Monday, September 11, 2017

Stan Getz - The Complete Roost Recordings

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


“*****Stan Getz:The Complete Roost Recordings Roost 859622-2 3CD


“So much attention has fallen on Getz's later work that these magnificent sessions are sometimes overlooked. No longer any need for that, now the complete works have been gathered across three generously filled CDs, with three new tunes.


The earliest tracks, from a session in May 1950, catch a young man with his head full of bebop and his heart heavy with swing-era romanticism. Those contrary strains sometimes come together, such as in the headily beautiful 'Yesterdays', in a marriage of intellect and emotion that is rare not only in Getz's work but in jazz itself. These two early dates, one with Al Haig, one with Horace Silver, are little short of electrifying. By 1951, he already sounds like the more settled, invincible Getz, but the short track-lengths (a relic of the 78 era) give the music considerable point and direction.


The live session from Boston's Storyville Club with Jimmy Raney has long been a prized classic, both musicians unreeling one great solo after another. Two studio dates with a similar band are at a lower voltage but are scarcely less impressive. Eight tracks with Johnny Smith, including the achingly lovely 'Moonlight In Vermont', offer Getz the lyricist in fullest flow, while the three with Basie at Birdland are like a fun bonus.


There is so much top-flight jazz in this set that it's quite indispensable, and brought together in one place and remastered to a consistent standard, it's breathtaking.”
-Richard Cook and Brian Morton, The Penguin Guide to Jazz on CD, 6th Ed.


Perhaps, after you’ve read the following, you’ll better understand why I make such a point of, as it states in the blog banner, “... featuring the work of guest writers and critics on the subject of Jazz.”


The best writers on the subject are Jazz Masters in their own right.


For as Peter Keepnews succinctly put it:


“Those of us who have tried writing about Jazz know what a daunting challenge it can be to do it well. Expressing an opinion about a given musician or recording is easy; explaining what exactly it is that makes that musician or recording worth caring about is not.”


And then there are guys like Doug Ramsey, who seem to knock the cover off the ball every time they come to bat [am I mixing metaphors here? - ].


Nobody does “... explaining what exactly it is that makes that musician or recording worth caring about …” better than Doug, and he’s been doing it consistently well for a very long time.


So when I started to dig around my Stan Getz collection after reading John Coltrane’s reference to Stan to wit - “Let’s face it, we’d all sound like that if we could” - I was determined to find a written description of what John meant about Getz’s sound.


I didn’t have to look far, for ‘lo and behold,’ there were - you guessed it - Doug Ramsey’s insert notes to Stan Getz:The Complete Roost Recordings Roost 859622-2 3CD which took me exactly where I wanted to go in terms of a detailed explanation of what made tenor saxophonist Stan Getz - “The Sound.”


© -  Doug Ramsey, copyright protected; all rights reserved; used with permission.


“On May 17, 1950, Stanley Getz from the Bronx was about to record with a world-class rhythm section. He was 23, an age at which many young men are wondering what to do with their lives.


Even al that early stage, his life had not been easy, but he never had a doubt about its path. As a junior high school bassist, he discovered that he had perfect pitch and perfect rhythm. His sight-reading developed as if by magic. His remarkable mind photographed music. In the words of his biographer, Donald Maggin, "he possessed musical gifts which are missing in ordinary mortals." [Donald Maggin, Stan Getz A Life in Jazz, William Morrow 1996.]


After a stint with the bassoon (lessons from Stanley Kovar ol the New York Philharmonic). Stanley switched to the alto saxophone and practiced eight hours a day. He joined the musicians union at 14. When he was barely 15 he was playing tenor sax with the Dick Rogers band at the Roseland dance emporium in Manhattan. While his mother was visiting relatives m Philadelphia, he talked his father into letting him go on the road with Jack Teagarden. The pay was 70 dollars a week, double what his dad made when he was able to find work as a printer. When the New York State truancy laws caught up with Getz and Teagarden in St. Louis, the great trombonist was able to keep his young saxophonist in the band by signing as Stanley's guardian. Getz never returned to school, but he got an education from Teagarden.


"In my early years, working with Jack Teagarden had the most effect on me," Getz told a reporter in 1964. "That was a very good introduction to professional music for me. Teagarden was a great musician. His playing is timeless - and it's logical. He adopted me. and he taught me a lot, especially about bending my right elbow.”


Precocious in music, Getz was precocious in life. Teagarden, one of the great drinkers of his time, introduced Stanley to booze. Shortly after, Getz took up nicotine. In his nine months with Teagarden, Getz became a chain smoker and chain drinker. His introduction to heroin was just down the road, in the back of Stan Kenton's band bus. A classic addictive personality, he was immediately hooked, virtually for life. He was unable to leave heroin behind until he was in his sixties.


Getz had a combative manner and an insatiable ego. Combined with the instability and deviousness of the addict, they established a behavior pattern that made him few friends even among fellow musicians who loved his playing. He was a walking psychiatric casebook. Zoot Sims voiced the nearly universal assessment of Getz the man: "Stan's a real nice bunch of guys.”


Getz was 17 when he was with Kenton. He quit after he asked the boss what he thought of the improvising of Lester Young, whose playing the fledgling tenor star adored. Kenton offended him by telling him that he thought that Young's work was too simple. Getz went on to Jimmy Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Buddy Morro, Randy Brooks, Herbie Fields and Butch Stone. He worked in a Los Angeles band led by Tommy DeCarlo and arranged by Gene Roland and Jimmy Giuffre. The band was the incubator for a new saxophone section sound, four tenors rather than the traditional combinations of tenors, altos and baritone.


In 1947. on the verge of reorganizing. Woody Herman heard DeCarlo's four-tenor sound and liked it. Herman hired Getz, Zoot Sims and Herbie Steward, experimented with the blend and ended up substituting Serge Chaloff’s baritone sax for Giuffre’s tenor. After Al Cohn replaced Steward, the section of Getz, Sims, Cohn and Chaloff was featured in a Giuffre's composition called “Four Brothers.” The name of the piece became the name of the section, quite likely the most famous ever in a big band. The Four Brothers sound came to identify Herman's Second Herd.


Herman's December, 1948 recording of Ralph Burns "Early Autumn' featured a lyrical solo by Getz. By the time the record came out in 1949, Getz had left the band and was in New York supporting his family by playing odd jobs, including parades. The popularity of his work on "Early Autumn” made him, at the age of 22, one ot the best known jazz artists in the world. Parades were a thing of the past.


Now it was a year later and he was in the studio for Roost Records, in charge of a rhythm section frequently employed by Charlie Parker, the most admired and emulated saxophonist in modern jazz. Seven Roost sessions during 1951, '52, and '53 would produce recordings that extended Getz’s fame and made a wide audience aware of his qualities: a pure tone that often soared into the range of the alto saxophone; an instinct for melodic beauty; an ear for subtle harmonic possibilities; senses of time and timing that invested his playing with compelling swing and interior rhythms He melded elements of Parker and Young with a poignancy that spoke of longing and loss and pierced listeners' emotions. Getz's solid, blue-eyed. Ali-American good looks added to his appeal.


"He was a good musician, I'll say that. He could play the hell out of a melody." Drummer Roy Haynes was speaking in 1997, six years after Getz’s death. 47 years after the first Roost session.


"I had been playing for Lester Young,” Haynes told me, "and I had become one of the favorites of a lot of the tenor players. Brew Moore and Wardell Gray were two I recorded with. Al Haig and I had played together with Tommy Potter on other dates as well.


Haynes said the music with Getz was rewarding, the working conditions were daunting. "He could play his ass off, but he’d get into his drinking and his drugs and all that, as a lot of the artists did. So he was like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. You had to be ready to deal with whatever the situation was. Sometimes he could be like an angel for a few minutes, a sweet guy. One time we were flying down South, drinking and being jolly. We were having fun. There were a few moments like that when we had a lot of laughs. But it never lasted long. He could be that way for 15 minutes, but for the rest of the hour he would be a terror."


Haynes' section mates for the May, 1950, date were Haig and bassist Potter. Getz and the pianist had recorded together in 1948 for a fly-by-night label with the original, if unmarketable, name of "Sittin' In With," and in 1949 and early 1950 for Savoy and Prestige. Getz called Haig. "the best accompanist in the business." Harmonically adroit with quick reflexes and exquisite placement of chords. Haig was also a favorite of Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.

Haig's liquidity and Getz's clarity are immediately evident in "On the Alamo." The alternate take is a bit unsettled, and the ending doesn't quite work. In the next take, Getz's rhythm is firmly centered. The beginning of his second solo demonstrates that he and Paul Desmond were affected by the same aspects of Lester Young.



The depth and openness of Getz’s tone at the beginning of "Gone With the Wind” are far from the alto sound of his upper register. Following his sweet paraphrase of the melody at the end of his chorus, he eases through a coda full of modulations and downward-spiraling phrases, each with its own propulsiveness The execution is exquisite.


'Yesterdays," one of his classic performances, is the essence of Getz the ballad artist. His Ravel-like abstractions in bars 17 and 18, a minute and twenty seconds into the track, constitute one of the most stunning moments he ever put on record.


Since the original Roost issue, "Sweetie Pie" has often been credited to Getz. but it was written in 1934 by John Jacob Loeb and recorded in that year by Fats Waller. Typically, Waller had fun with it, Getz does too, and adds to the playfulness a dimension of lyricism. Haig echoes Getz’s 16th-note flurries. Haynes executes a classic bop ride cymbal pattern that makes the swing irresistible, as it is in Cole Porter's “You Go to My Head." The 16-bar coda to the Porter song contains, among other things, an illustration of why horn players lined up to play with Al Haig: his comping behind Getz's ruminating modulations.


The pre-"Shadow of Your Smile" Johnny Mandel played bass trumpet in Getz's band for a short time and contributed a few pieces to his book. "Hershey Bar" is representative of Mandel's well-crafted tunes. Following Haig’s solo, Getz makes his memorable re-entry with an idea from "Paper Moon."


For the December, 1950 and May, 1951 dates. Getz brought aboard a rhythm section headed by the young pianist Horace Silver. Silver's accompanying style, rolling and buoyant, is immediately evident and may have had something to do with the slightly harder edge in Getz's solo on "Tootsie Roll" and his aggressive one in "Strike Up the Band." As he opens his own "Strike Up the Band" solo, Silver, a quotemaster, alludes to "The Hut-Sut Song."


When I talked with Silver about his days with Getz, I started to tell him that I wouldn't ask him to repeat the famous story about how Getz discovered him in 1950 when Silver was 21. Before I could get the words out of my mouth, he was off and running.


"I was playing at the Sundown Club in Hartford. Connecticut. Thursday, we had jam session night. It wasn't the regular band. It was my trio. Walter Bolden on drums and Joe Galloway on bass and myself on piano, and cats would come in that night and jam. So they invited Lucky Thompson up one Thursday night. The next person they brought up, maybe a month or two later, was Stan Getz as the guest artist, and we backed him up. He liked our rhythm section. He said that he was thinking about using us. And we said. 'Ah, he's just being polite.’ Two weeks later, though, the phone rang and it was Stan. He said, look I'm going to Philadelphia to play the Club Harlem and I want you guys to join me.' We went, we joined him and I stayed with him about a year."


Silver, one of the most successful musicians of his generation, still sounds awed by Getz nearly half a century later. "Playing with him for that year made me realize what a truly great musician he was. They don't come like that every day. You know, he could play in any key fluently, any tempo, and he covered his horn from top to bottom. He hit the high notes and the low notes with ease, and he could read his ass off. He was just a really great musician."


Silver seems to have learned to live with the Getzian storms that Roy Haynes described. "I had great admiration for his talent, and he was a beautiful person, too. You had to understand him. He had his moods. He could be a little ornery or evil sometimes. But he was a Gemini. One minute they're smiling and the next minute they've got a frown on their faces. When he got in those kinds of bags where he didn't want to talk or acted kind of weird or something, I'd just kind of bow out or keep quiet, or go somewhere else or not be around. And then when I saw him smiling and he was groovin,’ I'd go around him and try to hang with him. You just have to understand, that's the Gemini personality.


"I always tell everybody, thank God Stan Getz took me out of Hartford."


In the quartet dates with Silver. Getz is notably relaxed. The alternate take of "Imagination" can be considered a rehearsal for the brilliantly realized version that follows. Getz's tone at the end is a startling replication of that of the great clarinetist Irving Fazola.


Although quoting was not a major component of his style, Getz seems to have escalated it in Silver's company. In "'’S Wonderful," he summons up "Surrey With a Fringe on Top." In "It Might as Well be Spring." there's a lovely use of the main phrase of "Darn that Dream." He throws in a bit of "Old Man River" during "For Stompers Only," the first take of the blues also known as "Navy Blue." During the course of the two blues tracks alone, Silver borrows from "Nobody Knows the Trouble I've Seen." Mendelssohn's "Spring Song." "The Irish Washerwoman" and "Bill." In "Out of Nowhere." he manages snatches of "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down." "Willow Weep for Me" and "My Man." all in an abbreviated solo that achieves continuity despite its disparate elements. Silver is a superb craftsman. He and Getz were a felicitous combination.


Getz and Jimmy Raney comprised one of the great front-line partnerships in all of jazz. They recorded together in Getz's quintet for 16 months ending in April. 1953. Nearly five decades later that band is still a model of swing, precision, daring and empathy. The excitement it generated was captured in live recordings made at Boston’s Storyville club on October 28,1951.


Raney, the son of a Louisville newspaper editor, was seven months younger than Getz. In photographs taken during the Storyville engagement, the two look as if they could be working their way through high school. Al Haig was at the piano. The bassist was Teddy Kotick. much prized by Charlie Parker. The powerhouse drummer was Tiny Kahn, also a respected composer and arranger.


The Storyville tapes captured some of the most intricate playing ever heard from a jazz group. "Thou Swell" introduces the concept. "The Song is You" makes it unmistakably clear. With musicians of the technical capabilities of Getz and Raney. intricacy did not come at the cost of drive and emotion. Like his friend Miles Davis. Getz was tagged with the cliche label, "cool." Like Davis, he could lay back, but each could also generate heat, not that of a conflagration but of the blue flame from a gas-fed torch. There is no better demonstration of the empathy and fire that Getz and Raney shared than "The Song is You." For all of its counterpoint interaction, this is a hot performance. In Raney's bitonal ending, it concludes in some of the risk-taking this band loved.


This collection includes superb previously unissued versions of "Signal." "Budo" and "Wildwood." discovered by producer Michael Cuscuna shortly before final production of the album. When I played them for the bassist Clipper Anderson, he said, "Good heavens, these are outtakes?"


“Mosquito Knees," one of several tunes in the Getz book by alto saxophonist Gigi Gryce, is a prime recorded instance of unison playing in which Getz's saxophone and Raney's guitar breathe, phrase, and think as one. Their unity is as complete as that of Parker and Gillespie. Zoot Sims and Al Cohn. Joe Venuti and Eddie Lang. Art Farmer and Jim Hall.


Raney sits out "Pennies From Heaven." Getz solos all the way and has a great rubato coda buoyed by Kotick's bowing The empathy of Kahn and Kotick is especially evident in this performance.


“ Move" is a bit too fast for Raney and Getz to cleanly execute all of the jumps in the melody, but their solos and Haig's proceed with dexterity. So do the exchanges of fours with Kahn. Kahn's solo elicits a famous-and nicely placed-"yahay-eeee" from a member of the Storyville audience. "Parker 51" is named for Charlie Parker and based on "Cherokee." which he established as a bebop staple. It is faster than fast, but Raney and Getz play the complex head as clean as a whistle The blowing choruses are torrid.


Mandel's ' Hershey Bar" is a nice romp abruptly ended, perhaps by a slip of the engineer's finger or the tape running out. Frank Rosolino’s minor-key "Rubberneck" continues the up-tempo adventures leading to Raney's unusual "Signal," 48 bars of descending harmonies. Haig's genius at accompaniment eases Getz and Raney through this challenging material. Kahn’s skill with brushes and cymbals is essential to the success of the expedition.


There is more of Getz's ballad magic on Matt Dennis's "Everything Happens to Me" and Jerome Kern's "Yesterdays." He pays tribute to his mentor with Lester Young's “Jumpin' With Symphony Sid." Getz and Raney, in flawless unison, precede the "Sid" theme with one written by Gigi Gryce. In later years the line came to be called "Stan's Blues." It was in Getz’s repertoire until at least the late 1980s. In his solo, Getz employs a few of Prez's devices, including a series of false-fingered Cs. Raney picks up Getz’s final phrase to begin his own solo. Following solos from Haig and Kotick, both melody lines are reprised and the blues closes with an ending appropriate for a concert at Grauman's Chinese Theatre. The originally issued take of "Budo" and the new one of "Wildwood" end the Storyville date, a momentous evening in the annals of music recorded on location.


The quintet studio recordings that preceded the Storyville engagement by three months included Horace Silver, Roy Haynes and bassist Leonard Gaskin. They observe the time limits dictated by 78rpm singles but do not want for excitement, as Gryce's "Melody Express" makes clear. Getz's solo opens with a phrase epitomizing the tonal qualities that earned him the nickname. "The Sound." He all but swaggers through two choruses. Raney and Silver are equally propulsive, and Haynes surges behind the out-chorus.
Getz and Raney do their Castor and Pollux act on Gryce's "Yvette" and Silver's "Potter's Luck." The short time permitted "The Song is You" doesn't allow the band to build up the head of steam they were to generate in the Storyville version, but the counterpoint is thrilling. "Wildwood." with its surprise melody transition to the bridge, wraps up the session.


For Getz's December 19,1952, Roost date, Duke Jordan was the pianist; Getz and Parker had an affinity for the same accompanists. Frank Isola was the drummer. Bill Crow the bassist. Crow, then and now a stalwart of the jazz scene, recently recalled Getz's style of leadership.


"I think we only rehearsed a couple of times in all the months I was with him," Crow told me. "The first group, we didn't rehearse at all. Jimmy Raney showed me a couple of chord changes on tunes that I didn't know. I was lucky in those days: the style of drummers was light, so I could hear myself and I could hear what everybody was doing. It wasn't until some years later that everybody started pouring on the volume. It seemed like Stan just chose musicians that he was comfortable playing with and picked tunes he liked, and we played. There weren't any particular requirements to do anything more than that. You had to play his hit once in a while, “Moonlight In Vermont.” But other than that, he was in the best position of anybody I knew at that time to do whatever he liked and still fill the house."



The similarity of Getz's conception to Al Cohn's in places on "Lullaby of Birdland" was no coincidence, according to Crow.


"I know he admired Al Cohn's inventiveness, melodically. and felt that he had gotten a lot of ideas about how to approach jazz from Al. He felt badly that Al had never gotten the recognition that Stan felt he deserved."


The ending Raney suggested for "Lullaby of Birdland" has been copied by musicians around the world. The two takes of "Autumn Leaves" and the one of "These Foolish Things" recall an observation Getz made to tenor saxophonist Don Lanphere when Lanphere described the effect on his wife of Getz's ballads: "Oh, I know that there are those who might swing harder than I, but I'm very big with the ladies."


"When Duke Jordan came on the group." Crow says. "Stan mentioned that he thought Duke's intros were wonderful and he encouraged him to play something on almost every tune." Samples of Jordan's introductions are provided on the two takes of "Fools Rush In." He has a brief solo on "Lullaby of Birdland."


During his tenure with Getz, Raney became increasingly disturbed by the leader's behavior stemming from drugs and alcohol. Crow, an invaluable chronicler of the jazz life, wrote in his book, From Birdland to Broadway (Oxford) about seeing Getz nearly kill himself with an overdose. Author Gene Lees knew Raney during Lees' days as a newspaperman in Louisville, before he became editor of Down Beat He recounted to me a story Raney told him.


"Stan went through one of his periods of cleaning up. The group had about a week off before an opening in St. Louis, so Jimmy went home to Louisville to spend time with family. When he reached St. Louis, he went to Stan's hotel room and knocked on the door. Stan answered, conspicuously stoned. Jimmy said. 'Ah, Stan, what're you doing that for? The group's getting work, we're making a little money, and you're stoned again.'


"'Who. me?,” Stan said, which was his famous line. I’m not doing anything.' "'I just have to look in your eyes.' Jimmy said.


"Stan vehemently denied he was doing dope." Finally, Jimmy said," ‘Look, Stan. I can see your works in there on the dresser.'


"And Stan indignantly said. 'And you've let me stand here and lie for ten minutes?'"


Raney gave Getz notice in December of 1952. after a disagreement at a recording session for Norman Granz's Clef label. He finished the record, and he and Getz recorded together for Prestige under Raney's name the following spring, but Raney went on to work in a duo with the inventive pianist Jimmy Lyon.


"Moonlight in Vermont" was indeed a hit for Getz, but it was Johnny Smith's record. The guitarist used Getz in a series of exquisite chamber music recordings in 1952. An amazing technician, one of the premier guitarists of his day, Smith was as respected as Raney and Tal Farlow. His and Getz's dazzling unison work on "Where or When." "Tabu" and "Jaguar." equaled that of Getz and Raney. Smith's group, particularly in its fast pieces, was inspired by the sextet of Benny Goodman, with whom both he and Getz had worked. In the days when popular music was often good music, their "Moonlight in Vermont" was a fixture on radio stations and juke boxes for months, and it greatly added to Getz's popularity.


The final three tracks of the collection were recorded at Birdland. Getz's frequent New York headquarters, for Roulette, which inherited the Roost catalogue. The occasion was an engagement of Count Basie's amazing swing machine of the mid-1950s, with Getz as featured guest. Birdland's omnipresent greeter, Pee Wee Marquette, makes the introduction. Getz tackles Neil Hefti's "Little Pony" and Buster Harding's blues, "Nails," both originally recorded by Basie's 1951 band with Warden Gray as tenor soloist. His piece de resistance, however, is "Easy Living." in which his solo flows with the beauty of Lester Young. The beginning of his second chorus is pure Pres.


Getz went on to musical triumphs and to prodigies of self-administered pain. His 1961 collaboration with Eddie Sauter, "Focus," was one of the glories of his career. His bossa nova successes, "Desafinado" in 1962 and "The Girl From Ipanema" in 1963, made him wealthy. They were also two of the last cases in which music of uncompromising artistic quality made the hit parade. Through the 1970s and '80s, Getz continued to make bewitchingly beautiful music even as he left behind the wreckage of his life and the lives of his family.


It is said that in his last year or so, Stan Getz found a semblance of peace. For his contribution to the art of the twentieth century, he deserved it.
—Doug Ramsey


Doug Ramsey is the author of Jazz Matters Reflections on the Music and Some of its Makers (University of Arkansas Press) and a regular contributor to Jazz Times. Doug is also the author of Take Five: The Public and Private Lives of Paul Desmond [Parkside Publications, 2005]. You can visit with him on his blog via this link.

www.dougramsey.com



Sunday, September 10, 2017

Charlie Palmieri - El Gigante de Las Blancas y Las Negras

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


I have shared before on these pages how during my earliest attempts at playing Latin drum rhythms I was admonished to - “Do it right!; “Hey Man, learn what you are doing, you are screwing the rest of us up;” “Get off the bandstand until you know what a clave’ beat is.”


I’ve obviously cleaned some of this up a bit, but you get the point.


To the uninformed ear, it may sound like a bunch of banging around, but there is order and method in the conventions of Latin rhythms in particular and in Latin Jazz in general.


As I studied it more, I soon learned that Latin Jazz existed in what could be described as a parallel universe to Jazz, or perhaps, it would be better to say that it existed in its own universe.


This was especially the case in the Puerto Rican, Dominican and Cuban neighborhood the dotted uptown Manhattan, The Bronx, Brooklyn and Queens.


To give you a sense of what the Latin Jazz scene was like in New York in the decades immediately following the Second World War, here’s a detailed overview of the career of Charlie Palmieri, the older brother of Eddie Palmieri. Both were to become among the most creative forces in salsa, other forms of Latin popular music and Latin Jazz.


You’ll find the inspiration for this piece in the video that concludes it which incorporates Clare Fischer’s tribute to “CP” as performed by the Metropole Orchestra under the direction of Jim McNeely.


Source: The Encyclopedia of Popular Music by Colin Larkin. Licensed from Muze.


“Carlos Manuel Palmieri Jr., 21 November 1927, Bellevue Hospital, Manhattan, New York City, New York, USA, d. 12 September 1988, the Bronx, New York City, New York, USA.


Known in salsa as ‘El Gigante de Las Blancas y Las Negras’ (The Giant of the Keyboard), Palmieri’s parents, Carlos Palmieri Manuel Villaneuva and Isabel Maldonado-Palmieri, migrated from Ponce, Puerto Rico to New York’s El Barrio (Spanish Harlem), shortly before he was born.


He was a child musical prodigy who could faultlessly copy a piece on the piano by ear. He began piano lessons at the age of seven and later studied at the Juilliard School of Music in New York. In 1941 Charlie and his five-year-old brother, Eddie Palmieri, won prizes in amateur talent contests and during this time, a guardian would take him to Latin big band dances. Charlie made his professional debut on 2 October 1943 with the band of Osario Selasie at the Park Palace Ballroom.


A seven-month stint with Selasie was followed by one-and-a-half years with Orquestra Ritmo Tropical. After graduating from high school in 1946, he freelanced with various bands, including La Playa Sextet and Rafael Muñoz, with whom he made his recording debut on ‘Se Va La Rumba’. In October 1947, he was hired to replace Joe Loco in Fernando Alvarez’s band at the Copacabana club, by the band’s then musical director Tito Puente. In 1948 he recorded on the Alba label with his first band, Conjunto Pin Pin.


After leaving the Copacabana in 1951, Palmieri toured briefly with Xavier Cugat. The same year, he joined Puente’s band and appeared on the 10-inch album Tito Puente At The Vibes And His Rhythm Quartet, Vol. 6 on the Tico label (most of which was later incorporated on the late 50s album Puente In Love). He joined Pupi Campo’s band and worked on Jack Paar’s CBS daytime television show. In the early 50s, Palmieri formed another band, which debuted at New York’s famous Palladium Ballroom with lead vocalist Vitín Avilés.


However, lack of gigs caused him to resume work as an accompanist. He performed with Johnny Seguí, Tito Rodríguez, Vicentico Valdés and Pete Terrace. A couple of tracks he recorded with Rodríguez in 1953 were included on the 1990 compilation Ritmo Y Melodia, 15 Joyas Tropicales.



He appeared on Terrace’s mid-50s A Night In Mambo-Jazzland, and recorded as leader of a small Latin jazz group on El Fantastico Charlie Palmieri. At the end of 1956, he organized a quintet for an extended residency in Chicago.


Shortly after Palmieri’s return to New York, he discovered Johnny Pacheco playing flute with the band of Dominican singer/composer Dioris Valladares, who was on the same bill as Palmieri’s group at the Monte Carlo Ballroom. He employed Pacheco, initially as a timbales player, and later as the flautist with his flute, strings, rhythm section and voices band, Charanga ‘La Duboney’.


The band signed with the major label United Artists Records, and their 1960 debut Let’s Dance The Charanga!, featuring Vitín Avilés, generated several hits in New York’s Latino market. Not only did La Duboney enjoy considerable success in their own right - playing two to three dances a night - but they also kicked off the early 60s charanga (flute and violin band) boom. After a short while, Pacheco split to found his own charanga. Palmieri was obliged to break his contract with United Artists when the company insisted that he record Hawaiian music! This was because the record contract of Tito Rodríguez, who signed with the label in 1960, stipulated that he would be the only artist to record Latin music for them. Palmieri and Charanga ‘La Duboney’ switched to Al Santiago’ s Alegre label.


They released three albums on the label between 1961 and 1963, and contributed two tracks to 1961’s Las Charangas, which also featured the charangas of Pacheco and José Fajardo. The tracks ‘Como Bailan La Pachanga’ and ‘La Pachanga Se Baila Asi’ (co-written by Joe Quijano and Palmieri), from La Duboney’s magnificent bestselling Alegre debut Pachanga At The Caravana Club, were both hits in Farándula magazine’s New York Latin Top 15 during May 1961.


Palmieri directed (and performed on) and Santiago produced four superlative Alegre All-Stars Latin jam session (descarga) volumes issued between 1961 and the mid-60s. These albums, which gave Palmieri an opportunity to indulge his dual passion for jazz and Cuban music, involved artists such as Kako, Pacheco, Willie Rosario, Cheo Feliciano, Orlando Marín, Dioris Valladares, Joe Quijano, bass player Bobby Rodríguez, Barry Rogers, Osvaldo ‘Chi Hua Hua’ Martínez and Willie Torres.


The Alegre All-Stars’ recordings were a descendant of the Cuban Jam Session volumes recorded in Cuba on the Panart label in the second half of the 50s (see Israel ‘Cachao’ López). Cuban saxophonist José ‘Chombo’ Silva participated on both. In their turn, the Alegre All-Stars inspired a string of New York descarga recordings, which included releases by Kako, Johnny Pacheco, Osvaldo ‘Chi Hua Hua’ Martínez, Tico All-Stars, Cesta All-Stars, Salsa All-Stars, Fania All Stars and SAR All Stars. Palmieri and Santiago made a significant input: Palmieri guested on the Tico All-Stars’ 1966 descarga volumes recorded at New York’s Village Gate, and directed and played on the Cesta All-Stars’ two albums, which Santiago co-produced; Santiago produced Salsa All Stars in 1968, which featured Palmieri on piano.


When the charanga sound declined in popularity, Palmieri replaced the flute and violins with three trumpets and two trombones to form the Duboney Orchestra for 1965’s Tengo Maquina Y Voy A 60 (Going Like Sixty). Puerto Rico-born Victor Velázquez, a Palmieri accompanist since 1961, sang lead vocals with the new Duboney, which also included young trumpeter Bobby Valentín. Palmieri left Alegre to record for the BG label, but returned in 1967 for Hay Que Estar En Algo/Either You Have It Or You Don’t!, which contained some boogaloos, an R&B/Latin fusion form that was the rage at the time. Palmieri later admitted to Max Salazar: ‘... I didn’t care for the boogaloo, but I’ve learned that if you do not follow a popular trend, you’re dead.’ The following year he recorded Latin Bugalu for Atlantic Records, which was also released in the UK. The album was produced by Herbie Mann and contained his self-penned classic ‘Mambo Show’.





1969 was an extremely lean year for Palmieri’s band. He nearly suffered a nervous breakdown and contemplated relocating to Puerto Rico. However, he was dissuaded from doing so by Tito Puente, who hired him as musical conductor for his television show El Mundo De Tito Puente. When the series finished, Palmieri started a parallel career as a lecturer in Latin music and culture, and taught in various educational institutions in New York. Velázquez left for an eight-month stint with Joe Quijano in Puerto Rico; he returned to Palmieri’s band in 1972 to share lead vocals with Vitín Avilés, then departed to join Louie Ramírez’s band. Palmieri began using organ, which imparted an element of kitsch to some of his recorded work. He rejigged his horn section to two trumpets and saxophone (played by Bobby Nelson, who doubled on flute). He issued three notable albums on Alegre between 1972 and 1975 with Avilés on lead vocals, and two on Harvey Averne’s Coco label (in 1974 and 1975) with lead vocals by Velázquez.


A number of Palmieri’s hit tunes from this period were written by veteran Puerto Rican composer/singer and former heartthrob, Raúl Marrero, including, ‘La Hija De Lola’ from El Gigante Del Teclado (1972) and ‘La Vecina’ from Vuelve El Gigante (1973). Palmieri only played organ with his band on the first Coco outing, Electro Duro, which was probably his most disappointing album. His second Coco release, Impulsos, was a more refined remake of the rawer (and better) Charlie Palmieri. Both versions featured Velázquez on lead vocals; he again departed and went on to co-lead Típica Ideal. In 1977, Palmieri teamed up with veteran Panamanian singer/composer Meñique Barcasnegras for Con Salsa Y Sabor on the Cotique label. That year, he returned to Alegre to lead and perform on the Al Santiago produced 17th anniversary Alegre All-Stars reunion Perdido (Vol. 5), which re-convened 10 musicians from the 60s sessions, together with Louie Ramírez, Bobby Rodríguez and members of his band La Compañia. Palmieri remained with Alegre in 1978 for The Heavyweight, with singers Meñique and Julito Villot, and played and arranged on Vitín Avilés’ solo Con Mucha Salsa. His brief return to Alegre was punctuated by the highly recommended compilation Gigante Hits in 1978, which selected tracks from his 1965-75 period with the label.


In one or more of his capacities as A&R head, producer, keyboard player and arranger, Palmieri worked with a long list of artists, which included: Kako, brother Eddie, Celia Cruz, Tito Puente, Ismael Rivera, Rafael Cortijo, Herbie Mann, Ismael Quintana, Yayo El Indio, Cal Tjader, Raúl Marrero, Joe Quijano, Frankie Dante, Bobby Capó, Israel ‘Cachao’ López, Machito, Mongo Santamaría and Ray Barretto. In January 1980, Palmieri moved to Puerto Rico to escape New York’s severe winters and frustrating, exploitative Latin club scene. He organized a successful band there, but sadly never recorded with them. Palmieri returned to New York in February 1983 to discuss a proposed concert in Puerto Rico with his brother Eddie. However he suffered a massive heart attack and stroke and was hospitalized for six weeks. Upon his recovery, he continued to reside in New York and resolved to live at a slower pace. On 6 January 1984, New York’s Latin music industry paid tribute to Palmieri at Club Broadway. The same year, he returned to a small group format (piano, bass, timbales, conga and bongo) for the Latin jazz A Giant Step on the Tropical Budda label. He played on El Sabor Del Conjunto Candela/86, led by bongo/güiro player Ralphy Marzan, and on Joe Quijano’s The World’s Most Exciting Latin Orchestra & Review in 1988. Up to 1988, he gigged with Combo Gigante, which he co-led with Jimmy Sabater. He made his belated UK debut in June 1988 with a five-night residency at London’s Bass Clef club accompanied by London-based Robin Jones’ King Salsa.


On 12 September 1988, Palmieri arrived back in New York after a trip to Puerto Rico, where he had performed at the Governor’s residence with veteran singer/composer Bobby Capó. Later in the day he suffered a further heart attack and died at the Jacobi Hospital in the Bronx, New York. In 1990, the Latin jazz CD Mambo Show was released on the resurrected Tropical Budda label, which congregated an all-star ensemble, including Palmieri (piano and co-producer), Mongo Santamaría (conga), Chombo (saxophone); Barry Rogers (trombone), Nicky Marrero (timbales), Johnny ‘Dandy’ Rodríguez (bongo), Ray Martínez (bass), David ‘Piro’ Rodríguez (trumpet).”



Saturday, September 9, 2017

Shelly Manne and His Men "Live" at The Manne Hole

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


“Enthusiasm” palpably exudes from the following insert notes by the esteemed Jazz critic and author Leonard Feather which he penned for the double LP Shelly Manne and His Men "Live" at The Manne Hole [Contemporary S-7593/94 and Original Jazz Classics OJCCD 714/15-2].


And why not?


They were written as part of the continuing celebration associated with the opening of Shelly Manne’s Jazz club - The Manne Hole - just five months earlier in November, 1960.


Recorded in performance at the club on March 3-5, 1961, the tracks on this double LP were the first “live” recordings ever made at The Manne Hole.


Exuberance; excitement; ebullience - all were a part of the experience for Jazz musicians and Jazz fans when Shelly gave the gift of this club to the Los Angeles Jazz Community. During its 12 year history, the sounds of Jazz emanating from The Manne Hole would be enjoyed on an international scale as Jazz fans from many parts of the world visited this unique setting.


Over the years, I’ve read many of Leonard’s liner notes to Jazz albums. In my opinion, those that follow are among his best. He couldn’t have composed them for a more deserving subject.


The Host


SHELLY MANNE'S is one of the few successful operations of its kind, namely: a club actually financed by a name jazzman who plays there himself. In associating himself with a spot for which he could not only put up his own money, but also guarantee his own physical, swinging presence. Shelly knew he was gambling in an area that has long been one of the most hazardous in show business. His investment, in effect, was 40% faith, 40% courage, and 20% cash. Certainly the undertaking was not an attempt to get rich quick. In any case, that would be a near-impossibility without a liquor license and a larger room. Money was not his main object, for with or without the club, he has been as busy and successful a musician as any in the country. "What I really wanted was a place where I and other musicians would be free to play jazz without compromising musically in any way!'


But running a club has its responsibilities. "It's strange how different things look when you see them from the other side,” he said recently. "When I was a musician only, I'd get up on the stand and all I'd see would be people selling things. I never thought about all the loot that has to go out before any rolls in.


"What's been wrong with the night club business for so many years, as far as jazz is concerned, is that there's been too much of an atmosphere of pressure. People don't like to feel they are being forced to do anything—buy a drink, or favors, or food, or even listen to the music. In our place I think we let the audience and the musicians enjoy themselves. When the band is really swinging, even the non-jazz people in the audience know it. But I never want to establish a concert hall atmosphere or make it so rigid that people are afraid to feel at home!”


"As far as my own playing is concerned, I feel much freer in The Manne-Hole than I have ever felt in a club before. Working here for me has been one of those gigs where you literally can't wait to get there and start playing. And the band has gotten a freer and more exciting sound, partly I think as a result of the room!'


The Manne-Hole's manager, a stockholder in the corporation, is Amsterdam-born Rudy Onderwyzer, an ex-accountant. Rudy had all the qualifications except one: at the outset he had little sympathy for the modern sounds, and was, in fact, a traditionalist who liked to play tailgate trombone. But in a very short time, he says, "just by working at Shelly's I got a whole education in modern Jazz.”


The Club


SHELLY'S MANNE-HOLE at 1608 North Cahuenga Boulevard is in what could be called (except by those who write it off as a heartless, impersonal town) the heart of Hollywood. Providing incandescent evidence that Hollywood has a warm spot in its heart for jazz, The Manne-Hole immediately impresses the visitor as friendly, intimate, and relaxed.


Suspended from a beam halfway across the room is a large key on a chain, the kind seen outside keymakers' shops. On the walls are many of Shelly's Contemporary album covers, as well as a variety of relics: old newspaper clippings, faded photographs, all kinds of drawings, paintings, murals, and tapestries. Just beyond the bandstand to the left as you enter, a ladder painted on the wall leads up to a painted manhole cover, its lettering in reverse on the ceiling. Another manhole, looking more like a painted drumhead, has Shelly's photographed smile welcoming you from the rear of the room, over the legend "Founder and Owner. 1960 A. D"


The bandstand is clearly visible from all the booths, or from the row of barstools at a counter facing it; and the music, thanks to a first-class public-address system installed by Contemporary engineer Howard Holzer,. is eminently audible.


The Manne-Hole opened its doors November 4, 1960, with the same policy that is currently in operation. Shelly's own quintet works there every Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, with an outstanding singer as an added attraction. Among those who have played a series of week ends are blues singer Big Miller, Helen Humes, and Ruth Price, who was recorded at The Manne-Hole during the nights when these sides by Shelly's group were taped. The results can be heard on Contemporary M3590, stereo S7590.


The musical policy of The Manne-Hole is unique in that a different combo can be heard each of the four weeknights Manne's group is not working. Among the groups featured have been those of Frank Rosolino, Terry Gibbs, Joe Maini, Jr., Phineas Newborn, Jr., Russ Freeman, Paul Horn, Teddy Edwards, Dexter Gordon, and Barney Kessel.


The Manne-Hole attracts listeners who are genuinely interested in jazz, from teen-agers just shedding their rock and roll cocoon to older enthusiasts who remember Shelly as that promising young lad who took Dave Tough's place in the Joe Marsala band in 1940. No hard liquor is served at The Manne-Hole; beer and wine are available along with an assortment of soft drinks and, welcome surprise, edible food.


The Men


SHELDON (SHELLY) MANNE was born June 11, 1920 in New York City. His father and two uncles were drummers. Alto sax was Shelly's first instrument. He studied drums with Billy Gladstone. He made his professional debut playing on trans-Atlantic liners, and made his first record with Bobby Byrne's band in 1939. In the next three years, before entering the U. S. Coast Guard, he played in the bands of Joe Marsala, Bob Astor, Raymond Scott, Will Bradley,and Les Brown. He played in Stan Kenton's band off and on from 1946 to 1951; during this period he also worked with Charlie Ventura, Bill Harris, Norman Granz's Jazz at the Philharmonic, and Woody Herman. Settling in California in 1952, he worked with Howard Rumsey's Lighthouse All-Stars and with the Shorty Rugers-Shelly Manne Giants. After his appearance in The Man with the Golden Arm, for which he also instructed Frank Sinatra in the drumming sequence, he formed his own combo. Since late 1955, he has divided his time between this group, movie and TV work (including occasional appearances as an actor), and free-lance recording studio work of all kinds. He has also begun to compose and is responsible for jazz scores of two feature films. Shelly and his wife, Flip, a former dancer, live in Northridge, California, where their acreage also provides a home for three of their six horses.


SECONDO (CONTE) CANDOLI was born July 12, 1927 in Mishawaka, Ind. He studied trumpet with his brother Pete, who is four years his senior. He came to prominence in the Woody Herman band of 1945-6. He visited Scandinavia in 1947 as a member of Chubby Jackson's sextet. Heard with Stan Kenton in 1948 and '52-4, he was also with Charlie Ventura in 1949, led his own group in Chicago for a time, and for a long while was at The Lighthouse with Howard Rumsey. He has done extensive freelance work in Hollywood in more recent years and has been in great demand for studio record dates.


RICHARD (RICHIE) KAMUCA was born July 2.1, 1930 in Philadelphia, where he studied at the Mastbaum School of Music. Long a West Coast resident, he has played in the bands of Kenton, 1951-2; Herman, '51-5; Chet Baker and Maynard Ferguson, '57; Howard Rumsey, '57-8; Shorty Rogers, '59; and since then with Shelly's Men. Heard on records with all the above groups as well as with Al Cohn, Bill Perkins, Johnny Richards, and Manny Albam, he has developed during the past year or two from a capable musician into a performer of marked originality.


RUSSELL DONALD (Russ) FREEMAN was born in Chicago May 28, 1926. Long a favorite among Hollywood jazz musicians, he has worked for the combos of Howard McGhee and Dexter Cordon (in 1917), and with Art Pepper, the late Wardell Gray, and Rumsey's All-Stars when Shelly was in the group. After playing with Chet Baker and the Rogers-Manne Giants, he joined Shelly Manne in 1955 and has been with him continuously except for brief trips to the East Coast and Europe with Benny Goodman in 1958-9. CHARLES


CURTIS (CHUCK) BERGHOFER was born June 14, 1937 in Denver. Although he has studied with Bob Stone and Ralph Pena, he is mainly self-taught. Raised in Los Angeles from the age of eight, he played tuba and trumpet in high school, took up bass at eighteen, and made his professional debut
with Skinnay Ennis. He also worked with Pete Jolly, and was with Bobby Troup for a year and a half before joining Shelly in 1960. Shelly considers him one of the best young bassists in jazz today.


The Music


Love For Sale • The 1930 Cole Porter standard (from a show called The New Yorkers) has long been used as a backbone for jazz improvisation. Here Shelly sets the pace with his up-tempo vamp, and Conte offers a free yet faithful delineation of the theme, while Richie adds side comments and takes over for the release. Richie's long solo builds slowly during the first chorus into a continuously swinging groove that is later maintained by Conte and Russ. The solid underlining of Chuck's bass, as well as his walking solo, are conspicuous features of this track.

How Could It Happen To A Dream • This Ellington standard, originally cut by Duke's band in 1946 under the more Brooklynesque title It Shouldn't Happen to a Dream, offers a graceful vehicle for Richie's ballad thoughts. Russ has a gentle but firm solo in which the harmonic idea developed at the beginning of his last eight bars is especially effective. Conte has a spare, discreet, muted solo before Richie takes it out.


Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise • Conte, whose solo is a highlight here, has a particularly effective passage in which he hangs onto a repeated F against the C minor chord at the end of one chorus and during the suspended rhythm passage leading into the next. Shelly's interlude with sticks swings as tastefully as does his ensemble work, and Chuck has a remarkable Pettiford-like solo.


The Champ • Shelly, pursued closely by Chuck, sets the brisk pace for what turns out to be a ten-minute series of blues solos with the 1951 Dizzy Gillespie riff as a framework. A sense of tension and release is ingeniously established throughout as Chuck, at one point during each of the solos by Richie, Conte, and Russ, lays out to let Shelly provide the sole accompaniment.


On Green Dolphin Street • One of the first jazz recordings of this Bronislau Kaper movie melody was in 1957 by Contemporary's Poll Winners — Barney Kessel, Shelly, and Ray Brown (C3535, stereo S7010). The tune has also been closely associated with Miles Davis, and is now a staple in the repertory of many jazz combos. Despite the unusual length of this track, continuity is established and mood maintained by the device of launching each solo (muted trumpet, then tenor, then piano) with a chorus in which the first and third eight-bar strains are played against a pedal-point bass effect. Playing these comfortable changes, Kamuca offers a solo that is rich in dynamic and rhythmic variety. Chuck and Shelly have solo contributions that adhere carefully to the overall mood before the theme returns.


What's New? • First recorded by Bob Crosby in 1938, the music was written by Bob Haggart, then bass player with Crosby. This attractive melody is unique in jazz, in that it consists of the same eight-bar strain repeated four times, the third statement being played a fourth higher. That its harmonic structure carries it is made clear again in this slow-tempo treatment. Note Shelly's subtle variations between straight four and double-time, and the eloquent contribution of Conte, which gives the whole a beautifully dramatic, climactic mood. Aside from the difference in personnel, this is in complete contrast with the up-tempo version of the same tune in Shelly Manne & His Men at The Black Hawk, Vol. 2 (Contemporary M3578, stereo S7578).


If I Were A Bell • The Frank Loesser song from Guys and Dolls (1950) is furnished with an effective head-arrangement device through the varying support of Chuck Berghofer, who accompanies each of the soloists in two, for a single chorus, before bursting into a free-flowing four. Russ Freeman, who lends the appropriate touch of tintinnabulation to the introduction, is also responsible for an exciting, consistently pulsating solo, reminding us yet again that he is one of the most rewarding soloists in modern piano jazz. The series of eights traded by Richie, Shelly, and Conte is another high spot, preceding Conte's muted recap of the melody.


Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye • The Cole Porter song from a Broadway show called The Seven Lively Arts was introduced to jazz ears by Benny Goodman in 1944. Russ is notably melodic in his solo; the first eight bars sound as if he had composed a new theme based on these changes. Richie's sound and phrasing, and the mood of this melody, are well suited to each other, as the opening and closing choruses indicate.


A Gem From Tiffany • Once again Bill Holman's original provides a closer for a Shelly Manne set. The longest previous workout on this foundation was heard in Volume 4 of The Black Hawk series (Contemporary M3580. stereo S7580). The time-honored "and-then-there-were-none" routine is followed as the men leave the stand one by one until Shelly, solo, makes the final statement.”


—Leonard Feather Notes reproduced from the original album liner.


These liner notes are also used in At the Manne-Hole, Volume 2 (OJCCD-715-2), a second volume of Shelly Manne's Contemporary recordings; the notes make reference to tracks in both discs.