Wednesday, August 10, 2016

Tina Brooks: 1932-1974

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.



“But as effective as he was in orthodox hard-bop contexts, Brooks was essentially an individualist. His sound, first of all, set him apart — the prayer-like tone that Beener speaks of. It was an airy, keening, often speech-like approach to the horn that instantly identified Brooks as one of those musicians for whom feeling and sound were one.


Equally important were the ways in which he created a feeling of resolution within restlessness. Phrase by phrase, his lines are formed so naturally and perfectly that the melodic shapes seem almost tangible — three-dimensional objects that one can contemplate at will. But these purely lyrical resolutions are placed within a harmonic context that denies the possibility of rest.


The sonata-like patterns explored by Sonny Rollins — in which melodic and harmonic elements suddenly coalesce, releasing their accumulated tensions in
cadential outbursts — are alien to Brooks's music. Instead, he hears both melody and harmony as linear forces that exist in a perpetual equilibrium, a universe in which the forming process never ceases and tensions are not resolved but transformed into the new terms of an endless lyricism.”
- Lawrence Kart, original liner notes to Minor Move


I recently put into my CD changer four disc’s by tenor saxophonist Tina Brooks. All of them are on Blue Note Records and include Minor Move, True Blue, Back to the Tracks, and The Waiting Game.


After spending time with Tina’s music I was particularly impressed with his unique tone, intricate solos and well-constructed and interesting original compositions.


As Chris Sheridan points out The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz: “Brooks’ recordings for Blue Note [he would make 12 in all; 4 as leader] reveal a soloist capable of creating shapely statements and developing them with exceptional clarity and an urgent, infectious sense of swing. An intriguing and original performer, highly rated by his contemporaries, he was influenced by Lester Young, Sonny Rollins and above all the blues.”


I never knew what happened to Tina until I read the following insert notes by Michael Cuscuna which he penned for The Waiting Game [Blue Note 40536] a recording which he also produced for reissue on CD in 2002. In addition to Tina on tenor saxophonist the album features Johnny Coles, trumpet, Kenny Drew, piano, Wilbur Ware, bass and "Philly" Joe Jones, drums.




“TINA BROOKS'S story, though in the extreme, is one heard all too often in the jazz world: personal pain, career frustrations, public ignorance or indifference, drug abuse, early death and belated posthumous recognition.


Harold "Tina" Brooks and his twin brother Harry were born in Fayetteville, North Carolina on June 7,1 932, the youngest of eight children, In 1944, the family moved to New York City. Shy, short and hardly streetwise, Tina was harassed by gangs and once mugged and robbed of his saxophone, so he moved back to Fayetteville for all but his last year of schooling.


When he graduated in 1949, he was already working professionally at dances and social functions. The next year, he replaced his older brother David "Bubba" Brooks (by that time an established tenor saxophonist in certain circles) in Sonny Thompson's R & B band.


Stints with Charles Brown, Joe Morris and Amos Milburn followed until Tina tired of the relentless touring. In 1955, he joined Lionel Hampton briefly, but his taste was moving toward small-group modern jazz. Toward that end, he began to study theory and harmony.


In 1956, Brooks met the legendary bebop trumpeter Little Bennie Harris at the Blue Morocco in the Bronx. Harris schooled him in the intricacies of modern jazz, introduced him to kindred spirits like Elmo Hope and later brought him to the attention of Blue Note's Alfred Lion. Jimmy Lyons, Herman Riley, Junior Cook, Bill Hardman, Oliver Beener and Les Spann were among the group of musicians that Tina ran with, jamming in various Harlem and Bronx clubs.


Honing his skills at countless jazz sessions and absorbing the achievements of such influences as Lester Young, Wardell Gray and Hank Mobley, Tina developed a style of his own. His sound was lyrical and distinctive, his notes distinct and articulated and his ideas shaped and flowing.


Trumpeter Oliver Beener, one of his closest friends, called him "a sentimentalist - his favorite tune was 'My Devotion' - and especially on the blues, Tina's tone sounded like a prayer." An excellent description of the exceptional beauty that came out of Brooks's tenor.


Although he'd been on Sonny Thompson and Amos Milburn record dates in the early fifties, his first appearance as an improvising jazz artist was on the February 25,1958 Jimmy Smith session for Blue Note that produced the 20-minute blues classic "The Sermon." Except for a Howard McGhee album on Felsted, all of Brooks's recorded output would be on Blue Note. Given his talent and the recording activity of the late fifties, it's surprising that he did not appear elsewhere. And despite Alfred Lion's support and belief in the saxophonist, some of what Tina recorded for Blue Note as a sideman and three of the four albums he made as a leader sat in the vaults until the 1980s.


Three weeks after his performance on the Jimmy Smith date, Tina was recording his first album with Lee Morgan, Sonny Clark, Doug Watkins and Art Blakey. But the album, which came to be known as Minor Move, wasn't released. Nor was a live Jimmy Smith recording at Small's Paradise a month later, which was ultimately issued as Cool Blues. Then in May, Kenny Burrell made a marathon session featuring Tina that was issued as Blue Lights Volumes One And Two.


Tina's next appearance came in August of the next year when he and Art Blakey were added for several tunes on Kenny Burrell's At The Five Spot Cafe. On June 19,1960, Tina appeared on Freddie Hubbard's first album Open Sesame, contributing tunes and arrangements as well as superb solos. Freddie returned the favor a week later for Tina's first issued album True Blue. At the time, Tina was Jackie McLean's understudy in the Freddie Redd Quartet, which appeared on stage nightly in the Jack Gelber play The Connection. And that August, Redd used both Brooks and McLean on his Shades Of Redd album (the aforementioned Howard McGhee album on Felsted was another version of Redd's score to The Connection).


On September 1, Jackie McLean assembled a sextet with Brooks, Blue Mitchell, Kenny Drew, Paul Chambers and Art Taylor for a wonderful session, half of which would be used on Jackie's Bag, Seven weeks later, Brooks would use the same sideman for his next Blue Note album. When they couldn't get a satisfactory take on one original, "David The King," Blue Note borrowed "Street Singer," a Brooks original from the McLean sextet session, to complete the album, which was entitled Back To The Tracks, given a catalog number, pictured on inner sleeves and listed in catalogs, but never released!


In January 1961, he and Mclean appeared on Freddie Redd's third album, Redd's Blues, which was not issued at the time. In March, Tina made his fourth album as a leader, which was edited and sequenced, but again not issued. Both were ultimately issued in the mid-'80s on Mosaic and make their first Blue Note appearances now. They were his last sessions.


Tina's final album is now appropriately called The Waiting Game since he died in 1974 waiting for three of his four albums to be issued. With the exception of Philly Joe Jones, the personnel was not made up of frequent Blue Note contributors.


This date was, in fact the first Blue Note appearance of Johnny Coles, who'd already made a name for himself in the bands of Gil Evans and James
Moody. His playing is so strong and lyrical on this session that it's amazing that Alfred Lion did not use him more often. The fact that he was signed to Epic and would make his first album, The Warm Sound Of Johnny Coles, a month later may have had something to do with it


In 1963, he appeared on Horace Parlan's Happy Frame Of Mind and Grant Green's Am I Blue and made his own Blue Note album Little Johnny C. He would not reappear on the label until April 1969 as a member of Herbie Hancock's sextet on The Prisoner.


Kenny Drew, though not a frequent contributor to Blue Note, was an important one. He made his recording debut on the label in 1950 as part of Howard McGhee's All-Stars. He also made his first album as a leader for the label, Introducing The Kenny Drew Trio in 1953. His next appearance was four years later on one of the greatest albums in jazz history. John Coltrane's Blue Train. In 1960, he appeared on the Jackie's Bag and Back To The Tracks session and finished the year with his own Blue Note album Undercurrent The next year, he cut this Brooks date, Dexter Gordon's Dexter Calling and Grant Green's Sunday Morning. He moved to Copenhagen in 1964 where he remained for the rest of his life. That June, he participated in Dexter Gordon's One Flight Up, done in Paris.


Like Drew, Wilbur Ware was in a short-lived edition of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers that featured Ira Sullivan on tenor saxophone. It brought the great bassist from Chicago to New York. One of his first sessions was J.R. Monterose's Blue Note album, which also included Ira Sullivan and Blakey, followed by Lee Morgan's debut Indeed!. In 1957, Ware made his name with the Thelonious Monk Quartet and recorded for Blue Note on several important albums: Hank Mobley's Hank, Sonny Clark's Dial S For Sonny and Sonny Rollins's masterpiece A Night At The Village Vanguard.


A frequent contributor to Riverside sessions, Ware's next appearance for Blue Note was this Brooks session; his final one was a haunting Grant Green trio session five month later that was ultimately issued in Japan as Remembering and, more recently, as Standards.


Philly Joe Jones's contributions to Blue Note are too numerous to mention. They began in 1953 with Lou Donaldson-Clifford Brown and Elmo Hope sessions and continued until Hank Mobley's The Flip, recorded in Paris in 1969. With Miles Davis, Bill Evans and his own groups and on countless record dates by all the jazz greats, Philly Joe was a consummate drummer with on incredible sense of swing and musical literacy that added dimension to every situation.


With the exception of Stranger In Paradise, this is a program of Tina Brooks originals. Talkin' About is a minor riff blues with a shuffle beat. Coles
solos first effectively using half-valve techniques evocative of Clark Terry. The equally soulful Brooks and Drew follow. This is the kind of groove that Alfred Lion loved.


One For Myrtle is a burner, paced so fast that there is time for all five men to solo. Tina is first and he's simply dazzling. Dhyana is a minor swinger; listen to the long lines that Brooks develops so fluidly in his solo.


David The King, attempted without success on Back To The Tracks, has a Middle Eastern flavor that would lead one to believe that this is named after the biblical king. But surely, Brooks intended a nod to his supportive father and mentor older brother. An especially strong Coles takes the first solo, followed by Tina, Kenny and Wilbur.


Tina has the melody to himself on Stranger In Paradise, which is taken up-tempo with a rhumba beat under the bridge. Coles, Brooks and Drew solo in that order.


The Waiting Game with a 12-bar A section and 8-bar bridge, has magnificent sotos from Brooks, Coles (developing nice long lines) and Drew.


Alfred Lion felt that the ensembles on Minor Move were too ragged, not up to Blue Note standards and chose not to release it. The second album True Blue was issued. Tina followed it with two exceptional albums, Back To The Tracks and this one. Both were prepared for release, but neither appeared. Perhaps the sales of True Blue were so low that the independent label feared losing money by releasing them; Lion did not remember the circumstances when I asked him. But they are now available and ours to cherish.


It is a crime that Tina Brooks was not appreciated in his time, by music lovers or by himself. He never recorded after 1961; there was the occasional out-of-town gig like a Yale University concert with Herbie Nichols and Roswell Rudd in 1960 and a brief tour with Ray Charles's band. But primarily, Tina continued to play around the Bronx with creative musicians like Beener, Elmo Hope, Charles Tolliver, Don Pullen and Barry Altschul and did Latin and R & B gigs in the area to pay the rent. Ultimately, frustration and heroin got the better of him. When he died of kidney failure on August 13, 1974, he had not been able to play saxophone for several years. The final irony: his gorgeous voice was silenced long before he found any peace in death.”


  • MICHAEL CUSCUNA


The following video features tenor saxophonist Tina Brooks performing his original composition "Dhyana" with Johnny Coles, trumpet, Kenny Drew, piano, Wilbur Ware, bass and "Philly" Joe Jones, drums.


Tuesday, August 9, 2016

NUEVA MANTECA - CRIME!

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


“As indicated earlier, Nueva Manteca, inspired by the work of Jamal, generally approaches songs more as a 'compositional device' which allows for interpretations whereby the song becomes a story comprising edited musical scenes in the form of heads, intros, interludes, solo choruses, outros. Much like film editing. That way each musical scene contributes to the progress of the story of the song.”
Jan Laurens Hartong, Pianist and Founder of Nueva Manteca

There are three things you can always count on with each, new Nueva Manteca recording: [1] the highest quality in musicianship, [2] the best in Latin Jazz rhythms and [3] the application of Latin Jazz to a theme be it the sound track from Broadway Shows such as Porgy and Bess or West Side Story, the music of early Jazz as it might have been performed in Congo Square in New Orleans or Afro-Cuban themes centered around place such a Varadero Beach in Cuba [site of a Jazz Festival with the same name] or Yoruba-influenced catholic mass as in Afro-Cuban Sanctus.

Their latest efforts continues all of these themes in NUEVA MANTECA - CRIME! - live at Net Klooster, Woerden, The Netherlands, 2014 which is available through the Jazz Worldwide and Agency at www.jwajazz.nl.

As always, Jan Laurens Hartong, Nueva Manteca’s founder, pianist and principal arranger provides informative insert notes to each recording as noted below.

"With this recording Nueva Manteca makes you an offer you can't refuse."

A surprisingly big amount of the best film music has been written for Crime movies and TV series. The names of some of its greatest composers immediately come to mind: Ennio Morricone, Nino Rota, Dave Grusin. This 12 th Nueva Manteca album Crime! could also have been aptly titled 'Salsa y Suspenso’, instrumental Salsa that is. The crime movie genre heightens a viewer's mood and level of anticipation. Essential characteristic elements in its music are: suggestion, shock, surprise and suspense.

Some of these elements are also an essential aspect of the artistry of Ahmad Jamal whose approach appears at times to be similar to that of a film director.

As indicated earlier, Nueva Manteca, inspired by the work of Jamal, generally approaches songs more as a 'compositional device' which allows for interpretations whereby the song becomes a story comprising edited musical scenes in the form of heads, intros, interludes, solo choruses, outros. Much like film editing. That way each musical scene contributes to the progress of the story of the song. A good example of this filmic approach is our arrangement of The Godfather Theme.  An opening melody is stated immediately after which comes a montuno vamp with a conga solo , followed by o return of the initial melody.Then comes the principal theme. An interlude precedes solo sections for trombone and piano and towards the end a new melody appears. It is the beloved refrain melody of the song Caruso, Italy's tribute to the immortal opera singer. All the different parts of the arrangement are edited and so combined to form a whole.

With this approach we have attempted to shed 'new light' on some of the best-known film music.

In addition to the aforementioned The Godfather Theme, Nino Rota's Michael's Theme is presented here as a cha cha cha, it's pensive mood beautifully rendered by our guitarist. A slow Guajira closes the arrangement.

Ciao City, an original composition, was inspired by the great TV series Boardwalk Empire about the rise and fall of Atlantic City

The cop TV show of Baantjer was an instant success in Holland, its main title song "Circle of Smiles" made famous by harmonica virtuoso Toots Thielemans. If is here presented as a solo piano prelude after which the bond kicks in.

The 'sneaking up behind’ theme song of Baretta - one of the most famous police series of the 70's - challenged us to try some Latin Funk.

The gorgeous "Deborah's Theme" from Once Upon A Time In America is Morricone at his best. Reason enough to keep our version as basic and simple as
possible.

From the West Side Story comes I Like to be in America cast in a catchy arrangement by the inventive pianist Marc Bischoff who gave the melody an intriguing 6/8 twist.

Dave Grusin composed the wonderfully haunting theme song of Mulholland Falls, a crime movie which, strangely enough, never appeared in Dutch movie theaters. Here we used several different grooves for different parts of the 'O Sole Mio, the old immortal Neapolitan song is here performed in a fast-paced arrangement seasoned with contemporary flavor and contrasting nostalgic old-fashioned horn lines. A Cuban-style montuno vamp rounds it all off.

Tatort is a famous European police TV drama which is still running. It's 'in your face' theme song was composed by the nestor of German Jazz saxophone, Klaus Doldinger.
Finally, I extend my heartfelt thanks and deep appreciation to the band members whose unique artistry has made this music come to life”                                                               

Ilja Reijngoud, trombone
Ben van den Dungen, saxes
Ed Verhoeff, guitar
Jeroen Vierdag, bass
Nils Fischer, Latin percussion
Lucas van Merwijk, drums

The following video features the band on - what else? - The Theme From ‘The Godfather.”



Monday, August 8, 2016

Hoagy's in the Hall

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


The August 2016 edition of Downbeat brings the news that as part of the 64th Annual Critics Poll, composer Hoagy Carmichael has been elected to the magazine’s Hall of Fame by the Veterans Committee.

The significance of Hoagy’s election is explained in the following excerpts from John McDonough’s feature entitled Immortal Composer.

“... Hoagy Carmichael, the man who found "Stardust" … now takes his place in the DownBeat Hall of Fame.

It is long overdue that the Hall of Fame shift its attention from musicians—whose composing has been done largely as a self-serving avocation—to the full-time, professional songwriters who wrote for the world. They are the hidden second front of jazz history—the heroes who worked alone, found their inspiration behind the scenes and provided those musicians with the unique literary inventory on which they erected many of their greatest performances.

Carmichael is an ideal composer to open this second front. More than anyone, he wrote popular music from a jazz sensibility, which maybe why "Stardust" still endures. According to the Tom Lord Jazz Discography, it has been recorded 1,520 times since October 1927— and that includes only the jazz recordings, not the thousands of "popular" versions by artists as varied as Nat "King" Cole, Willie Nelson, Ringo Starr and Rod Stewart, and Billy Ward and the Dominos. Other Carmichael classics at I home in any jazz set include "Georgia On My Mind" (1,019 recordings), "The Nearness Of You" (828 recordings), "Skylark" (804 recordings), "Lazy River" (466 recordings) and the traditional Dixie favorite "Riverboat Shuffle."

Many of the early recordings of these standards have been interred with their time, interesting now as quaint artifacts trapped in the grooved amber of a vanished chic. They stand forever where they were planted in time, as tastes and styles move merrily along. But the work of a great composer is never finished, only latent. It slides through cycles of swing, bop, doo-wop, soul, gospel, country and come-what-may, embracing, then shedding, the characteristics of fashion like a literary Leonard Zelig. Such songs exist in the future, not the past, patiently awaiting a new generation. …

Carmichael came by his jazz instincts near their source, which in the 1920s was Chicago, where the best musicians of New Orleans and the Midwest were converging. Born in Bloomington, Indiana, Nov. 22, 1899, he came of age in the early '20s as Gennett Records in nearby Richmond began recording the first important records in jazz history — Jelly Roll Morton, the King Oliver's Creole Jazz Band with Louis Armstrong, and the Wolverines with Bix Beiderbecke. Carmichael's first composition, "Riverboat Shuffle," was recorded for Gennett by the Wolverines in May 1924. He soon felt the impact of the Beiderbecke horn and personality (so much so that he briefly tried to play the cornet). ...

His destiny was decided in Richmond in October 1927 when he recorded a peppy original called "Star Dust" (compounded soon afterward into the one-word title "Stardust"). Irving Mills, who had published "Riverboat Shuffle," signed him to a contract and printed the first sheet music run of the song as a piano piece. A Mills staff writer, Mitchell Parish, added the famous lyric—"Sometime I wonder why I spend the lonely night... "—in 1929. But early recordings persisted in treating it as a jazzy tune, and Carmichael resolved to leave the music business for investment banking after the market crash. Then, in 1931, Bing Crosby and Armstrong recorded their versions of "Stardust" as full blown love songs with the Parish lyric. Crosby
provided the romance. Armstrong gave it fire. From that point forward, Carmichael's path as a composer was clear, and few jazz artists from Ben Webster to Archie Shepp have dared tamper with the soul of "Stardust."

Today, both the song and its composer endure. "After careful study," musicologist Alec Wilder wrote in 1973, "I think it is unquestionable that Hoagy Carmichael has proven himself to be the most talented, inventive, sophisticated, and jazz-oriented of all the great craftsmen."

Hoagy passed away in 1981.



Sunday, August 7, 2016

Jay Glacy's "Horace Silver Complete: Volume 2"

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.




The following post is probably for a more select audience but we wanted to give Jay Glacy’s efforts a boost by posting the information about his latest book on Horace Silver’s compositions to the blog.


From a more general perspective, I don’t think I ever met a Jazz fan who didn’t like the music of Horace Silver.


Put directly, I find the music of Horace Silver irresistible. When I listen to it, I feel happy, joyous and free.  


Each of Horace’s tunes seems cut from the same cloth: rocking beats, nothing too quick but nothing that dawdled; sashaying minor melodies, voiced in clean unison by tenor and trumpet with riffing interjections from the piano; gospel and the blues seeming to soak into every eight-bar passage.


Compared to the careening tempos and linear charge of ‘true’ Bebop, this music might have seemed almost too simple, a reduction rather than a development. But Silver’s group opened up possibilities in other ways.


His themes had a melodious side to them, which the slash-and-burn tactics of bop had little time for. It was listening music, but it opened the door to backbeats, a grooving motion which audiences tired of abstraction were ready to welcome.


In the new black popular music – typified by the kind of [rhythm and blues] output which Atlantic …. was making money from in the 1950’s and 60’s, Bebop had no place. But Horace’s blend of funky sophistications could take a seat at the table.


Always bright and bouncy, Horace used a number of compositional devices to keep his music full of surprises.


For example, The Outlaw, is vintage Horace with its twists and turns containing all sorts of surprises due to its unusual structural form.  Like Ecaroh, another Silver original,  it employs both 4/4 straight-ahead and Latin-inflected rhythmic passages, but The Outlaw does so within an asymmetric construction that employs two sections of thirteen [13] bars divided into seven [7] measures of straight-ahead 4/4 and six [6] of Latin rhythms, a ten [10] bar 4/4 section which acts as a bridge followed by a sixteen [16] bar Latin vamp [or Latin pedal] with a two [2] break that leads into the next solo.


It’s a masterpiece whose seemingly disparate parts generate a powerful “tension and release” effect that will leave you wanting to listen to this sprightly bit of musical magic over and over again.


If you can read music and  want to know more about how Horace put his music together, do yourself a favor and treat yourself to a copy of one of Jay’s books.


Here’s his original message.


“Hello, Steve. I am pleased to announce that Horace Silver Complete Volume 2: The 60s has just been published by Really Good Music LLC, the leading music publisher serving the professional jazz community. This new volume contains all of the tunes written and recorded by Mr. Silver during the 60s. These 49 enhanced lead sheets document indelible performances of tunes many of which have become jazz standards. As editor, I have included many of the ancillary musical elements (like bass lines, harmony parts and shout choruses) that create that unique Silver touch. A sample is attached.


You can order the book on Amazon or by remitting $19.95 via PayPal to this email - jay.glacy@excite.com - address for the PDF version. And stay on the lookout for the companion book Horace Silver Complete Volume 3: The 70s, forthcoming. Many thanks. Jay Glacy.”


Songlist:
The African Queen, Ah! So, The Belly Dance, Blue Silver, Bonita, Brain Wave, Calcutta Cutie, The Cape Verdean Blues, Dimples, Doin' the Thing, Down and Out, The Dragon Lady, Filthy McNasty, Grease Peace, The Gringo, Horace-Scope, It Ain't S'posed to Be Like That, It's Time, The Jody Grind, Jungle Juice, Kindred Spirits, Kiss Me Right, Let’s Get to the Nitty Gritty, Lonely Woman, Mary Lou, Me and My Baby, Mexican Hip Dance The Natives Are Restless Tonight, Next Time I Fall in Love, Nineteen Bars, Nutville, Pretty Eyes, Psychedelic Sally, Que Pasa?, Rain Dance, The Risin’ Sun, Sayonara Blues, Serenade to a Soul Sister, Sighin' and Cryin', Silver Treads Among My Soul, Silver's Serenade, Skinney Minnie, Song for My Father, Strollin’, Sweet Sweetie Dee, The Tokyo Blues, Too Much Sake, Where You At?, You Gotta Take a Little Love



Saturday, August 6, 2016

Bobby Shew - A Pro's Pro

© -Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.



Say the name “Bobby Shew” in Jazz trumpet circles and people respond with a look of sheer delight on their faces.


Bobby Shew’s trumpet playing brings out all of the beautiful qualities that are unique to that instrument and which made it The Rock Guitar of the Swing and Post World War II Modern Jazz periods.


Qualities such as a brilliant brass sound; a purity of tone that’s synonymous with the imagined clarion call of The Angels; screaming high notes; beautiful legato phrases in the middle register; an accuracy of attack that makes notes literally pop from the horn. His tone is “legit” with a sparkling upper range and a full lower one and his sound comes out of the horn with an effortless finesse.


Bobby is equally at home in the lead trumpet or Jazz chair.  You name it - Miles Davis/Gil Evans Sketches of Spain; Clifford Brown’s Joy Spring; Stan Kenton’s anthem Artistry in Rhythm -  Bobby Shew can bring it, in many cases making it sound better than the original.


He’s simply a Pro’s Pro.


No half-valve nonsense or puckered squeaks, Bobby’s trumpet playing is brimming with a virtuosity that has no need to resort to soulful cliches.


Bobby’s solos crackle with ebullience and spontaneity. He has such a command of the horn that anything that comes into his mind he can play through the instrument.


Of all the recordings that Bobby has made over the years, my favorite has remained Bobby Shew with the Metropole Orchestra [Mons LC 6458]. The orchestra is based in Holland and was directed on this occasion by Rob Pronk. All of the arrangements were written by Lex Jasper.


Judging from the following insert notes that he wrote for the recording, it looks like the opportunity to perform with The Metropole Orkest was a pretty special one for Bobby, as well.


“I've been referred to as an "incurable romantic". I don't know,.. MAYBE! I can tell you that there is a part of me that does, in fact, seek out moments of romance in music.,., no matter what tunes, where, with whom.


When I was a child first being exposed to jazz, I loved the "feel" of this music, I loved the emotion of it, I loved the energy of it... but, I loved the beauty, I wore out copies of Clifford Brown with strings, Stan Getz' "COOL VELVET", the soundtrack album to "THE SANDPIPER" with Jack Sheldon playing those gorgeous Johnny Mandel charts.... plus many other string albums I managed to find. I guess if I'm an incurable romantic, it's because I dreamt, as I think most horn players have, of doing a string album someday before we leave this earth!


This recording with the outstanding METROPOLE ORCHESTRA far exceeds my wildest dreams. The real bulk of the credit here goes to Lex Jasper who really honored me with the first impetus to perform with the METROPOLE ORCHESTRA. His writing is absolutely magic.,.!


He wrote for me specifically and I've never felt more comfortable. The "BALLAD FOR BOBBY" touched me so deeply, it was almost difficult to play it past my emotional reaction to the first reading. Rob Pronk is masterful in rehearsing and conducting the music to perfection. The musicians, as you can hear, are first-class in every respect and quite fun and easy to work with. I must add an extra 'lip of the hat" to the outstanding lead trumpet playing of my dear friend Jan Oosthof. It would be difficult to find a more powerful and consistent player (or a nicer guy).


High at the top of the list of "thank-you’s", is Jan van Riemsdyk, the producer of these sessions. I'll never be able to thank him enough for the invitation to do the recordings as well as this efforts to make the music available on this CD. Similarly, thanks to Thilo Berg for a willingness to press and release it.


Finally, I can think of no better dedication for this music than to my wife, Lisa…. She truly is MY ONE AND ONLY LOVE.”


Bobby Shew, Feb. 1995


You can checkout Bobby’s playing on Lex Jasper’s beautiful arrangement of With A Song In My Heart.