Sunday, October 8, 2017

Stan Getz - East of the Sun: The West Coast Sessions - The Ted Gioia Notes

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


“Flawless technique, perfect time, strong melodic sense and more than enough harmonic expertise, fabulous memory, and great ears. Add a superb sense of dynamics, pacing, and formal. Top this off with a sound of pure gold, and you have Stan Getz.


He was a charismatic musician. His music actually affected the course of people's lives. They fell in love with his music. They fell in love because of his music, and they made love to his music.


My association with Stan started in Woody Herman's Second Herd, the "Four Brothers" band. Stan was already in the band when the Jimmy Giuffre original "Four Brothers" was recorded for Columbia Records. But the real breakthrough came with the recording of Ralph Burns' "Early Autumn" at Radio Recorders in Hollywood for Capitol Records. By that time I had become a band member. I was fortunate to work with Stan from that time on — playing, recording, and traveling together in the Forties. Fifties, Sixties. Seventies. Eighties and, finally, in 1990.


After Stan left the Woody Herman band in 1949, he made a string of important recordings, including Jazz At Storyville,  the "Moonlight in Vermont" series with Johnny Smith Focus with Eddie Sauter and the huge success, Antonio Carlos Jobim's bossa novas "Desafinado” and "The Girl From Ipanema".


When Verve first asked me to contribute to this presentation. I accepted without hesitation. Then the tapes arrived. Listening to previously released material was great, but a lot of the unissued takes became further proof of the unfaltering quality of Stan's playing.


These recordings contain many outstanding solos by Slan. but if I had to choose one. it would be the lengthy solo on "S-h-i-n-e". This has been a topic of conversation since it was first released. It is Stan in full stride.


When an artist leaves a legacy of recordings such as Stan's, it is overwhelming. But when the artist affects the lives of his audience, he is then in a class with a chosen few. Such an artist is Stan Getz.


On the bandstand and in the studio he brought out the best in those who played with him.


And I for one say, "Thank you. Stanley."
- LOU LEVY, Jazz pianist


The insert notes to the Verve three CD set Stan Getz - East of the Sun: The West Coast Sessions [314 531 935-2] by the distinguished writer Ted Gioia were made a hash of when they were formatted into the booklet.


I’ve rarely seen a more garbled mess disgrace such important Jazz recordings.


The irony here is that Ted is the penultimate all-things-West-Coast-Jazz historian and was actually contracted by Verve to produce these notes!


What a waste.


But fear not; the editorial staff at JazzProfiles contacted Ted and he gave his blessing to having his notes developed into manuscript form so that they can be clearly read as presented on these pages.


“I remember how unhappy I was with the layout of liner notes in the booklet, which made it almost impossible to read the text. I'd be very happy to see them made available online.”


Nothing like making one of the best writers on the subject of Jazz “happy.”


© -Ted Gioia, copyright protected; all rights reserved; used with the author’s permission.


“Stan Getz always equivocated about the West Coast jazz scene. During the late 1980s, when he lived in California. I frequently had the opportunity to talk with him about various jazz musicians, both current and historical. He was bluntly honest during these informal discussions. Typically sparing in the compliments he paid other performers (except for a handful of figures he clearly admired), he seemed especially reserved about many of the prominent West Coast names. Getz kept a safe distance from the local scene during these years, and he almost always had a rhythm section flown in from New York for important gigs. Even while soaking up the sun and enjoying the ambiance of West Coast life, Getz seemed an inveterate East Coast character in his attitudes, mannerisms, language, and temperament


Imagine my surprise at his reaction, when I told him one day that I was researching a book on West Coast jazz. He looked at me in silence for a moment, puzzled, then asked.  “Do you include me in West Coast jazz?" For all his aloofness, he knew how strong his ties were to the California scene, not just in the Eighties but also during the glory days of West Coast jazz in the Fifties. Yet looking at his career in retrospect, he honestly didn't know if he was a West Coast jazz musician.


Was he? These recordings from the mid-Fifties include the most powerful statements in defense of Getz as a major exponent of jazz on the dream coast. Joined by some of the finest players on the Los Angeles scene. Getz participated in a series of memorable sessions. The title of the initial LP release of some of this material left little doubt about the intended marketing angle: It was simply called West Coast Jazz.


This was a long way from Getz's Philadelphia birthplace and childhood in the Bronx. He often dismissed the impact of these formative years on his career, offering snippets of information or relating a meandering anecdote about his first performance on the harmonica. Yet the evidence clearly shows that Getz was a phenomenal talent almost from the start. The late Shorty Rogers mentioned rehearsing in a band with Getz when the latter was barely in his teens and had only been playing saxophone for a few months But even then. Getz was garnering a reputation as a sax prodigy attracting the attention of bandleaders. He lasted for only one year of high school, but had he persisted he might well have fulfilled his teacher’s dream of attending Juilliard. Getz’s primary instrument was the bassoon at this point and he quickly earned a coveted spot in the all-New York student orchestra.


The jazz life had already beckoned and the tenor sax replaced the bassoon as Getz’s horn of choice. Truant officers were tracking him down at the Roseland Ballroom bandstand. So before long Getz bid adieu to James Madison High School choosing to go on the road with trombonist Jack Teagarden. The tenor saxophonist was so young that Teagarden had to be named his legal guardian. Stardom also came at an early age. Getz was barely out of his teens when he dazzled jazz fans with his celebrated playing on Early Autumn with the Woody Herman band.


Getz gravitated to the West Coast in his early career At age sixteen, he traveled to Los Angeles while still with Teagarden. He returned to California as an 18-year-old bandleader in 1945, leading a trio at the Swing Club in Hollywood, but he soon left to go on the road with Benny Goodman. He returned again some time later and parlayed a gig at a Mexican ballroom into a celebrated stint with Herman.


At Pete Pontrelli's Spanish Ballroom, the unlikely staging ground for this movement, Getz participated in the development of a completely new jazz style, one that came to be known as the "Four Brothers' sound". The band's repertoire on this gig consisted primarily of stock arrangements of Mexican and Spanish tunes, supplemented by an occasional jazz chart. But arranger Gene Roland was working on a new way of voicing the sax section, which Jimmy Giuffre took and refined further for the Herman band. The result was a lightly swinging ensemble featuring three tenor and one baritone saxophones — with Getz helping to recreate the sound from Pontrelli's in his new role as a Herman sideman. The recording of “Four Brothers,” from the close of 1947, exhilarated listeners — so much so that jazz fans were soon calling this edition of the Herman orchestra the "Four Brothers band".


By this time. Getz had developed the translucent tenor tone and softly swinging style that gave an airy lightness to the Four Brothers' sound and would distinguish his mature work. Getz's debt to Lester Young in this regard has often been cited, and Getz was the first to admit he admired the older tenor saxophonist. Yet Getz brought a more overtly modernist sensibility to his playing that sharply distinguished it from Young's. Although Getz was never an ardent bebopper, he had listened carefully to Charlie Parker and brought a deep understanding of modern jazz into his own, cooler style.


This influence is especially marked on these West Coast sessions, where Getz draws uncharacteristic inspiration from bop-inflected tunes, such as Gillespie's A Night in Tunisia and Woody 'n' You, and offers a tour de force solo on S-h-i-n-e. These progressive leanings were evident throughout Getz's career, as seen by his constant use of young sidemen with new musical ideas. One recalls with admiration how, more than a decade after these sides, Getz was careening over Phrygian scales and navigating through some of Chick Corea's most complex material on another Verve release, the seminal Sweet Rain. On that record he showed a daring unmatched by any other Young disciple from the postwar years. Or listen to another Verve outing, the justly celebrated Focus, which finds Getz engaging in a marvelously intricate dialogue with a string section. The claim that Getz merely commercialized a variant of the Young sound falls to the ground after even the most casual listening to these recordings.


But what Getz did learn from Young was his essentially melodic approach to improvisation. Throughout most of the history of jazz, the prevailing approach to the tenor sax has stressed the harmonic possibilities of the instrument. Substitute changes, intricate cadences, unusual modes that imply equally exotic harmonies — a range of techniques has been used in the paradoxical attempt to extract a chordal texture from this inherently monophonic instrument. Getz, like Young, never got caught up in this quixotic pursuit. Instead both adopted an unabashedly linear approach, unapologetic in its lyricism There was an almost brutal honesty in this style. No shiny ornaments were hung out to distract attention from its melodic core.


"Players like Stan and Al Cohn (another Young follower from the period] thought about the song more than other jazz musicians," pianist Lou Levy remarks. "The melody line was important to them. I suspect that Stan paid attention to the lyrics as well. I remember giving him the music to the song “No More” — one of the pieces that Billie Holiday used to sing. Stan looked over the sheet. 'It's a good story,' he said, and we went on to play it." His solos had the flow of a well-paced narrative. Yet the structure never got in the way of the music's emotional immediacy. Few players of any generation could construct solos of such logic and rigor while maintaining a depth of feeling and, at times, such poignancy.


These virtues made Getz a natural participant in the West Coast scene that gained notoriety in the early Fifties. The influence of Young was especially prominent among the Los Angeles saxophone players of this period. The emerging cool-Jazz style, which Getz had helped promote with his early work, was also making waves near the Pacific. Getz's Los Angeles-based band with Bob Brookmeyer reflected this side of the West Coast aesthetic, with a formalist compositional approach somewhat akin to the Mulligan-Baker group efforts from the same period. (This similarity was perhaps more than a coincidence, since Getz-Brookmeyer were working at the Ambassador Hotel when Mulligan-Baker were gracing the bandstand across the street at the Haig.) Getz later joined Mulligan on a celebrated Verve recording in 1957, and he occasionally collaborated with other leading West Coast players. Yet these tended to be exceptions to the rule. Getz spent most of the Fifties in musical pursuits far afield from the West Coast jazz scene: in heated jam sessions with Jazz at the Philharmonic; in exceptional recordings with Dizzy Gillespie, Sonny Stitt, and other bop masters; and leading a variety of ensembles under his own name. Many of these settings no doubt resulted from Getz's relationship with record producer Norman Granz. Granz had only a limited interest in the burgeoning West Coast scene, and his projects with Getz mostly reflected this attitude.


But by the middle of the decade, the West Coast label had proved to be such an effective marketing device that even Granz was taking notice. Getz and Granz were now determined to make a more dedicated foray into the West Coast scene. On July 27, 1955 Getz made the plunge when he kicked off an engagement at Zardi's, a major Southern California jazz club on Hollywood Boulevard, fronting a new West Coast quintet. This combo was essentially a pickup group, organized specifically for the Zardi's gig. But the quality of the musicians more than compensated for the lack of rehearsal time. Audiences were dazzled by the new California combo. By the time the quintet entered the studio, some two weeks later, to undertake the first of the sessions included here, it sounded like a veteran unit.


Getz drew on some of the finest players on the Los Angeles scene for these sessions. Levy had played with Getz in the Herman band and had recently relocated to California from his native Chicago. In an interview from the period, Getz pointed out that Levy was “more than a two-handed pianist. He plays with all ten fingers.” Levy's orchestral approach and harmonic ingenuity is well-documented on these recordings. Listen to him move into a polytonal mood midway through his solo on There Will Never Be Another You, pushing the chord changes to their limits. Although Levy has often been labeled a bebop pianist, his roots go much deeper. His earliest models in the jazz world were, in fact, the big bands that he heard in his native Chicago. The pianists he listened to were especially diverse. "I heard Al Haig before I heard Bud Powell, and before them I heard Nat Cole. But I was listening to Teddy Wilson long before that. And of course there was Art Tatum who was in a category of his own.”


“The most prominent sound in the the rhythm section on these Getz sessions is Leroy Vinnegar’s bass,” explains Levy with characteristic modesty. “You can hear its strong rhythmic presence.


“Leroy is always there, his time is as solid as a rock, and everyone plays off him." Like so many of the Indiana natives who made their mark in modern Jazz (Carl Perkins, the Montgomery brothers. Freddie Hubbard), Vinnegar boasts an uncanny knack for swinging effortlessly, for propelling a Jjzz band without any wasted energy.


Shelly Manne, who worked with Vinnegar in many settings over the years, lets the bass serve as the pulse of the band, using his drum kit to supply color and deepen the textures of the ensemble sound. "Shelly took more chances than most other drummers," Levy adds. "He was always interested in trying something different, in experimenting.  While Stan Levey, on the later sessions, was more of a bebopper, a terrific drummer with an outstanding modern-jazz feel."


Conte Candoli, who joined Gelz in the front line, was another transplanted Indiana native and one of the hottest trumpeters on the West Coast scene. In a jazz environment where subdued or cerebral approaches to the horn received more publicity, Candoli took a different tack. His improvised lines generally burst forth with exuberance and vitality. His work with Getz on this date is surprisingly subdued, but on “S-h-i-n-e” he lets loose with the compelling devil-may-care brashness that is very much his trademark.


Despite the Los Angeles sidemen and the marketing of these sessions as West Coast Jazz, I have always felt that there was something incongruous about this whole project. In fact, I'm half-convinced that Getz was slyly trying to subvert the West Coast marketing label attached to his new approach. The opening track on the original West Coast Jazz album was East of the Sun — was he making a little joke here? And why did he make such a point of drawing on East Coast composers for the band's repertoire? There is enough Gershwin material from these dates to make a whole theme album. (Hmm. Gershwin….wasn't he a New York boy who made most of his best music on the East Coast, but came out West to make money with some blatantly commercial efforts?)


Getz's choice of sidemen was equally telling Candoli, Vinnegar, Levy, and Manne or Levey — they were all West Coasters, more or less, but not one was a native Californian. Each one had started back East or in the Midwest. And why was Getz playing, in addition to Gershwin, all of these East Coast bebop tunes — so rare for him — on a project that supposedly celebrated the West Coast?


Maybe I am reading too much into the tenor saxophonist's choice of material. But his wry sense of humor was just the sort that would delight in this type of cryptic playfulness. I recall a similar ambiguity from Getz's later years, when he had given up drink and was an ardent participant in Alcoholics Anonymous — yet seemed to play a booze song, “Lush Life” or “Sippin' at Bells,” at every concert! Indeed Getz always had an irreverent attitude toward song titles — who else would introduce his mega-hit “Desafinado” as "Dis Here Finado" (this coming on the heels of such soul-jazz tunes as “Dis Here” and “Dat Dere,” then the rage), then add offhandedly, "This is the song that is going to pay my kid's college tuition.”


"This was not a West Coast Jazz session," Levy asserts confidently. He notes that the most celebrated performance from this project, “S-h-i-n-e,” counters any stereotype of laid-back West Coast playing. "Everybody always liked this one." Levy continues. "Stan really forges ahead. His intro is clear as a bell He plays those eight bars unaccompanied, but with a real momentum and swing. Then — bam! — the band comes in and he's off. He really lets loose on this piece, and never falters, charging all the way through to the end."


Yet there were many moments on these sessions where Getz was the consummate lyrical soloist, very much in the vein of the West Coast sound. In fact, these sessions include some of the most effortlessly graceful performances of Getz's career. He is low-key on “Like Someone in Love” where he kicks off his solo with a deliciously lazy break and follows up with a richly melodic solo. His work on “Too Close for Comfort” is equally noteworthy and could serve as a case study in relaxed improvisation. The two complete lakes of “Our Love Is Here to Stay” are both masterly examples of thematic improvisation. The unreleased version is an especially brilliant example of how Getz could weave baroque lines while continuing to hint at the contours of the melody. And even when Getz tackles a stop-time interlude, as on “Blues for Mary Jane” or “How About You?” his playing retains an elegant sureness, a calmness even in the most fiery surroundings.


Not that the experimental side of Getz's playing is totally absent here. On “Woody 'n' You” Getz plays atypical, polytonal games with a simple motif. This interlude sounds like a parody of Coltrane's A Love Supreme. It couldn't be, of course, since the Coltrane performance was still a decade in the future, yet the resemblance is uncanny. Other feints and jabs — an occasional bebop lick in double-time, a judicious bit of bluesiness, a tongue-in-cheek quote — are dished out in sparing doses, showing how much Getz always kept in reserve, waiting for the right moment to let it loose.


Yet if we ultimately grow wary of associating Getz too closely with West Coast jazz, it is only because he kept a safe distance from all of the passing fads and fancies of the jazz world. Although he was linked to the cool jazz sound, Getz played some of his hottest music during the years when cool was in its ascendancy. And his collaborations with other leading cool players were surprisingly rare. Years later. Getz was equally detached from the stardom he attained when crossing over with his bossa nova recordings. He could have made a whole career from this popular, Brazilian-inflected style, but he ultimately abandoned it for other projects and approaches. His work with Chick Corea anticipated the fusion craze, but Getz soon left that format behind as well. One is forced to conclude that even when Getz jumped on the bandwagon, he was always among the first to jump off.


And so it is with these West Coast sessions. For a brief period, Getz met West Coast jazz at least halfway. But there were no compromises here, no banal attempts to find a commercial sound. The music was Stan Getz, plain and simple, with all the beauty and richness that he brought to every performance, whichever the coast.


“Playing with him was like a music lesson," Levy remarks. "He had a sense for the right tempo, the right volume, the right way of sequencing the solos. He knew when to stretch out and when to hold back. He knew when to let the bass and drums sit out and when he’d bring them back in. He had such great time and technique, and [he] could react to anything. He would even make the wrong chords sound right. He could lake i small combo and make it sound like a symphony."


And Getz does just that on these performances. Was Getz a West Coast player? That question may well remain unanswered. Was he one of the greatest soloists to play the saxophone? Of that there can be no doubt. The more than three hours of music on these discs provides compelling evidence and a persuasive account of one of the jazz masters in top form.”


Ted Gioia


[Ted is a pianist, a jazz historian and the author of West Coast Jazz: Jazz in California, 1945-1960, New York: Oxford University Press, 1992.]





Saturday, October 7, 2017

Abe Most: A Profile by Gary Foster

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


“No matter what artistic credentials might be previously acquired, when a jazz musician takes a position of security or one of financial stability as opposed to accepting and living the rigors of the jazz life, the critical press often registers displeasure.”
- Gary Foster, multi reed and woodwind instrumentalist

Multi reed and woodwind instrumentalist Gary Foster “dropped by” the editorial offices of JazzProfiles recently and shared a copy of the following article that he wrote about clarinetist Abe Most.

The article first appeared in the February-March, 1996 issue of The Clarinet [Volume 23, No. 2].

In his piece, Gary included a technical transcription of Abe’s solo work on Mexican Hat Dance that have been omitted here because it would mainly be of interest to other clarinetists. But we have developed a video with Abe’s outstanding solo on Mexican Hat Dance as played by the Les Brown Band featured as part of the sound track and you can locate the video montage at the close of this piece.

In addition to his detailed treatment of Abe’s career, Gary’s essay contains a marvelous description of a musician’s life in the Hollywood studios following the Second World War. If you had the chops and the reading skills, the period from about 1945-1965 was a Golden Age in the Golden State for a studio musician.

Enter Abe Most.


© -Gary Foster: copyright protected; all rights reserved; used with the author’s permission.

“At age 75, Abe Most has been a working professional clarinetist for 60 of his years. Never a man to rust on his laurels, Abe is as concerned about the personal music he will play today and tomorrow as he has been about the music in his illustrious past. At an age when many of his colleagues have fixed their last reed or have long since become more interested in their golf game or rose garden, Abe is editing a recent recording for release as his first compact disc and, of all things for a veteran of the music wars, he is planning to take to the road. In mid-January 1996. Abe and his wife, Gussie. will board a bus along with a big band of 15, vocalist Julius La Rosa and the Ink Spots for a two-month national tour. Abe will conduct and will be featured soloist in a program tribute to Artie Shaw. The eagerness and enthusiasm Abe expresses for this on-the-road-again project is spoken in terms he might have used when he joined his first name band ... in 1941.

Except for the fact, proudly told by Abe. that his father, at age 65. became cantor of his synagogue in the Bronx, Abe's parents were not musical. Of his two brothers and two sisters, only one. brother Sam, developed musical interests. Sam Most, ten years Abe's junior, is a distinguished jazz artist in his own right. Sam's place in jazz history is uniquely secured by the fact that he is credited with being the first to record a jazz flute solo.

By the time Abe was nine, the family had moved to Atlantic City. The public schools there offered music instruction. and Abe, who had heard and liked the city band, saw himself with a trombone. It was a clarinet that his father brought home, however, and typical of the time, it was a metal clarinet just like the one many of us started out on. Saved for him over the years by his mother, that very instrument has been handsomely framed and has a prominent place on the Most's living room wall.

Soon, Abe had "strictly classical" lessons with Atlantic City clarinetist. Walter Parella. Abe's parents operated a grocery store and, with lunch an added bonus for the teacher, lessons often ran to three hours in length.

The neighborhood kids were listening to improvised jazz, especially to Bobby Hackett. and soon a small combo of sorts was trying to find the sounds of the music they were hearing. Long before anyone dreamed that jazz education would flourish and become a major movement in schools, Abe and his friends, in what has perhaps always been the best way to start, learned by trial and error and with their own good ears and strong desire.

The family moved back to New York City and, by his mid-teens, having acquired considerable skills and a repertoire of tunes of the day, Abe was able to work during the summers in the Catskill mountains, an area of resort hotels famous for entertainment just a short distance from New York. "We couldn't play in the big rooms." says Abe. "but we earned our room and board and made $10 a week." The valuable practical experience gained there was soon to pay off.

Joe Allard's teaching studio was well known by then and, now back in the Apple. Abe began to study clarinet and saxophone with Joe. "Lessons were again about basic. legit clarinet playing, but one day Joe stepped out of the room and I began noodling some jazz licks," remembers Abe. "Joe returned, listened a bit, and asked me to write some of those ideas out for him to show other students." Joe Soldo, another Allard pupil, recalled recently that Joe kept a large manuscript volume of excerpts and improvised jazz solo transcriptions for his students to copy for their practice.

By the mid-1930s, Benny Goodman was the preeminent clarinetist in jazz, and Abe soon fell under Benny's spell. In 1936, immediately after their triumph at the Palomar Ballroom in California, Benny returned to New York for a long stay at the Manhattan room of the Pennsylvania Hotel. "I used to hang out, under age of course, at the hotel to hear Benny and the band. Benny really made me want to play. One evening Benny provided a table for me and my family. That was the biggest thrill of my life," Abe recalls.

Abe's comment on how he felt when he first heard Artie Shaw is quite interesting. "Benny is the guy who got me practicing, but then ! heard Artie and said, 'What the hell is that?' ... him coming in with sixteenth notes. And he knew the harmony. Benny didn't always know the harmony."

By 1939. then barely 19, Abe was the clarinet player at Kelly's Stables, one of the most famous clubs on New York's legendary 52nd Street. Coleman Hawkins, king of the tenor saxophone at the time, was enjoying the success of his now famous recording of Body and Soul. Hawkins' first appearance in the United States, after a period of living in Europe, was at Kelly's Stables, and Abe played nightly opposite the saxophone legend. Abe remembers that the audience every evening included such stars of the music world as Billie Holiday. It must have been a heady experience for the young clarinetist.


At the time. Les Brown (and His Band of Renown) was only a few votes behind Goodman. Ellington and Basie in popularity polls. Les, a clarinet player himself, came often to hear Abe at Kelly's and, as soon as details could be worked out, Abe joined Les' band as clarinet soloist to play the solos Les had been playing. Discographies disagree, but in 1940 or '41, the Brown band recorded Mexican Hat Dance, one of its earliest hits. Abe's clarinet solo, which was, of course, improvised for the recorded performance, was stunning. The promise that Abe would receive label credit for his solo did not become a reality when the record was issued, however. Such errors cannot be corrected, and it is the irony of such an occurrence that more than 50 years later someone recently remarked to Abe. "That Les Brown was a hell of a clarinet player when he recorded Mexican Hal Dance." In spite of that unfortunate oversight. Abe's prior experience and reputation had placed him in the polls. In 1942, he placed number eight in Down Beat magazine's annual popularity survey.

With the country at war, Abe soon enlisted in the military and, after basic training, was stationed at Santa Ana, California. The military musical groups in California were quite famous at the time as postings for some of the best big-band musicians of the era. Along with Santa Ana, Catalina Island and Santa Anita had exceptional groups also. Ensembles of 70-plus musicians were capable of playing orchestral, concert band and jazz music. Abe, Billy May, Wilbur Schwartz, Manny Klein, Vince DeRosa. Harry Bluestone, Marshall Sosson, Jimmy Rowles. Chuck Peterson, Earle Hagen and many, many others who became the most successful writers and instrumentalists in post-war Hollywood studio orchestras were in the West Coast military groups.

At Santa Ana, Abe met brothers Art and George Smith, two highly-respected woodwind doublers in the decades following the war. With the Smith's encouragement, Abe began to study the flute and, a few years later when he joined the staff orchestra at Fox studios, found that his early efforts to double on that instrument gave him a valuable asset in the workplace.
Manny Klein, one of the most respected trumpet players in history and a generous friend to many musicians, urged Abe to stay in California at the end of the war. Abe was eager to return to the jazz scene in New York, however, and was soon heard again in the 52ND Street clubs. Work was not as plentiful in New York as Abe had hoped it would be and, with a bit more encouragement from Manny, he returned to Los Angeles.


In 1946, the most startling and forceful movement in jazz since Louis Armstrong was centered around the music of Charlie Parker. The music, called bebop, was played and virtually patented by Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and their New York colleagues. It had evolved in the early '40s but had been heard only on recordings on the West Coast. Parker and Gillespie's first live performances in Los Angeles were at the club called Billy Berg's. Abe and accordionist Milton DeLugg closed at Billy Berg's the night before the famous bebop musicians opened. Abe had not then heard Parker's music and knew of him only by reputation. A double shock came for Abe when he returned to the club the next evening for Bird and Dizzy's opening. The music was a thrilling new experience for him. He could hear instantly the beauty and originality of the new music and, very much to his surprise, the gregarious man who had been in the club listening to Abe the night before, and who had sincerely but anonymously complimented Abe on his playing, turned out to be Charlie Parker himself.

Bebop was a musical earthquake that divided swing-era musicians from those who. by the mid-'40s, were following the more modern approach. It was natural for some musicians like Abe. who liked what they heard in the new music but whose roots were firmly in the '30s, to embrace the new sounds. The sophisticated harmonic language of bebop was then, and remains, a real challenge. The playing of pianist Jimmy Rowles, a contemporary of Abe's, has clearly kept abreast of the periodic changes in the music for over 50 years even though, like Abe, he too was recognized for his originality before the 1940s came along.

In Los Angeles, Abe found that union regulations at the time did not permit steady work for a period of six months or until a union card had been "worked out." Abe sold wallets by day at a department store and played occasional single-night engagements as he could get them. Shortly after he became eligible for the steady job he had at Billy Berg's, Abe received a call inviting him to replace Buddy DeFranco, who was leaving Tommy Dorsey's orchestra. Tommy's clarinet book had been played by a distinguished line-up of players, and it was an excellent break for Abe to follow Buddy in that chair with one of the country's best bands. Saxophonist Sid Cooper had been composing Clarinet Cascades, a virtuoso piece for DeFranco. but the number was not finished until Abe joined the band. Abe recalls that Tommy always played the piece faster than usual if Benny, Artie or Tommy's brother Jimmy just happened to be in the audience. Jimmy Dorsey, on hearing Abe for the first time. said. "I'd like to break your fingers." From one clarinetist to another that remark, of course, can only be taken as the ultimate compliment. Tommy Dorsey disbanded in 1947 and, after only a short time back in L.A., Abe rejoined Les Brown. From his work with Bob Hope, successful tours and many recordings, Les Brown was at the peak of his popularity in the post-war big band world.

In 1950, during an engagement at the Hollywood Palladium with Les, the opportunity to stay in Los Angeles permanently and with full employment was presented to Abe by some of his former service colleagues who had settled into the Hollywood studios after the war. Earle Hagen and several members of the staff orchestra at Twentieth Century Fox came to the Palladium to hear the Brown band and told Abe of an opening at Fox. At the time, the music department of every major studio was a virtual music factory, turning out dozens of motion picture (and eventually TV) soundtracks each year.

Abe gave his notice to Les, said goodbye to the road and settled in at Fox. For the next 22 years, until the contract staff orchestras were disbanded. Abe was a staff musician 52 weeks a year. A typical week at the studio was centered around 10 hours of work. Base pay was given for 520 hours of work a year. Overtime, and usually a lot of it, supplemented the contract salary and was paid as a year-end bonus.


The woodwind section at Fox when Abe arrived was an interesting mixture of straight "legit" players and doublers. In addition to a full section of orchestral woodwinds, a section of saxophones (two altos, two tenors and baritone) had to be included and available for composers who needed a jazz element for their scores. Abe came to the studio as the jazz clarinet, section flute and saxophone player. The other saxophonists doubled only on clarinet and bass clarinet. They were Russ Cheevers, Maury Crawford, Bill Ulyate and Chuck Gentry. Cheevers, Crawford and Ulyate, along with the great freelance saxophonist Jack Dumont, were for many years and many recordings banded together as the Hollywood Saxophone Quartet. Their much admired and prized library is still played by saxophone quartets everywhere.

Russ Cheevers, saxophone soloist on many film scores, was also first clarinet at Fox. It should be of interest to clarinet players that this early doubler was also recognized for his beautiful classical clarinet playing. Bill Ulyate was the bass clarinet and tenor saxophone on Robert Craft's recordings of the complete works of Anton Webern.

Twenty-two years and the thousands of studio recordings at Fox tend to become a blur when looking back on a life's work. On careful reflection, however, Abe cites the John Williams score for the motion picture 1941 as a musical high point. Abe's clarinet was featured throughout and, with drummer Louie Bellson, an exciting duo performance (a la Goodman and Gene Krupa) was recorded under typical studio pressures as Abe recalls. "In only two takes and in a funny key ... but it worked!"

No matter what artistic credentials might be previously acquired, when a jazz musician takes a position of security or one of financial stability as opposed to accepting and living the rigors of the jazz life, the critical press often registers displeasure. After having been recognized for over a decade as one of the best jazz clarinetists. Abe states clearly, articulately and without bitterness how he feels he was perceived after he took the position at Fox studios. "Once I went to Fox it was the opinion of the experts that I was no longer a jazz player, but merely a studio musician -making money and all that. I just wasn't thought of as a jazz player after that."


It is certainly not possible to take the jazz urge out of a man like Abe Most. Steady employment and security couldn't do it. All those who know Abe and his playing well believe that he has had, and has been, the best in both of the musical worlds of his choosing.

A now-famous series of recordings issued by Time-Life in 1970 recreated all of the hits of the big band era. Billy May was musical director and arranger for the project. Billy's task was to take down (transcribe) the earlier arrangements, including note-for-note representations of improvised solos originally played on all instruments. Chosen as the clarinetist, it was Abe who recreated most of the famous solos played by Goodman, Shaw, Herman. Fazola, et al. Typically, Billy May transcribed a solo and sent it to Abe with a tape of the original. Abe's job was to learn "every nuance" of the solo. "I analyzed the solos for everything ... breathing, articulations, fingerings, squeaks and all. and tried to get as close as possible to the original performance." Abe recalls.

In recent years Abe has been a full-time member of the freelance woodwind work force. By the time the studio orchestras were dissolved, the flute was a mandatory double, and Abe was one of the few from the earlier era who had learned that instrument. Over the intervening 20 years, Abe has added hundreds more recordings to his resume.

Once each year, both Los Angeles and Sacramento, California, host well attended classic or traditional jazz festivals. An appearance by Abe with one of his groups, or as a member of an all-star band, is a sure thing at such events. As an adjunct activity to the Sacramento festival, a one-week jazz camp is held there every summer. Abe has been on the teaching staff for 10 years, and speaks enthusiastically of the talented youngsters he meets there. When asked what he teaches. Abe says. "Well, it begins with the blues, of course, and then we work our way into the standards like I Can't Give you Anything But Love. Baby. It is good to think of the young players of today taking advantage of the wisdom and experience of Abe Most.

Motion picture and television scores, phonograph record arrangements and TV commercials that require solo clarinet are written every week of the year. To this day, in Los Angeles, the remark. "... and the clarinet has to be Abe," can mean only one thing when a composer and contractor consult on casting an orchestra's personnel.

The Abe Most Orchestra, an ensemble varying in size from four to 15 musicians plus vocalist, plays many engagements each years in the Los Angeles area. Occasionally Abe and brother Sam are heard with their jazz quintet at a local club. During the week prior to the Academy Awards show, a number of the trades related to the movie industry have their own private "mini"-award ceremonies. For many years Abe has conducted the Sound Editors Awards show. Abe describes the event as "complete with fanfares, play-ons and special show material."

A number of concerts featuring the music of Benny Goodman or Artie Shaw are booked each year, in various locations, to feature Abe playing the original clarinet parts. It must be said, however, that no matter how expert Abe may be at recreating Benny and Artie, clarinetists for whom he has had a lifetime of respect and admiration, there is a clear, original and recognizable Abe Most that shines through in every phrase he plays.

Abe and Gussie have been married for nearly 50 years. Their three children, three grandchildren and two great-grandchildren, plus golf, fishing and, of course, the prospect of tomorrow's as yet un-played music, keep Abe Most a vitally healthy, happy and creative man.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR...

Gary Foster is a graduate of the University of Kansas, where he was a clarinet student of Don Scheid. He lives in Los Angeles, CA, where he is a freelance musician performing on clarinet. saxophone and flute. He has performed and recorded with jazz groups led by Clare Fischer. Warne Marsh, Cal Tjader, Shelly Manne. Moacir Santos and Poncho Sanchez. Gary may be heard on Toni Tennille's More Than You Know and All of Me albums. The Broadway Album and Back to Broadway by Barbra Streisand, Mel Torme's Reunion and Live in Tokyo. and on Natalie Cole's Unforgettable and Take a Look. Other recent recordings were with Michael Feinstein, Rosemary Clooney, Diane Schuur, Melissa Manchester, Joao Gilberto, Johnny Mathis, Barry Manilow. Michel Legrand, Milt Jackson. Kenny Rogers. Dionne Warwick and Manhattan Transfer.

Gary's solo jazz recordings include: Kansas City Connections, Subconsciously and Grand Cru Classe (Revelation); Imagination and Beautiful Friendship (RCA Japan); Warne Marsh Meets Gary Foster (Toshiba EMI) and Starbright-Duo and Whose Woods Are These? with Clare Fischer on Discovery.

His most recent solo albums include Make Your Own Fun and Live at Maybeck HallDuo With Alan Broadbent on Concord Jazz. White Heat and One From the Heart are with the Jazz At The Movies Band on Discovery.

From its inception in 1973 until 1982, Gary was a member of the award-winning Toshiko Akiyoshi-Lew Tabackin big hand. He has received the Most Valuable Player award for woodwind doubling from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences, and since 1984 he has been the Rose Ann Millsap visiting professor at the University of Missouri at Kansas City.

During the current TV season Gary is heard as a member of the television orchestras for Matlock, Diagnosis Murder, Love and War, Murder She Wrote, Perry Mason and The Simpsons. Current motion picture soundtracks include The Flintstones, Casper, Forget Paris, Batman Forever and Under Siege II.

Gary Foster is a Yamaha performing artist.”