above-referenced musicians quotations about Kenny: [1] the drummer world
website, [2] Modern Drummer magazine, [3] Mike Hennessey, Klook:
The Story of Kenny Clarke, [4] Burt Korall, Drummin’ Men: The Heartbeat of
Jazz – The Bebop Years, [5] Georges Paczynski Une Historie De La Batterie De
Jazz and [6] Downbeat magazine.
Wednesday, August 1, 2012
Bob Crosby, His Orchestra and The Bobcats – “The Best”
© - Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all
rights reserved.
The big band era
largely blossomed during the decade of the 1930’s bringing the Swing Era into
existence.
The circumstances
of the World War II [1939-1945], including the recruitment into the armed
forces of many of the musicians who played in them, essentially ended the era
of big bands. The economics of the postwar era also had a great deal to do with
their demise.
But those who experienced
the heyday of the big bands, never forgot the pleasure they derived from
listening and dancing to them.
Everyone had their
favorites: Benny Goodman, Glenn Miller, Tommy Dorsey, Artie Shaw, Harry James.
Some fans were such avid followers that they even knew the names of who held
down the 3rd trumpet chair in their favorite band.
Every so often, a
big band would come along that wasn’t a huge commercial success, but one that
nevertheless developed a close following for the quality of its music.
Such was the case
with Bob Crosby’s Orchestra and the small band embedded in it which he called –
The Bobcats.
My Dad was one
such Bob Crosby fan and when I discovered his stash of Decca 78 rpm’s of the
band and asked him about them, he simply said: “You’ll like listening to them;
they were The-Best-of-The-Best!”
Richard Sudhalter
offers some reflections on why the Bob Crosby aggregations were thought of so
highly in the following excerpts from his seminal Lost Chords: White Musicians and
Their Contributions to Jazz, 1915-1945 [New York: Oxford, 2000, pp.
382-384, excerpted].
“Above all," [bassist]
Bob Haggart recalled, "we were like a family. We worked together,
socialized together. Thought musically together. Most other bands—well, to tell
the truth, we didn't pay much attention to what everybody else was doing. To us
most of the time, they just sounded as if they were trying to steal from one
another."
Meet that wonder
of the musical 1930s, the Bob Crosby Orchestra. In the whole colorful decade
there wasn't another band like it, and in certain ways there may not have been
another nearly so good.
For chronicler
George T. Simon, they were an ensemble "with tremendous spirit, one filled
with men who believed thoroughly in the kind of music they were playing and,
what's more, who respected and admired one another as musicians and as
people."
Few bands, however
brilliant, approached that degree of unanimity with any consistency. It extends
beyond mere skill, beyond originality—even beyond a leader or arranger's
inspired vision. Neither Benny Goodman's virtuosity nor the faultless precision
of his orchestras ever quite transformed their efforts into the expression of a
single collective will. Artie Shaw came closer, his various bands driven by the
strength and singularity of his vision: but Shaw's musicians remained his
employees. Much the same could be said even for Red Norvo's extraordinary 1937
band, breathing, whispering, exulting as extensions of both its leader's
xylophone sound and Eddie Sauter's ensemble concept.
The Crosby orchestra had an extra dimension. It lives
in such words as "ensemble," when describing tightly knit group
acting, or "team," in the finest athletic sense; the idea of a
collective entity, each component interacting constantly and creatively with
the others to shape, to determine the whole. Gestalt, a single consciousness
compounded of many.
In that rarified
context only the Duke Ellington Orchestra comes to mind as in any way
comparable. But an Ellington orchestra, any Ellington orchestra, assumed its
finished shape through the leader's (and often Billy Strayhorn's) codification
of an ongoing fusion and fission among its individual members. The Crosby orchestra, by contrast, began with
unanimous, shared dedication to a single stylistic ideal. Its name, most often
popularly (and imperfectly) identified, I was "dixieland." But the
word fails to describe either a stylistic predisposition or a rhythmic
foundation, not to mention a wide palette of orchestral color and texture.
Better by far, and
more accurate, to remember that the band led by Bing Crosby's younger brother
was built around a core of New Orleans musicians, whose shared background and
affinity determined its musical direction.
Historically, New Orleans jazzmen away from home shared a bond, a camaraderie,
that seemed to transcend class, education, politics, even race. Meeting in New York , Chicago , or Los Angeles , they were often simply homeboys together,
carrying their environment with them in a way that seemed to render differences
among them irrelevant, or at least secondary. It may be that way with i
musicians from St. Louis , Boston , or San Antonio , but not to that degree; and on the evidence it's anything
but that with New Yorkers. …
Whatever it was,
and by whatever name its music was known, the band had sparkle, spontaneity,
and lift and left a legacy of distinctive records, which have easily withstood
the shifting winds of musical fashion.”
Here is an
audio-only track to help afford you with a sampling of the Bob Crosby
Orchestra’s style of music.
Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Dave Holland 5tet - Metamorphos [1999]
The musicianship on display in this video by Dave Holland on bass, Billy Kilson on drums, Steve Nelson on vibes, Robin Eubanks on trombone and Chris Potter, making a rare appearance on alto saxophone, his original instrument, is awesome to behold. Program music based around tonal points, chromaticism, motifs and riffs and rhythms. It's the way a lot of young guys hear the music these days. Stick around for Chris' solo beginning at 9:14 minutes. Charles Mingus must be smiling. The tune is Prime Detective.
Monday, July 30, 2012
Bobby, Roger and The Animals
© - Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all
rights reserved.
Ahmet Ertegun, one
of the co-founders of Atlantic Records, was a big supporter of Rhythm and Blues
music as well as a devotee of Rock ‘n Roll in its fledgling years.
His brother,
Nesuhi, produced Jazz recordings for the Atlantic label including the Modern
Jazz Quartet’s No Sun in Venice and Pyramid, John Coltrane’s Giant
Steps and Coltrane Plays the Blues, and a host of other Jazz albums by
Milt Jackson, Mose Allison, Jimmy Giuffre and Shorty Roger s, among others.
Ahmet always
maintained that his involvement with the commercially lucrative Rock and R
& B music enabled him to subsidize his brother Nesuhi’s
less-than-profitable ventures into Jazz.
One of his most
successful forays into Rock was Ahmet’s decision to record Bobby Darin’s Splish, Splash. It was a record that
would sell a million copies for the then, virtually unknown Darin.
Ironically, almost
10-years later, Darin, now and internationally recognized celebrity, would
leave Atlantic and establish his own label [Direction Records] over a dispute
with Ahmet and Arif Mardin [who had become Bobby’s producer at the label in
1963] involving Bobby’s fervent wish to record the music from Leslie Bricusse
and Anthony Newley’s Doctor Dolittle.
As recounted by
Fred Dellar in his notes to Bobby Darin Sings Doctor Dolittle:
“Bobby Darin
constantly re-invented himself. Initially, he'd been a teen idol, littering the
charts with the likes of Splish, Splash
and Queen Of The Hop. Then he opted
to become the new Sinatra, fashioning songs such as Beyond The Sea and Lazy River
for a whole new set of swingin' lovers. Once, Bobby even moved into R&B to
cut an album of Ray Charles songs, using Ray's own back-up singers, while in
1966 he moved on yet again, linking with the contemporary folk field, and
emulating the likes of Tim Hardin. After two critically hailed albums (If I
Were A Carpenter and Inside Out) filled with material
mainly penned by Hardin and John Sebastian, Darin decided that it was time for
a change yet again. No-one was going to classify him, place him in some 'file
under' category. It was time for a return to show-biz, a time to dust down the
tux, head in a Hollywood direction. But, being Darin, it would not
be a mere return to former glories. Nothing as easy as that. Instead, Bobby
decided to create a whole album based around his interpretations of a film
score. His choice for the project was Doctor
Dolittle, a musical penned by Leslie Bricusse, who'd previously
collaborated with Anthony Newley on The
Roar Of The Greasepaint - The Smell
Of The Crowd and Stop The World -I
Want To Get Off, the latter a Broadway hit that ran for 555 performances.
Doctor Dolittle, a movie that co-starred Rex Harrison,
Anthony Newley, Samantha Eggar and Richard Attenborough, featured a score that
had taken Leslie Bricusse 18 months to write. During that period he'd discarded
10 songs and constantly reshaped others. Darin, who'd earlier recorded Bricusse
and Newley's Once In A Lifetime,
heard the score and loved it. His decision to record it as a complete album
pleased Arthur C. Jacobs, the film's producer who claimed: "When Bobby
came to us and said he wanted to do his musical impression of Doctor
Dolittle, we were flattered but felt that the musical content of our
production was out of Bobby's usual style. I mean, in one scene Rex sings a
tender ballad When I Look In Your Eyes to a seal! How would that sit with a
chap who whirred and whirled with Mack
The Knife? Bobby's reply: 'Lead me to it'."
Others were even
more incredulous that Darin should want to record the score, his album
producer, Arif Mardin, advising him not to go ahead with the project. But,
after working on a fine set of arrangements with Roger Kellaway, Bobby made that trip to Western
Recorders and shaped an album that has stood the test of time. …”
Pianist-composer-arranger
Roger Kellaway summed it up best when he
observed: “Bobby was a sensation to work with. He had the knack of knowing
exactly what was right for him.”
See what you think
as Bobby sings Roger ’s arrangement of Talk to the Animals in the following video made with the assistance
of the ace graphics team at CerraJazz LTD and the production facility at
StudioCerra.
Our latest montage
is set in HD images, a format we’ve returned after a long absence.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
"Striking Up The Band" with the Kenny Clarke - Lucky Thompson Quintet
The Blue Note in Paris, 1960. Lucky Thompson on tenor saxophone, Jimmy Gourley on guitar, Alice McLeod Coltrane on piano, Pierre Michelot on bass and Kenny Clarke on drums.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Having "Cheese Cake" with Dexter, Sonny, Butch and Billy
Bring a cup of coffee or tea and enjoy a slice of Cheese Cake with Dexter Gordon and Company. If you are a Jazz fan, it truly doesn't get any better than Dexter Gordon on tenor saxophone, Sonny Clark on piano, Butch Warren on bass and Billy Higgins on drums. Dexter's Cheese Cake is based on the changes to tenor sax legend Lester Young's tune, Tickle Toe.
Brian and Barbara
© - Steven A. Cerra, copyright protected; all
rights reserved.
I have no idea if
trumpeter Brian Lynch and vocalist Barbara Casini know each other or have
worked together.
I doubt it because
Brian is based in New York and Barbara in Italy , but given the international and
cosmopolitan flavor of Jazz in the 21st century, it’s certainly is
possible.
Where there is a
relationship between the two, and what prompted this posting is that both have
recorded terrific versions of the tune – You’ve
Changed - Brian on his Bolero Nights, Venus Jazz CD [VHCD
1029] and Barbara along with the Jazz Orchestra of Sardinia, Paolo Silvestri
conducting on Agora Ta, ViaVenetoJazz [CD VVJ 076].
Okay, I’ll admit
it; I’ve got a thing for Bill Carey and Carl Fischer’s tune having featured two
versions on a previous blog piece with interpretations by alto saxophonist Andy
Fusco and the sublime, “Sassy Sarah Vaughan.
And early this
month [July 7th], I spotlighted [bloglighted?] the version that
Hammond B-3 organist Eddy Louiss recorded along with Belgian Guitarist Rene
Thomas and drummer Kenny Clarke for Dreyfus Jazz [Dreyfus Disques FDM-36501-2].
The song’s
poignant lyrics assume autobiographical, heart-breaking proportions when one
reflects on their long association with vocalist Billie Holiday. The themes of
lost love, seeking love and unrequited love were a constant in Billie’s brief
and turbulent life [she died in 1959 at the age of forty-four].
What intrigued us
about Brian Lynch’s rendition of You’ve Changed
is that it is done in the bolero style of Latin Jazz and has a corker of a
solo by alto saxophonist Phil Woods. Brian also takes a fine solo as does
pianist Zaccai Curtis.
And did you know
that the island of Sardinia off the western coast of Italy has a fine Jazz orchestra? As you will
hear on the following video, it does, indeed, and for Barbara Casini’s vocal
version of You’ve Changed, the
orchestra is under the direction of Paolo Silvestri who also wrote the
arrangement. Be sure and checkout the
fine trumpet solo by Giovanni Sanna Passino beginning at 2:42 minutes.
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)






