Tuesday, August 27, 2019

Lee Konitz - MOTION!

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


One of my first impressions of Jazz was the sense of motion I felt while listening to the music.

This feeling of movement was enhanced when I began playing Jazz because I played it on the drums with all four limbs going at the same time, just about all the time.

No other musician experiences Jazz in quite the same way as the drummer.

I’ve been on bikes, in cars, small and large planes and helicopters, and on amusement park thrill rides – none of them compares to the feeling of motion generated by a Jazz group “in full flight” [sorry for the mixed metaphor].

One of the most jarring experiences I’ve ever had with motion in Jazz was my first listening to a 1961 Verve LP featuring alto saxophonist Lee Konitz with Sonny Dallas on bass and Elvin Jones on drums.

The name of the recording was – you guessed it – Motion: Lee Konitz [released on CD as Verve 314 557 107-2].

The original LP was comprised of the five [5] tunes that Lee, Sonny and Elvin recorded on August 21, 1961. The CD set is on three discs that contains this music plus a number of other tracks made around the same time with Dallas on bass and Nick Stabulas on drums that Konitz labels as “equally compelling.”

Prior to Motion: Lee Konitz, I had been accustomed to hearing Lee on recordings that featured a straight-ahead “Cool” style of Jazz. His improvisation on these recordings from the 1950s was very linear, fluid and heavily influenced by pianist Lennie Tristano’s harmonic conception of the music.

That all changed on Motion: Lee Konitz.

Here, Lee’s solos were very intense and jagged. They were made to sound even more so by his choppy phrasing which stopped and started so often that they forced the listeners’ ears to constantly move in new and different directions.

The rhythmic pulse that drummer Elvin Jones lays down behind Lee on the recording was also relatively new to me, at times, startlingly so.

With its many accented triplets and other syncopations, Elvin’s drumming interrupted the even flow of time then characteristic of most modern Jazz.

Elvin along with Tony Williams revolutionized modern Jazz drumming by altering its motion away from a linear, metronomic time. Instead of pulling the listener forward, Elvin’s drumming pushed, shoved and bounced the listener in all directions. Tony framed the music in a sense of “controlled chaos.”

Elvin and Tony gave the rhythmic prism of Jazz different angles of acceptance and, as such, changed the manner in which the listener perceived it.

As trumpeter, composer and bandleader Wynton Marsalis once remarked: “Change the rhythm and you change the music.”

Lee, Sonny and Dallas are constantly changing the rhythm on Motion: the motion is still there, but it is unsettled, jagged and implied. It seems to become multi-dimensional, almost like the sense experienced when closing one’s eyes while riding on a roller coaster.


Nat Hentoff, original liner notes to Motion: Lee Konitz further elaborate on the qualities that make the music on it so distinctive. 

“If I were given Lee Konitz's name in a word association test, my automatic corollary term would be ‘integrity.’ At thirty-four, Lee is still firmly self-contained, direct and laconic in speech, and impregnably committed to his own way of personalizing the jazz language. The winds of change that keep most of the jazz world in a perpetual state of hurricane alert (as poll winners are toppled and ‘hippies’ change their definitions of what's ‘in’) have left Konitz unruffled. He keeps deepening the direction he has chosen, works where he can providing he has complete musical freedom, and teaches one day a week. In the past few years, as ‘funky,’ ‘soulful,’ hard,’ and various forms of experimental jazz have nearly monopolized the foreground of jazz publicity, Konitz has become part of what Paul Desmond calls ‘the jazz underground.’

Yet Konitz's jazz conception is so singular and provocative that his influence is still felt, especially in Europe. Nor certainly has that influence disappeared in America. Konitz has set standards of melodic continuity and freshness of line that are respected by musicians who are otherwise widely dissimilar to him in approach; and I'm sure that as the scope of jazz improvisation continues to expand, the worth of in retrospect and he himself will again be considered an important part of the foreground of jazz explora­tion.

In this set of performances, which are among the most consistently resourceful Konitz has ever re­corded, his distinctive qualities are brought into especially clear focus. If, for one thing, jazz at its most stimulating is indeed ‘the sound of surprise,’ Lee's playing here is constantly fresh and unpre­dictable.

He avoids standardized ‘licks’ and limp cliché with persistent determination and instead constructs so personal and imaginatively flowing a series of thematic variations that the five standards he has chosen become organically revivified. Konitz goes far inside a tune, and unlike many jazzmen who skate on the chord changes or ‘wail’ on the melodic surface of a song, Konitz reshapes each piece entirely so that it emerges as a newly integrated work with permutations of form and expanded emotional connotations that are uniquely different from the results obtained by any previous jazz treatment of the piece …

Consider the command of his instrument that Konitz must have to execute the swiftly moving and subtly interrelated ideas that make each of his per­formances in this album so pregnant with invention. In addition to the remarkable clarity of Konitz's supple and ingenious lines, he also is intriguingly skillful in the molding of series of climaxes of vary­ing intensities so that a topographical musical map of each performance would show considerably more complexity and variety than is true of the majority of jazz improvisations. Underneath this multi-layered logic of ideas is a firm, complementary resilient rhythmic line that is an integral part of the total design of Konitz's structure. He does not, in short, depend on the rhythm section to swing him but instead fuses with drums and bass so that a rare feeling of tripartite unity of execution emerges from these tracks.”

To make that degree of unity possible, of course, require* particularly sensitive, listening colleagues. Francis Dominic Joseph "Sonny" Dallas has worked with, among others, Zoot Sims, Phil Woods and Gene Quill, George Wallington, Lennie Tristano and Mary Lou Williams. In these performances, he keeps the fundamental rhythm curve steady and yet pliable while blending accurately with Lee's superimpositions on that curve. Elvin Jones, now a regular member of the John Coltrane unit, is increasingly considered by most modern jazzmen to be one of the key direction setters among the more venturesome drummers. Jones' rhythmic patterns over and around the basic meter are sparer here than in his work with Coltrane, but he contributes unmistakably personal impact to the proceedings while joining with Dallas in keeping the foundation firm and provocative.

The level of invention on the five standards is so sustained that commentary on individual tracks would be, I think, superfluous. Konitz's playing, in any case, is so clear and coherently developed on its own musical terms that it presents no esoteric difficulties for even an apprentice listener The simple procedure is to keep each basic tune in mind as a counterpoise to Konitz's transmutations of its line, harmony, and overall shape — and density. For the rest, there is only the matter of opening yourself to the intense emotional content of the playing. I've long found criticisms of Konitz's "detachment" untenable, at least by my criteria of emotion. As Paul Desmond told a British interviewer, "A sound of emotionalism is easy to produce; it's too easy, and the problem is how to do it honestly." Konitz, to be sure, does not roar or holler on his horn, but he does communicate strong, concentrated emotion and it is all the more penetrating because it is so honest.”

And Lee Konitz had this to say about the music on Motion in the liner notes to the original LP:

“When asked on a radio show to comment on one of his records, Lester Young replied: ‘Sorry. Pres, I never discuss my sex life in public.’ Bless his sweet soul!

After over twenty years of playing, I find that music is like a great woman: the better you treat her, the happier she is.

There's not much for me to say about my music -I play because it's one of the few things that make sense to me.

When I left Chicago to come to New York in '48 I had been playing in my own way for a few years, but for various reasons was unable to understand what it was I had hold of. A woman can be very elusive! Then came the first recordings, the little reputation and the working all over the place and practically losing contact with my whole playing feeling.

Fortunately for me, I never really made it profes­sionally, so I've had the chance to relax and get a little insight into my life. Freud said something like it all happens in the first four years of our life and we spend the rest of the time trying to figure out what happened. I guess I've always had some kind of feel­ing to play; now I'm trying to eliminate as much as I can of what it is that prevents it from happening

I've been recording since 1949; I have always tried to improvise — lots of different settings — some things made it for me, some didn't. This particular record means something to me.

It was made one afternoon at the end of August with Elvin Jones and Sonny Dallas. This was the first time the three of us had played together: in fact,  I Remember You was the first tune of the session. We just played what would be the equivalent of a couple sets in a club and got these five tunes for the album. Elvin loves to play and gets lots of things going on and the time is always strong; he really is something else. Sonny, to me, is one of the best bass players around. So I was fortunate to have a good strong rhythm section. Playing with bass and drums gives me the most room to go in whichever direction I choose; a chordal instrument is restricting to me.

The thing that I like about this set is that everyone is trying to improvise. The music will speak for itself.” Lee Konitz


Kevin Whitehead wrote these [at times, overly dramatic] sleeve notes for the October 1997 three CD set.

“Konitz then as now may barely nod at a melody in his opening chorus; he lets you glimpse just a corner of the card. ("It infuriates me when I can't place a tune someone is playing, so I just play a little of the melody as a tipoff.") That melody becomes just one of the many jazz or pop riffs or tunes he alludes to; Alphonse Picou/every dixieland clarinetist's "High Society" solo gets friendly waves all over the place.

Konitz's quotes lack the usual self-congratulation or canned cleverness. You can hear them as meditation on the full range of materials available to mainstream jazz, from classic New Orleans to what you heard last night at the Village Gate or Carnegie Hall, to a tune Konitz heard whistled on his way to the studio. Like everything else, allusions go through the mill; he interweaves and interleaves those fragments into new formulations, then into variations on variations, free-associating or developing by design.

Konitz's timbre has always been his calling card. That pale and ghostly facade - out of tenor saxophonist Lester Young, like so many Fifties saxophone sounds - masks how much of alto saxophonist Charlie Parker's wit, harmonic trigonometry, and under-the-fingers speed inspire him. Konitz's interest in certain classical procedures, notably counterpoint, helps to clarify his commitment to order on a high level, but he has never been seduced by the classical saxophone sound. All that vibrato is not for him. A master needs his own sound.

On the surface Konitz sounds prim compared with Parker and all of the era's little wannabirds, but within narrow parameters, and in short order, he'll declaim to the seventh row, whisper to the wings, make his reed sound slobbery wet or sandpaper dry; he'll also make all of those far-flung allusions and drape his lines flawlessly over the chords, pausing in the least likely places.

Konitz's mentor, pianist Lennie Tristano, espoused the long, clear line devoid of overstated gestures; for Tristanoites a loud hit was like playing to the balcony. Konitz runs long and paces himself, avoiding road hypnosis by varying the lengths of phrases and rests, and by constantly fidgeting with timbre and dynamics. Throw in poise and lyricism and call it great saxophone playing.

Principals remember the central events differently. Sonny Dallas easily recalls this 1961 session; it's his most famous record. He says he and Konitz did three days of recording with drummer Nick Stabulas.

"Lee just called the tunes, no second takes, just blow, and that's all we did. Nick was a great drummer, but he was not really up to par on those sessions, so Lee said, let's do it over, same format.' Maybe two weeks after that, we went back in the studio for three more days with Elvin [Jones]. He asked, 'What should I do?', and Lee said, 'Whatever you want.'"

Yes, but, Lee Konitz:

"First I had asked Max Roach, who had some kind of contractual difficulty, and he recommended Elvin, whom I hadn't even thought of. I didn't think I was in his league.

"Elvin came in and did one day of recording with us. He was working with [tenor saxophonist John] Coltrane that week - I'd heard them with two basses at the Village Gate the night before - but he came in at nine a.m. like the rest of us."

Konitz's memory is spot-on there; Coltrane had just started using both Art Davis and Reggie Workman, and had begun a month at the Gate on August 8th.

"I have the greatest respect for Elvin, a real professional, a great, creative player who loves to play with and encourage people. He was a very enthusiastic participant. It was special for me because I was delighted by how well Elvin and Sonny got along. And [getting support from] a trio meant I could play longer.

"I'd wanted to do another date, but Elvin wasn't available. I think that's how I got Nick, who had played a lot with Sonny with [Lennie] Tristano."

Konitz's note to the original LP issue, when his memory was fresh, says that it was all recorded on one late August afternoon. He and Dallas agree that Jones is the drummer on all eight previously released pieces.

The session ledgers say that there were three days of recording, scattered over two weeks.

Jones could not be reached to scan his memory: on the road, in motion. He was busy in August 1961, too. The Motion sessions came during the pressure-cooker season when Coltrane's quartet and quintet really came into their own, shortly after Ole Coltrane (Atlantic) and Africa/Brass (Impulse) and before their well-documented November stand at the Village Vanguard.

Jones's Coltrane days are celebrated for his polyrhythmic problem-solving. Less frequently remarked upon is how the ramshackle gait of four loosely independent limbs makes for disarmingly relaxed swing. With all of that business to attend to, the Detroit-weaned drummer can hang way behind the beat as do good Midwesterners from Chicago or Kansas City. As anyone who remembers Jones as the drum-soloing gunslinger in the 1971 hippie western Zachariah knows, the hot drummer could be the apex of cool. He was arranger Gil Evans's drummer of choice, having made Out of the Cool (Impulse) earlier in '61.

Jones's billowy expansiveness with Coltrane is far from his minimalist Motion. Even a roll here is too showy. His stock of self-effacing gestures is the stuff of amateurs sitting in: murmuring snare and the occasional, subtle bass-drum bomb or crash-cymbal crash. (The latter, like all cymbal sounds, discreetly tucked behind the steady ride cymbal ching).                                                             

Motion's single-mindedness, its clarity, owes much to Jones's seemingly unswerving trajectory; but the surface is deceptive. You have to focus on him to hear how much he's playing, quietly, quietly. On I Remember You, for one, notice the patterns of cross-rhythms under and inside the ride cymbal, played double time but still somehow nonchalant. The Coltrane innovations swim under the calm surface. Like Konitz, he does a lot within self-assigned limits.

Sometimes, after the trio had taped masters, bass and drums laid down a shorter rhythm track in the same tempo, sans alto sax.

Konitz: "I asked for them. I presented the idea as if I [were going to] overdub pieces with the rhythm section. Actually it was a sly way to get Sonny and Elvin to play something I could play along with at home - my own, private Music Minus One experience."

A two- alto saxophone I'm Getting Sentimental Over You (slugged as "X-periment" on the log) shows how far Konitz pushed the charade. It's a curious flop. His two altos butt heads - two soloists coming up with the same ideas, sometimes as if unconsciously - more than they weave counterpoint or harmonize or otherwise come to terms. It's all wrong, but it has its own odd, sonic brilliance.

The duo tracks only help to cement Jones and Dallas's simpatico time- and space-keeping. Just the sound of them hitting it in the studio intensifies the off-and-running air of the whole show; perhaps it makes Konitz more restless to get back to work.

On the duos intended for overdubs, Jones's snare-talk either serves as booting beneath the horn (if the soloist decides to play at that moment) or perfect fill (if he decides not to). Or, Jones is keeping up a running conversation with himself, for his own amusement, even as he and Dallas run the forms.

There's nothing to say about the good time-feel between bass and drums that the music won't say better. They obviously listen to each other - yet Dallas, too, seems to occupy his own space, imperturbibly running standard changes through whatever crossfire.

Which ties in with his experience with Tristano.

Sonny Dallas was born in Pittsburgh in 1931. Like Konitz (only later) he passed through Claude Thornhill's proto-cool orchestra. By the late Fifties Dallas had played with the Phil Woods-Gene Quill alto sax tandem, with trombonist Bob Brookmeyer and pianist George Wallington. He was also prowling around town in search of sessions, jamming with the then-current crop of players, including Konitz, Jones, and tenor saxophonist Warne Marsh.
In 1959 Marsh coaxed Dallas into Tristano's quintet. Leery of a pianist who'd fired bassists Teddy Kotick and Paul Chambers, Dallas took the gig for one night, with an option. He stayed (and sometimes boarded) with Tristano for ten years. He is on the Tristano LP compilations Descent Into the Maelstrom (East West; US release, 1978) and Continuity (Jazz Records; a 1964 quintet date with Konitz, Marsh, and Stabulas), and the CD Note to Note (Jazz Records 1993; issued with daughter Carol Tristano's overdubbed drums).

That first night with Tristano, at Basin Street East, with the Konitz-Marsh-Stabulas quintet, Dallas didn't recognize any of the leader's titles - but Tristano told him which standards they were based on, so Dallas knew the chords. Trouble was, Tristano, Konitz, and Marsh spent so much time playing long, snaky paragraphs and trampling bar lines, and trying to trip each other up, that the only way the bassist got through it was by focusing on the underlying chords and blocking out the rest.

Just keep walking and act like everything's okay.

Dallas is a talkative, outgoing man - he lives in Shirley, Long Island now, and teaches music at two colleges - but there is some of the same aloof self-sufficiency on Motion as there was with Tristano. Dallas defines Indiana and I'll Remember April and the rest as only their chord changes and underlying form. The rest, as it is for Konitz the melodist, is impermanent, as free as talk.

The flip side of the Dallas-Jones rhythm duos for Konitz is his 1974 Lone-Lee (Steeplechase), solo-saxophone standards so orderly that you could drop in a rhythm section. In Motion, too, he has the tendency to treat an improvised statement as interior monologue, even in the midst of interplay. The invisible arrangements, nearly always the same - no theme, long alto sax solo, alto over bass solo, abrupt wrap-up - put Konitz under the interrogation lamp. "I can see that session in my mind's eye and hear it in my ear. Elvin and Sonny sounded beautiful together. I was suffering from my usual inferiority complex, wondering if I could swing through.”

If the Tristanoites were refreshingly and/or tiresomely candid about their self-doubt - see Konitz's own note - as a group they were probably no more helpless than less analytical souls. Konitz was determined to face his fears, never wandering far from the key light; he wouldn't even lay out during the bass solos, keeping up a running commentary of wrong-register bass lines, straight counterpoint, New Orleans counterpoint, section riffs, and blues obbligatos. That was something he'd been doing with Dallas on gigs.

For an unconfident man, it's a hell of a show.

"I couldn't evaluate the music at the time; I doubted myself so much [that] Creed Taylor let me out of my contract after that date. But when the record came out, I was delighted. After declaring my insecurities, I'm very happy with the way it came out overall."

The next (and, to date, only other) time he recorded with Elvin Jones - one track on Duets, a 1967 Milestone LP - Konitz was feeling more confident. He brought his tenor saxophone.”


Motion is also discussed in the interviews that Andy Hamilton conducted with Lee in his Lee Konitz Conversations on the Improvisor’s Art:

It seems like for a time in the early 1960s you kind of left music. 

No, I just didn't have any work. I had to do something else, just odd jobs around, working in a record store selling my own records sometimes, but that was just for a brief period. I never prepared myself to do other work, so I wasn't about to retire from what I could do. I felt that I needed to work more on my playing, so that I could do a better job when I was asked to play. But there just wasn't much interest in my direction, and I wasn't hustling for work.

The 1960s was probably the hardest period in your career. 

1 have that impression. And 1 think the 1970s, too. I think starting in the 1980s, with my getting older and still trying to develop my playing, more of an interest occurred. And then, more opportunities in Europe were possible.
In the beginning, people were calling me, and I thought that was the way it was going to be. Then I stopped getting the calls, and I didn't quite know what to do. I didn't seem to do the business part very well, and nobody was representing me. So I just did whatever I could, getting a few students in, or playing a wedding, or whatever I could do to earn some money. 

But you'd just made this great album Motion, you'd think there'd be some response to that.

There was, but just among the few who liked the trio. It didn't make the kind of impression that made people want to hire me.

On Motion you were partnered by Elvin Jones. On the face of it you'd seem like very different players.

Originally I had asked Max Roach to do the date, but he was under contract, and suggested Elvin. I didn't know Elvin, and thought from what I'd heard that he was a "wild man." I didn't identify with that. But Elvin is an angel! He turned out to be just a beautiful player, a beautiful man. He was working the night before |at the Village Gate| with Coltrane and two basses or whatever, playing with that kind of intensity. And he came in for the recording session at nine o'clock in the morning, and the first tune was with brushes— it was a take. It was exactly what I wanted to hear—a beautiful time-feeling. He and Sonny [Dallas] locked in immediately, and made a great response to me.

Elvin is a real musician who loves to play with people who are trying to play, whoever they are. We had different conceptions, a difference in the kind of intensity; but swinging together in our individual ways, we both tried to make music as real as we could. 

When you say he was a wild man, what do you mean? 

I mean I thought of Elvin as a very dynamic, passionate player, and a guy using hard drugs — that was his reputation. But he was beautiful in the situation with me, and I appreciated that.

As I said, a lot of people were surprised that I was able to play with Elvin, because they didn't think I could play with that kind of intensity. And I've shied away from that in many respects, because it's kind of intimidating to have someone back of you, churning up a lot of energy. You've got to match that in some way. A rhythm section will frequently play harder than you're feeling at that moment. It can stir you up to play with more energy, or run you over with theirs.

So that was special of Elvin Jones — obviously he really listens. He immediately found the right level to play at, without compromising himself. He played as intensely as the situation called for, and with complete enthusiasm. It was a great surprise, and a pleasure.

You were nervous about it. You were expecting to be overwhelmed, possibly.

Yes, I was a bit anxious. And I'm sure Elvin was, for different reasons. But I knew [bassist] Sonny Dallas, so I thought that he would be a middleman. And it worked out that way. Sonny was very strong, very musical. I think he was one of the few guys who could play with Tristano comfortably. He played pretty much all Tristano's last gigs with him, with Nick Stabulas, frequently. He played with just about everybody.He could hold his own in that company.

Yes—he was a former football player, and very strong, very streetwise. And he loved Shakespeare — at the drop of a hat, he could go into a lengthy recitation, with this Pittsburgh accent — it was priceless! He is a very special character, a very lovable guy. I'm glad he was there that day.

We also did some sessions with [drummer] Nick Stabulas, a fine player too. I enjoyed those sessions, I think there were two. Thirty-seven years later, they found that music — two more hours of playing with Nick and Sonny — and released a three-CD set.

Then I was released from my contract with Verve. That always seemed interesting to me. Norman Granz, who was responsible for my recording with Verve, was not a fan of mine, but he encouraged me, and even made me a weekly advance, because I was raising a family and could use that money. Maybe Norman was advised that I was trying, and took a chance, though his personal taste was for the older music. I always appreciated that. Then Creed Taylor took over at Verve, and he didn't need me in his roster anymore. I didn't investigate his reasons too much. It was a bit strange to drop me after making a good recording — go figure!”

Interview with Sonny Dallas

SONNY DALLAS, born Pittsburgh 1931, is a bassist, a music therapist, and educator. After moving to New York he worked with Bob Brookmeyer, Bill Evans, Jimmy Giuffre,Jim Hall, and Phil Woods, he was Tristano's regular bass player during the last decade of the pianist's playing career. Despite recent illness, he continues to play in the New York area.

I call him "Leo." We went in to the session together because at that time we were living in Lennie's house—it was a big, beautiful house; I think it's still there. Charlie Parker told Lennie that he was not happy about being imitated—and one of the first things Lennie laid on Leo was to have his own sound. But Lee could play like Bird. He lived upstairs from me [in Tristano's house I and 1 would hear him practicing Bird's solos, and it was astonishing, it was like Bird in the next room. And he could imitate Bird's sound—I don't think many people know that. He just used it as a practicing technique.

I was surprised to hear we were doing a session with Elvin Jones, because we had already done two sessions with Nick Stabulas on drums. I'd done a lot of playing with Nick, with Phil Woods and Gene Quill and everybody, but I thought thai maybe Leo didn't dig Nick as much as I did. Nick was a wonderful friend of mine, as Leo is of course. I think I misinterpreted that [that Lee didn't dig Stabulas). I played with "Philly" Joe Jones, too, and I put Nick Stabulas right on the same echelon as any of those guys — so smooth, so hip, and so cool.

I had played with Elvin before, but I don't think Lee had. Not too long ago, Lee was asked whether he was frightened going on that date with Elvin, and he said, "No, I knew Sonny Dallas was there, and he knows like five thousand songs!" Lee is like the Pope playing, with that group. He's the main man! That was his date.”


Monday, August 26, 2019

Fred Nardin -An Opening to Look Ahead

© Copyright ® Steven Cerra, copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Look Ahead, along with its fitting entitled predecessor Opening arrived at the editorial offices of JazzProfiles recently courtesy of Fred Nardin, the pianist whose trio is featured on these recordings.

Frankly, both recordings haven’t been out of any of the CD changers in office, home or car since their arrival and probably won’t be in the foreseeable future because the music on them is enthralling, energetic, and exciting.

Fred, along with bassist Or Bareket and drummer Leo Parker has pushed the sound and the feeling of the piano-bass-drums trio in new directions, which is a considerable achievement given how often this format has been employed throughout the history of Jazz.

The music are these recordings is dense and as such not for the casual listener. There’s so much going on all the time that if you let your attention lapse while listening to it, you will literally be lost and unable to find your way back into it.

Like so many other aspects of the cultural and communicative arts these days they are brought into new eras and new dimensions by artists and craftsmen, the level of technical mastery on display in Look Ahead and Opening is astounding - rhythmically, melodically and harmonically.

Sometimes, you just shake your head in disbelief at the virtuosity, the scale of the musicianship and creativity which Fred, Or and Leon are able to muster and sustained. 

What was also apparent to me as I listened to the Nardin trio is that these guys really don’t sound like anybody else, although I must admit that on some of his original compositions - not surprisingly - Paris Memories - a hint or two of the approach of the late, great Jazz pianist Michel Petrucciani does come to mind. One can also detect here and there a small smattering of Herbie Hancock inflected phrasing from the Inventions and Dimensions period at Blue Note.

Of course, you can hear the Jazz tradition throughout the work of the trio, for example, the collective improvisation model favored by the Bill Evans trio, in the bluesy cadence that underscores the melody to Just Easy, which the group really locks in with Leon using a stick over the snare to “knock” the beat forward.

Young Jazz players use a lot of notes in their solos.

This tendency seems to be a part of the joys of first expression; the thrill of discovering that you can play an instrument and play it well.

Kind of like: “Look what I’ve found? Look what I can do? Isn’t this neat?”

Another reason why these young, Jazz musicians play so many notes is because they can.

They are young, indiscriminately so, and they want to play everything that rushes through their minds, getting it from their head into their hands almost instantly. 

Their Jazz experience is all new and so wonderful; why be discerning when you can have it all?

If such abilities to “get around the instrument” were found in a young classical musician romping his or her way through one of Paganini’s Caprices, they would be celebrated as a phenomena and hailed as a prodigy.

Playing Paganini’s Caprices, Etudes et al. does take remarkable technical skills, but in fairness, let’s remember that Paganini already wrote these pieces and the classical musician is executing them from memory.

In the case of the Jazz musician, playing complicated and complex improvisations requires that these be made up on the spot with an unstated preference being that anything that has been played before in the solo cannot be repeated.

But often times when a Jazz musician exhibits the facility to create multi-noted, rapidly played improvised solos, this is voted down and labeled as showboating or derided as technical grandstanding at the expense of playing with sincerity of feeling. 

Such feats of technical artistry are greeted with precepts such as “It’s not what you play, but what you leave out” as though the young, Jazz performer not only has to resolve the momentary miracle of Jazz invention, but has to do so while solving a Zen koan at the same time [What is the sound of the un-played note or some such nonsense].


Pianist Fred Nardin plays lots of notes on Opening and Look Ahead
At only 31 years of age, it’s hard to believe that he has this much talent.

But the technical facility of Fred and his colleagues Or Bareket on bass and Leon Parker on drums is applied in the service of the music, to make it interesting, challenging and a statement of artistic expressions.

These two recordings represent a tour de force by Fred and his colleagues and they expand the vocabulary of the piano-bass-drums trio exponentially into new territory in terms of both composition and improvisation. 

Power and speed, touch and delicacy, unique phrasing, unusual twists and turns, Fred’s music is full of what Whitney Balliett said was the essential nature of Jazz - it’s “sound of surprise.”

It also full of powerful, pulsating swing.  The virtuosic control that Fred, or and leon have over their respective instruments allow them to really lock in and drive the rhythm. The music just flows, effortlessly and results in cascades of exciting music chorus after chorus. 

If you are a fan of the quintessential piano-bass-drums trio format and are looking for something new and different then Fred Nardin, Or Bakeret and leon Parker on Opening and Look Ahead will put a smile on your face.

Here’s the press release developed by Simon Veyssiere at Accent-Press and distributed in the USA by Michael Bloom Media Relations which contains a wealth of opinion and information on Fred and his latest CD - Look Ahead.

Two years after the revelation that was Fred’s first CD Opening, which was awarded the Django Reinhardt Prize from the Académie du Jazz, Fred Nardin is back with the bass player Or Bareket and the drummer Leon Parker for the Fred Nardin Trio’s second album, Look Ahead.

« You can be both  - as intellectual and as soulful as you want -  and the swing beat is powerful but subtle. I think you have to devote yourself to it exclusively to do it at that level, '' Mulgrew Miller, DownBeat Magazine. 
A pianist bred on experience(s) and tradition, Fred Nardin has only one aim in life: to play as well as he can, just as long as it swings. Reasonable but determined, passionate and enthralling when it is a question of tackling the great masters - Kenny Barron, McCoy Tyner or Mulgrew Miller –every day Fred Nardin gets a little closer to his objective, and Look Ahead is the resounding proof. 

Co-founder of The Amazing Keystone Big-Band, chosen sideman for Cecile McLorin Salvant, Bria Skonberg, Jacques Schwarz-Bart, Natalia M.King, Stefano Di Battista, Jesse Davis and Gaël Horellou, regular feature « After-Hours » at the Duc Des Lombards in Paris : Fred Nardin is everywhere where jazz is happening but it is with the trio of the album « Opening » that he was really discovered in 2017. On the Bass: Or Bareket, a promising youngster from New York, brought up between Buenos-Aires and Tel-Aviv. And on the drums, a reference: the immense American Leon Parker. 

« Melody in the middle of the trio » Télérama 

« Fred Nardin sets a very high benchmark, an explosive cocktail » Libération 

« Swing, depth, a lot of humility and already gutsy coming from a little giant.” Jazz News 

« I had this idea in mind for a long time” says Fred Nardin. I knew that to play with Leon would necessitate maturity and having something to say in order to get to something worthwhile. At 30 years old I said to myself: OK, let’s go for it, it’s time » Having met in the cellar of the Sunset/Sunside in Paris in 2008, Fred Nardin came across Leon Parker again in New-York in 2016. « he introduced me to Or in his Harlem apartment and it was there, as soon as we had played the first notes that I knew that we would see it through to the end! ”The cornerstones of this instant trio: time, desire, pleasure, a certain taste for tradition. “ We like it when it swings. When it really swings well, and it’s no laughing matter! » If the affinity with Or Bareket is exemplary, it is really the quasi-filial relationship between Leon Parker and Fred Nardin which makes all the difference. « Leon has played with Mulgrew Miller and Kenny Barron and I have listened to a good deal of his recordings with Jacky Terrasson. Transmission takes place in this way. Having him in the trio is fantastic but you have to be present, and ready to respond, otherwise you will be unstabilized. Leon is very demanding, very charismatic, he has taught me an enormous amount. We spent entire weeks working just on the mental, being in the music at every moment: connected. In the beginning: he debriefed me after each rehearsal or concert, it was not simple but it was very constructive. At such a level, it’s no longer a game. There is no bullshit”. 

In order for a group to work and for the music to be of a high level it must be played. After the tour « Opening » in 2017-2018, Fred Nardin, Leon Parker and Or Bareket immediately got down to work at the Meudon Studio with Erwan Boulay at the console. The same place, the same team, but in a mode: further, higher, stronger. « We are a family ». What touches me is the idea of developing a sound of which we can say: this is this trio. that What was successful on “Opening”, I am keeping it. The rest, I am trying to improve it. In between the two there were concerts: it’s tighter, there are more risks taken, it’s more playful! In two days, the trio recorded eleven pieces of which one solo per musician, in a live and spontaneous atmosphere. “« They got themselves into concert mode, they were motivated and they went straight through everything » says Erwan Boulay. 


Which is where the impression of freshness, urgency and emulation comes from, in« Look Ahead », which really is a response to the ambition at the beginning: more precise, more playful, even more elegant. Then there is this writing by Fred Nardin in the great tradition of the standards (« Just Easy », « Memory Of T. »), this phenomenal interplay which cuts through « One Finger Snap » by Herbie Hancock taken at an incredibly mad tempo, the intelligence of a pianist, lyricism of the double bass and the exceptional joyride of a drummer, all recorded by a sound engineer who also was looking to be as close to the emotion as possible, “as if there was a microphone on the tip of his sticks”. 

If « Opening » was a revelation, « Look Ahead »capped it brilliantly as episode two. Since then, Fred Nardin, Or Bareket et Leon Parker have already got together in New York to prepare for the future development of their unusual adventure in today’s Jazz world.: Dig again and again the same groove, until they find the musical truth: as a certain Mulgrew Miller had a habit of saying, long before them. 

BIOGRAPHY: Jazz is an astounding language. It enabled a kid born in 1987 in a small town in Burgundy to meet a giant born in the country of Blues, in Greenwood, Mississippi, sixty years ago. The kid is Fred Nardin. And the giant Mulgrew Miller, the most underestimated of jazz pianists, a guy who played with Art Blakey, Woody Shaw, Tony Williams pulled on the same thread aset tiré sur le même fil qu'Oscar Peterson. « He was tall, with huge hands ! A giant on the stage and in life ». That’s how you make a connection between Bradley’s in New York and Chamilly, 20 kilometres from Chalon-sur-Saone (France). Brought up in the 1990’s, Fred Nardin, is a little bit generation Y going backwards, the millennial who went in the opposite direction: « My dad had a dance band which toured the region and my mum took me to see it on Saturday evenings and Sunday afternoons. I loved it ! And then one day, I asked my parents if I could have a go at the piano ». When he discovered jazz, Fred Nardin made it into an obsession « it was the only thing I listened to and read ». From morning until evening, playing the piano, sifting through phrases and instrumentalist’s solos ». In between his first classical and boogie piano lessons and then his entry into the conservatoire, the boy took things in the right way: Armstrong, Ellington et Basie before Roy Hargrove and Michel Petrucciani. “I was lucky to learn as part of the flow of history, the way in which you should play this music ». A well-marked path which led him as far as McCoy Tyner, Herbie Hancock, Kenny Barron (« the  synthesis of everything I liked so much »), Tommy Flanagan, Hank Jones, Red Garland and Cedar Walton... without forgetting Mulgrew. 

After having practiced his scales at the Conservatoire in Chalon, Fred Nardin entered the CNSM of Paris in 2007, the year of his nineteenth birthday. It was the saxophonist Sylvain Beuf who helped him get started. He graduated with a diploma in 2011. In the meantime, Nardin toured the clubs of his region: l'Arrosoir in Chalon, le Crescent in Mâcon, le Hot-Club and la Clef-de-Voûte in Lyon where the future members of the Amazing Keystone Big Band were building up courage: Jon Boutellier (saxophone), Bastien Ballaz (trombone), David Enhco (trumpet) and all the others. « In the beginning, we formed a little jam combo to liven-up the restaurants during the Vienne Jazz Festival. It was a bit of a joke to start off with, but it caught on, and it became the core of a big- band! We said to ourselves that we could usefully make use of all the arrangements that we were working on with François Théberge at the CNSM of Paris, and we started playing them at the Clef-de-Voûte on Monday evenings, with other scores specially written for the occasion, a bit like the house orchestra of the Village Vanguard in New York does”. Today the AKBB gives more than 40 concerts per year, from « Peter and the Wolf... and the Jazz » to «We love Ella».” « It’s instructive. A huge weight to learn how to composer, to arrange, work on the form of pieces and lead projects ».

In Vienne, it was the programmer Jean-Pierre Vignola who put their band on the track of Cecile McLorin Salvant, a young Franco-American singer who was to carry off the prestigious Thelonious Monk Competition in the United States. « We went to see her at the Duc Des Lombards with Jon Boutellier and we were gobsmacked. It was impressive. With Patrick Maradan (double bass) and Romain Sarron (drums), we accompanied her on her concerts then the promo for her recording « Woman Child ». For her, I arranged «Le Front Caché sur tes Genoux» which features on the album ». 

So, this is how at the beginning of the 2000 and teens, Fred Nardin began to achieve his goal. In 2013, he and Jon Boutellier go public with « Watts » their first recording as a quartet. Jon, overtook him : « We have the same references. When we were younger, we went down into the cellar where his dad’s collection of 16.000 recordings was stored (Jean-Paul Boutellier, the founder of the Vienne Jazz Festival)! We spent whole evenings listening to them and then put them on a computer, because iTunes and YouTube didn’t yet exist. Jon has an incredible jazz culture for a thirty-year-old guy. In the blindfold-test he is just about unbeatable. '' Boutellier, Nardin ? Same combat ! : a no-bullshit, approach to jazz and the desire to be as sincere as possible. 

And so we are back at the starting point, the day when Fred Nardin, the young pianist from Burgundy, was able to approach his American heroes for real, starting with Mulgrew Miller « It was at the Beaupré Piano Festival where I was playing with Cecile’s quartet in the first part of his trio. 
He had listened to the whole of the balance and the whole of the concert, a really adorable man. Mulgrew, McCoy Tyner, Cedar Walton, Benny Golson ? All those guys, I saw them, I spoke to them when there were concerts or masterclasses. I remember a piano four – hands with Kenny 

Baron, an extraordinary chance! That really leaves a mark when you are a young musician ». Based in Paris for twelve years, Fred Nardin and follows the example of his elders and has got into the habit of « doing the job », just like he has always wanted to, as an enthusiast : « I go out, I go clubbing, I do jam sessions, I meet people”.And going through the non-exhaustive list of artists he has accompanied these last few years (Didier Lockwood, Cecile McLorin Salvant, Jesse Davis, Stefano Di Battista, Scott Hamilton, Evan Christopher, Joël Frahm, Nancy Harms, Joe Sanders, Jacques Schwarz- Bart, etc...), You can identify certain consistencies, certain spiritual and aesthetic affinities, draw up a profile which would be definitively anchored in the jazz tradition. Not by chance, consequently, that Dred Nardin should come face to face with the immense drummer Leon Parker, ten years ago, in the cellar of the Rue des Lombards. Leon Parker, henceforth member of his regular trio... Yet another direct link with Mulgrew! 

Before disappearing in 2013, the pianist with the hands of a giant had let go in the columns of the magazine DownBeat : « Today, a lot of musicians learn the rudiments of classical jazz, think that they have done it, become blasé, and decide to go on to something else : reggae, hip-hop, blues, a little soul here, classical music there... But, rather than do a lot of things quite well, I have the intuition that you have to dig more and more until you attain real knowledge : the true essence of music ». And it is precisely that, that Fred Nardin has attempted to accomplish since, in remembrance of a handshake.” 

Fred Nardin in ten dates : 
1987 : Birth in Saint-Rémy (Burgundy). 
2007 : Enters the CNSM of Paris. 
2008 : Meets the drummer Leon Parker. 
2010 : The debut of The Amazing Keystone Big Band. 
2011 : Accompanies Cecile McLorin Salvant. 
2013 : Recording of « Watt’s », Quartet with Jon Boutellier (feat. Cecile McLorin Salvant) 
2016 : Debut of the trio with Leon Parker and Or Bareket in New-York. 
2017 : The trio’s first album: « Opening ». Wins the Django Reinhardt Prize of the Académie du Jazz (French musician of the year). 
2018 : Victoire du Jazz « Group of the Year » with The Amazing Keystone Big-Band. Present on the Boxed-set « At Barloyd’s » with 9 pianists from the Parisian jazz scene including Alain Jean-Marie, Franck Amsalem, Laurent Courthaliac... 
2019 : Second album album: « Look Ahead ». 
Translation : Christopher Bayton 



Sunday, August 25, 2019

Big Band Bossa Nova: Stan Getz and Gary McFarland

© -Steven Cerra. Copyright protected; all rights reserved.


Fresh from the sudden success of Jazz Samba and "Desafinado," Stan Getz asked the 28-year-old, strikingly gifted Gary McFarland to arrange a bossa nova album for big band as a follow-up. Getz is always his debonair, wistful, freely-floating self, completely at home in the Brazilian idiom that he'd adopted only a few months before. – Richard Ginell www.allmusic.com

Getz’s melodic gift was never more evident; even the way he plays "straight" melody is masterful. Few jazzmen have had this gift - Lester Young did - and it has to do with singing by means of an instrument, for Getz doesn't just play a solo, he sings it,… - Don DeMichael

From this vantage point, it is difficult to remember back to when the beautiful bossa nova melodies swept the USA in the early 1960s as a prelude to the psychedelic rock craze that closed that decade with The Beatles lodged somewhere in between.

Musical styles moved rapidly during that transitional decade and so did a lot of other socio-cultural developments. 

Many of bossa nova composers explained that the music was intended as a blending of "cool" Jazz sounds with a lighter samba rhythm so as to dial down the intensity of the street Samba which is so noisily characteristic of the Brazilian carnivals.


Unfortunately, the bossa nova did not prevail as an international musical trend, but it was nice while it lasted. 

Recorded in 1962, Stan Getz’s Big Band Bossa Nova [Verve V6-8494, CD 825771-2] which features his tenor sax in a series of magnificent arrangements by Gary McFarland is an album from a time when the world was awash in good music. 

Mainly through his early association with composers Antonio Carlos Jobim, João  Gilberto and João’s wife, vocalist Astrud, Getz was to become personified [and made quite wealthy] by his association with the bossa nova music from Brazil that became an international sensation in the early 1960s.


Lyrics were such a powerful and intriguing part of the bossa nova movement that it was initially unusual for instrumental-only versions of the music to succeed.

Big Band Bossa Nova was one of those early instrumental-only success LP’s. Getz, who had such a beautiful tone on the tenor saxophone that some musicians referred to him as “The Sound,” plays beautifully throughout, no doubt inspired in part by McFarland superbly developed and orchestrated arrangements.

Thanks to a friend in New Zealand whose collection of criticism and writings about Jazz appears to be equal to or greater than his [quite vast] collection of the recordings themselves, the editorial staff at JazzProfiles is able to share the following reviews of Big Band Bossa Nova which appeared in the Jazz press around the time of the album’s release.

Also included to further familiarize the reader with the album and its music are Gary McFarland’s and esteemed Jazz author Dom Cerulli’s liner notes to the original LP.

While Stan Getz was to go on and have a long and distinguished career, quite sadly, Gary McFarland passed away, under mysterious circumstances, at the very young age of 38.

For those interested in delving further into Gary’s music please checkout the website lovingly maintained in his honor by Douglas Payne.


Liner Notes to the Verve LP Big Band Bossa Nova [V6-8494]

“My first exposure to bossa nova was in the Spring of 1960 when a friend played a recording by João  Gilberto, a Brazilian guitarist and vocalist. I liked it immediately. Naturally, I responded to the rhythm, but it was more than that. There seemed to be more underplay, more subtlety than in other Latin rhythms but with just as much buzz or intensity. The songs had interesting chord progressions, and the melodic intervals were more modern than in traditional samba melodies. I'm sure that Gilberto's singing had much to do with my response to this music. His voice has an indefinable quality- something close to melancholy, but not quite.

I asked a Brazilian friend about the bossa nova, and he explained that it is a variation of the samba with modern harmonies and more syncopation than the traditional samba. He also told me that the first reaction in Brazil to this new music was similar to the American public's reaction to be-bop in the 40's- it was misunderstood by the traditionalists. However, it is now more widely accepted.
When Stan asked me to write an album for him, he told me to do anything I wanted. I had written a few bossa nova arrangements for Cal Tjader's group, and Stan had recorded a jazz samba album with Charlie Byrd. We both enjoyed working with this music, so we decided to do a big-band album with four songs by Brazilian composers and four songs of mine.

MANHA DE CARNIVAL (Morning Of The Carnival) is a theme from BLACK ORPHEUS. When I saw the movie, 1 was deeply touched by the gentle melody. In keeping with this mood is Jim Hall's treatment of the introduction on unamplified guitar. Following Stan's statement of the theme is an interlude in 5/4 leading into the guitar solo.

BALANCO NO SAMBA (Street Dance) was inspired by the film BLACK ORPHEUS, particularly the street scenes with the marching bands romping, the people dancing and yelling. This is more like a traditional fast samba. 1 think the band got a real happy feeling on this song.

MELANCOLICO (Melancholy) is another tune of mine. Stan plays the verse, the band enters, and he states the melody. The piano solo is by Hank Jones.

ENTRE AMIGOS (Sympathy Between Friends). Stan's phrasing on this tune is, as always, extremely lyrical. After Stan's solo the trumpets play a 16-bar figure that is typical of the high level of their performance on the entire date.

CHEGA DE SAUDADE (Too Much Longing) was also written by Jobim and is one of the best-constructed songs I have ever heard. Notice the restatement of the original minor theme in major during the last 16 bars of the song. Doc Severinsen introduces the melody in the opening statement. Stan begins his solo and is joined by Bob Brookmeyer for 32 measures, leading into the complete statement of the melody. Doc's sensitive handling of the introduction and the interplay between Stan and Bob are high points.


NOITE TRISTE (Night Sadness) is a song of mine. The melody is first stated out of tempo by Hank Jones and then restated by Stan leading into his solo. Drummer Johnny Rae plays Chinese finger cymbals on the first 16 bars of the solo.
SAMBA DE UMA NOTA SO (One Note Samba) was written by Antonio Carlos Jobim, a composer-arranger who works with Gilberto on most of his albums. I have a lot of respect for Jobim's work. This is a song I heard Gilberto sing, and I thought it would be a good ensemble piece.

BIM BOM, by Joao Gilberto, is a lilting melody in the lighter spirit of bossa nova. Solos by Stan and Jim sustain this happy feeling.

I am indebted to the whole band for making the always difficult task of recording much easier. Drummer Johnny Rae did a wonderful job of heading the rhythm section; his experience in Latin music made him an invaluable asset to the band.

About Stan - well, his is a unique talent. In the strong romantic quality of his playing, in his regard for the melody and the spirit of a song, he is perfectly in tune with bossa nova.”

GARY McFARLAND

DOWNBEAT 1962  Rating:*****

This is one of the most musical albums I've ever heard. And, please, let's drop the pigeonhole bit- it doesn't make a great deal of difference if this music is called jazz, bossa nova, or what.

And Getz. . . . His playing is flowing, lyrical, inventive, beautifully songlike -commonplace words all, and none describe adequately or even come close. Those words don't capture that sad-glad feeling he achieves on Melancolico or Entre Amigos. Nor can they substitute for hearing his tenor line rise like a dove from a descending trumpet figure on Melancolico; it lasts but a moment, but it's just one of many little diamonds strewn through this record.

Getz’s melodic gift was never more evident; even the way he plays "straight" melody is masterful. Few jazzmen have had this gift - Lester Young did - and it has to do with singing by means of an instrument, for Getz doesn't just play a solo, he sings it, as can be heard on any of these tracks, most evidently on Noite Triste and Chega De Saudade.


The most remarkable performance in the album is Chega De Saudade, a lovely tune by Antonio Carlos Jobim. It begins with Severinsen's unaccompanied trumpet and gradually builds, like a flower unfolding its beauty. Following Getz1 first solo, he and Brookmeyer engage in a twining duet, as if they were dancing around each other's phrases- it's a wonderful moment.

McFarland shares in the artistic success of the album. His writing is peerless. With what he's shown on this effort and his own adaptation of 'How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying' released earlier this year, he looms large as an outstanding writer. He knows the proper combination of instruments to achieve certain sounds, and he has the taste not to use all the instruments at hand all the time. His sparing use of the ensemble allows the beauty of the soloist and the material to shine through.

Perhaps McFarland's mastery of writing in song form explains his taste in orchestration, for the four songs he contributed (Balanco No Samba, Melancolico, Entre Amigos, and Noite Triste ) are much, much more than record-date lines. Others deserving credit for their work on the album are Jim Hall, for his sensitive unamplified accompaniment and for his solos on Manha De Carnival and Bim Bom; Hank Jones, whose taste matches that of Getz and McFarland. as can be heard on his out-of-tempo Noite Triste theme statement; and Johnny Rae, for general excellence (his use of finger cymbals behind Getz on Noite Triste is a perfect touch).

But it's still Getz who is most responsible for the beauty of the album. This record, 'Focus', and 'Jazz Samba', all issued this year, plus the quality of his 1962 in-person performances - well, most of them - lead me to believe Getz is at the height of his creative powers. And he sure wasn't a slouch before.”

Don DeMichael

JAZZ MONTHLY April 1963

“Gary McFarland, who arranged all the numbers here and conducted the band, wrote Balanco No Samba, Melancolico, Entre Amigos, and Noite Triste in the style of such native Brazilian bossa nova composers as Antonio Carlos Jobim and Louis Bonfa. In recent months McFarland has been the arranger on a number of records and has contributed several pleasant melodic themes, but it is still too early to detect any very clear personality in his work.

The bossa nova is, to all intents and purposes, a samba played with jazz overtones, the themes using more 'modern' chord progressions and the rhythm being more subtle than is the case with most of the older sambas. I find the work of Bonfa in particular very interesting in the compositional field but while the idiom provides an attractive means of varying the content of a jazz LP I suspect that too many records solely devoted to it will prove a little wearisome. This is by the way, of course, for this present release is the best of its kind that I have heard to date.


Stan Getz is a particularly good choice to carry the main solo role, for his style, although it has developed more strength over the past few years, is notable for a melodic awareness that fits aptly with the thematic content to be heard in the best of bossa nova. The lightness and grace of his work on Chega de Saudade and Bim Bom is immensely attractive - these are perhaps the best tracks on the LP- but one must not overlook the fact that graceful as the outlines of his solos may be they do not lack, as was sometimes the case in his earliest records, the necessary swing. Throughout this LP the impressive aspect of Getz's playing is the balance between refinement and rhythmic strength, illustrated very well on his finely constructed solos on the two tracks already mentioned and on Manha De Carnival and Balanco No Samba. The only other soloist to be heard at length is Jim Hall who is also playing better than before, with a continuity previously lacking, and he is heard to best advantage on Manha De Carnival and Bim Bom.

Two points which bossa nova can claim credit for is far superior themes than one hears in the case of the average jazz 'original' and the guiding of guitarists to the potentialities of their instrument in its unamplified form. Bossa nova may be something in the nature of a gimmick in its exploitation by the record companies but when a musician of Getz's talent uses it this LP proves that it can be stimulating and melodically attractive. I think that most readers will find this a very worthwhile LP, the playing time being rather short at 33 1/2 minutes, and the recording excellent.”

Albert McCarthy