Monday, April 17, 2023

Chet Baker : Blue Room - The 1979 Vara Studio Sessions in Holland

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



“In February of 2O21, while I was working on another Chet Baker production with my partners Jordi Soley and Carlos Agustin at Elemental Music, I asked my colleague, Frank Jochemsen of the Nederlands Jazz Archief, if he could find any previously unissued Chet Baker recordings. Since Jordi, Carlos and I were already working with the Chet Baker Estate doing our best to contribute to Chet’s legacy with the Live in Paris release on Elemental, we've all been passionate about the prospect of finding other unissued Baker recordings.


My inquiry with Frank bore fruit, as he was able to find two previously unissued studio sessions in pristine condition from the KRO-NCRV archives recorded at VARA Studio 2 in Hilversum, the Netherlands on April 10 and November 9,1979 respectively. It was thrilling to find these two sessions where we can hear Chet in fantastic form with a great cast of supporting musicians. It represents a welcome addition to Chet’s discography, as he spent much of his time in Europe; a delightful find that we all felt strongly deserved a chance to see the light of day. I want to thank my dear friends, Jordi and Carlos, for being behind this production from the start and making it possible. Messrs. Soley and Agustin have championed the legacy of Chet Baker and they are passionate about supporting Chet’s music by continuing to seek out and issue these kinds of important unissued recordings. I'm very proud of this release and the way that we told the story of this important music.


I'd like to acknowledge and thank the acclaimed Dutch recording engineer Marc Broer for his meticulous attention to detail working from the original tapes.”

- Zev Feldman, Producer, Chet Baker: Blue Room - The 1979 Vara Studio Sessions in Holland [Deep Digs Music Group]


“I worked with Chet from '76 to '85 in different settings. I was young, so it was a formative experience to be with such an artist. He was a very quiet person, not an extrovert, so every word he said was as if God were speaking.


Chet was such a master of melody. When he was improvising, I tried my best to learn from him. I remember when we'd drive to a gig, we'd sing songs, bass lines. He'd sing bass lines to me. I'd improvise. We liked to sing. I could scat, so for hours we'd share tunes that way. He was one of the best teachers I ever had.”

-Jean-Louis Rassinfosse, bassist


If you ever wondered what made Chet Baker, a trumpet player of very limited technical ability who rarely ventured out of the middle range of the instrument, such a perennial favorite among Jazz fans, the following explanations by his bandmates during the heady days of the original Gerry Mulligan Quartet [1952-53] identify many of the ingredients that make up  Chettie’s “secret sauce.”


Bassist Bob Whitlock:


“Chet was one of those rare birds who learned to read music but never had any real training in harmony. Most of us play by ear, assisted by some knowledge of harmony and counterpoint, but since he didn't have the benefit of those tools, he was forced to do it all by ear, and therein lies his genius. Naturally, there is a price to pay with this approach. It requires the bravado to run through minefields and the courage of Hannibal, because the perils are endless. The reward comes in the form of refreshing vitality, breathtaking melodic invention, freedom from exasperating clichés, extraordinary sensitivity to shading and color, and a lyricism second to none. Not a bad trade-off if you are willing to take the risks, and Chet greeted the challenge like a gladiator.”


This description from drummer Larry Bunker provides some remarkable keys that also unlock some major characteristics of Chet’s playing.


“Sometimes he would come into work with his mouth all cut from having been in a fistfight during the day, but that was Chet. The paradox was that he could be incredibly sensitive in his playing. He was a more linear player than Gerry, probably because of his lack of technical knowledge about what he was doing; so much of it was a magical, intuitive thing. Even without piano harmony to guide him he could sail across the changes when they were merely implied. Some people thought he couldn't read music, but he certainly could, though not very proficiently. He had been in an army band, so he would have had to read marches, and in the few situations I was with him when he had to read, he did O.K. He couldn't read chord changes, though, and he didn't know what they were, except for that amazing ability he had that enabled him to hear where they went. Gerry was right on the money when he said, "Chet knew everything about chords; he just didn't know their names."


When other musicians realized that Chet didn't have any theoretical knowledge, they would sometimes try to get him at jam sessions by calling tunes in ridiculous keys that nobody was familiar with, hoping to trap him. They would try "Body and Soul" in G-flat, for instance, but it didn't matter at all, because they could have said Q-flat and Chet would still have been able to play it. After a while that all stopped, because the guys couldn't transpose that fast from their accustomed keys, so they were trapping themselves, but not Chet. They backed themselves into corners that they couldn't get out of, but he would just sail through all of it because he didn't have those kinds of constraints. His mental apparatus worked in a different way, and that was what was so amazing about him, the fact that he could do what he did with such limited theoretical knowledge.”


Taken together, you can literally spend a lifetime dissecting and applying elements from Bob’s and Larry’s elucidations to Baker’s vast discography. 


Especially if you do so with Chet’s better recordings. 


On some occasions, Chet did tour with set groups which, for example, featured pianists Richie Beirach,  Enrico Pierannuzi and Philip Markowitz, or guitarist Phillipe Catherine or bassist Ricardo Del Fra or drummer John Engels.


But like alto saxophonist Sonny Stitt, Chet was primarily a peripatetic musician during the last two decades or so of his career, often picking up local rhythm sections and recording with them to generate  his income. So although his recorded legacy is vast, because of issues with the level of ability of some of his accompanists, many of his recordings lack quality.


Every so often, select recordings capture Chet in his best form and when these come along, applying Bob’s and Larry’s insights into Chet’s playing can serve as a source to reveal Baker’s ear for nuance, melodic originality and constant surprises in his improvisations.


Such is the case with Chet Baker: Blue Room - The 1979 Vara Studio Sessions in Holland [Deep Digs Music Group] which is due out as a Limited Two LP set on Record Store Day, April 22, 2023 followed by a CG release on April 28, 2023 [ DDJD-008]. A major shout out goes to Zev Feldman, the “Jazz Detective” for making this music happen in a commercial format.


My comments are based on the double CD offering, a copy of which was received from Ann Braithwaite of Braithwaite & Katz Communications. Her always informative media release closes this feature.


This music on these recordings comes from three, separate dates featuring two different groups: [1] Chet with Phil Markowitz [p], Jean-Louis Rassinfosse [b] and Charles Rice [d] play on seven of the thirteen tracks; [2] Chet with Frans Elsen [p], Victor Kaihatu [b] and Eric Ineke [drums] perform on the other cuts [LP speak for “tracks”].


What immediately jumps out at you when you listen to these recordings is - “refreshing vitality, breathtaking melodic invention, freedom from exasperating clichés, extraordinary sensitivity to shading and color, and a lyricism second to none.” [from Bob Whitlock’s description of the virtues in Chet’ playing; emphasis mine].


Chet’s improvisations are like nothing you’ve heard before: he doesn’t play pat licks; there are no resting places; nothing is wasted - no throw-aways. Each interpretation is like a story in itself; each a fresh invention; each an ephemeral expression of beauty and precision. His playing is never cloying, or brittle or overly exaggerated. And, it inspires all the other musicians to bring their best playing to match Chet’s energy and enthusiasm.


In this regard, while I’ve been a fan of pianist Phil Markowitz for some time, I find his work here with Chet to be more introspective, impulsive and intriguing. He takes his playing in some new directions, no doubt spurred on, in part, due to Chet’s influence.


And what can one say about the big, bold tone of Jean-Louis Rassinforte - Le maître, en effet?! He centers the time so beautifully and because of all the space Chet leaves, his sound rings out and envelops the music in rich overtones. His playing is so resonant that it seems like the time is being carried forward on a cushion.


While not as familiar with the work of pianist Frans Elsen and bassist Victor Kaihatu, their playing on the four tracks laid down later in 1979 certainly reflect their quality as both accompanists and soloists. Drummer Eric Ineke’s solid time anchors the music within a pulsating groove which keeps the music rhythmically bright and exciting. 


Throughout these 1979 recordings, time and again, there are examples of what Larry Bunker noted as Chet’s “magical, intuitive” playing. “Even without piano harmony to guide him he could sail across the changes when they were merely implied.”


What’s more, many of the comments from the interviews with musicians who are featured on these recordings as contained in the marvelous booklet notes that accompany the set reaffirm the observations made by Bob Whitlock and Larry Bunker about Chet and his music.


For example: 


“As an accompanist, I really learned how to comp properly for someone who was in the very precise harmonic zone that Chet was in. He came from players like Charlie Parker and Clifford Brown. I'm not saying his sound was like Clifford's but his harmonic sense in terms of playing inside of a very strict set of changes was non-chromatic. Basically, if you played a wrong chord behind him, it was death and it was embarrassing for you. But also, it was death for him because it made him sound bad. So you really had to listen.” - Phil Markowitz


“Chet was a master of melody. …. Chet taught me to be strict with rhythm. For me the most important quality in Chefs playing was rhythmic placement. The soloist has to swing, not only the rhythm section. Chet’s placement of phrases was impeccable.” - Jean-Louis Rassinfosse


“With Victor's steady beat next to me, I felt very comfortable and, when Chet started singing, I felt he was telling me a story personally because I was playing with headphones on. An unforgettable moment.” - Eric Ineke


And other musicians interviewed in the booklet who are not on these recordings but played with or were influenced by Chet offered comments similar to Bob and Larry’s assessment of Chet’s playing.


Randy Brecker [trumpet]:


“He wasn't a powerhouse trumpet player, but boy, he got to the heart of the instrument like nobody else. You hear him and you want to take everything from his playing, his whole conception, his sound, his melodic content. He was really an improviser. He played off the melody and he played what he heard. To this day, I try to use all those elements. I try to keep him and five or six other trumpet players in the back of my mind when I play. I especially try to concentrate on playing less, rather than more. I am constantly using his example to try to get to the core of the matter, get to the essence.”


Enrico Rava [trumpet]:


“What made him special for me was the feeling that for him, every note was the last one; the feeling that he was really speaking directly from his soul, directly from his brain. There was no phrasing, no routine. It was always something different. It was pure beauty, all of his phrases. Beautiful, beautiful phrases all the time. And it was moving. It spoke directly to my soul. It was like Miles except Miles had a more dramatic sense. He built up a story, while Chet didn't. Chet just built little episodes of beauty.”


Enrico Pieranunzi [piano]:


“When I met Chet, everything turned upside down. I saw I had to cut to the essentials because Chet’s phrasing was so essential, so amazingly lyrical, musical, smart, logical. I began to feel that something was wrong with my playing. I had to change everything. I had to really go toward what was truly essential.”


The recording quality deserves special mention as it is simply outstanding. You feel like the musicians are in your living room playing just for you. As Frank Jochemsen, a producer for the Dutch National Jazz Archives and the researcher who located these recordings by Chet at the request of Zev Feldman who produced them for this release:


“As if this weren't enough: the music was recorded in the fantastic VARA Studio 2 [in Hilversum, The Netherlands] by the brilliant technician Jim Rip and, moreover, all this music is of high artistic quality and has never been released before!”


Chet’s recorded legacy is vast, but very uneven due to a variety of factors including the poor shape of his playing on some due to his drug addiction, the substandard rhythm sections on the horn-for-hire albums, and the inferior recording quality which plagues many of them.


Given this fact, if you are a fan of Chet’s in particular or a fan of good Jazz in general, you are not going to want to miss Chet Baker: Blue Room - The 1979 Vara Studio Sessions in Holland [Deep Digs Music Group] with Chet in great form backed by two quality rhythm sections recorded to the highest audio standards and complimented by a 23 page booklet that contains a great collection of photographs and is replete with interviews by those involved with making the music on these superb recordings.



Here’s more about these recordings from Ann Braithwaite’s media release.


"ARCHIVAL LABEL JAZZ DETECTIVE TO ISSUE BLUE ROOM, AN

UNRELEASED TREASURE BY TRUMPETER CHET BAKER, AS A

LIMITED TWO-LP SET ON RECORD STORE DAY, APRIL 22


Collection Produced in Partnership with Elemental Music and Dutch Jazz Archive KRO-NCRV, Also Available on CD and Digital Download April 28,

Presents Two Superlative Sessions Recorded for Dutch Radio in 1979,

Drawn from Tapes Unheard Since Their First Airing Extensive, Newly Commissioned Notes Include an Overview by Journalist and Chet Baker

Biographer Jeroen de Valk, Interviews with the Dates' Producers and Sidemen, and Tributes from Trumpeters Randy Brecker and Enrico Rava



Jazz Detective, the label founded in 2022 by GRAMMY-nominated archival producer Zev Feldman, will release Blue Room: The 1979 VARA Studio Sessions in Holland, a superlative, previously unreleased set of studio performances recorded in Holland by legendary trumpeter Chet Baker, as a limited two-LP set on Record Store Day April 22. The package will be issued as a two-CD set and digital download on April 28.


The collection — co-produced by Feldman and Frank Jochemsen and released in partnership with Elemental Music — comprises a pair of brilliantly played dates cut for Dutch radio KRO-NCRV in Hilversum, the Netherlands, by producers Edwin Rutten and the late Lex Lammen in 1979: an April 10 session with pianist Phil Markowitz, bassist Jean-Louis Rassinfosse, and drummer Charles Rice, and a November 9 session with pianist Frans Elsen, bassist Victor Kaihatu, and drummer Eric Ineke. Both occasions found Baker playing (and, on three tracks, singing) in exceptional form.


Blue Room's extensive booklet includes an overview by Dutch journalist Jeroen de Valk; essays by Feldman. Jochemsen and Rutten; interviews with sidemen Markowitz, Rassinfosse, and Ineke; and tributes from trumpeters Randy Brecker and Enrico Rava and pianist Enrico Pieranunzi. The collection is illustrated with photos by Veryl Oakland, Jean-Pierre Leloir, Christian Rose and others. The package was mastered for vinyl by the great engineer Bernie Grundman and Dutch engineer Marc Broer.


The album succeeds Jazz Detective's inaugural offerings, two volumes of widely-praised live performances by pianist Ahmad Jamal, issued as Emerald City Nights on Record Store Day's Black Friday last year. Feldman -who produced the Chet Baker Trio's Live in Paris for Elemental Music last year for label partners/executive producers Jordi Soley and Carlos Agustin Calembert --previously joined with Jochemsen to explore the Dutch archives for Bill Evans' Behind the Dikes (Elemental Music, 2021) and Another Time: The Hilversum Concert (Resonance Records. 2017) and Sonny Rollins' Rollins in Holland (Resonance Records, 2020).


Feldman says of the present package, "It was thrilling to find these two sessions where we can hear Chet in fantastic form with a great cast of supporting musicians. It represents a welcome addition to Chet's discography, as he spent much of his time in Europe; a delightful find that we all felt strongly deserved a chance to see the light of day."


Jochemsen — who unearthed the '79 sessions on a tip from radio producer Lex Lammen, who supplied the researcher with detailed notes before his death in 2018 — says, "These two sessions by Chet Baker were both recorded in 1979 in brilliant stereo for the radio program 'Nine O'clock Jazz.' As if this wasn't enough, the music was recorded in the fantastic VARA studio 2 by the brilliant technician Jim Rip and, moreover, all of this music is of high artistic quality and has never been released before!"


Rutten, who offers a track-by-track look at both '79 recording sessions, recalls fondly, "The beauty of being a jazz producer is that you can give yourself birthday presents even when it's not your birthday. Gifts in the form of the best jazz from the Netherlands and from way beyond....The first tones [of Baker's version of "Nardis"] started unwrapping my birthday present."


Baker's sidemen Markowitz, Rassinfosse, and Ineke reflect on the sometimes challenging task of supporting the notoriously eccentric Baker, but all walked away from the experience impressed by the high level of his performances.


"It was an incredible honor to play with him," says Markowitz, who supplied masterful support and solos. "I'm grateful for the lessons I learned with him back then...This recording is really great. Chet Baker's fans are going to be absolutely thrilled because he sounds unbelievable on this recording."


His session partner Rassinfosse. who worked behind Baker from 1976 to 1985, adds, "Chet's playing is amazing on these tapes. He was in very good shape. He had good chops on these recordings....Being able to record with Chet Baker was an honor. I learned half of what I know in music through Chet Baker."


Both Brecker and Rava offer thoughts on the deep influence Baker's playing had on their own styles with his acute melodic sense and economy of expression.


Brecker, who studied Baker's recording of "My Funny Valentine" when he was learning to play, says, "Boy, he got to the heart of the instrument like nobody else. You hear him and you want to take everything from his playing, his whole conception, his sound, his melodic content. He was really an improviser. He played off the melody and he played what he heard. To this day, I try to use all those elements. I try to keep him and five or six other trumpet players in the back of my mind when I play. I especially try to concentrate on playing less, rather than more. 1 am constantly using his example to try to get to the core of the matter, get to the essence."


Rava says the trumpeter's recordings with Gerry Mulligan were "my introduction to modern jazz. It was so beautiful, but also easy to understand. For a European, it had the logic of a Bach fugue with the soul of jazz....Chet created pure beauty. Doing what he did, everyone loved him. There was no way you could escape it. He was totally committed. He played music as if it was his last night in this world. Every note he played was essential. He taught everybody not to play too many notes; to play only the necessary notes."


Rava's countryman Pieranunzi. who backed the musician on his Italian dates of 1979, says, "When I met Chet, everything turned upside down. I saw I had to cut to the essentials because Chet's phrasing was so essential, so amazingly lyrical, musical, smart, logical. I began to feel that something was wrong with my playing. I had to change everything. I had to really go toward what was truly essential."


Summing up Baker's impact in his overview, writer de Valk says, "Almost 35 years after his passing, Chet Baker continues to reach our hearts and our heads. He touches our hearts with his mellow sound and melodic approach and enters our heads with his adventurous improvisations."”


For more information please contact:

Ann Braithwaite / Braithwaite & Katz Communications/ann@bkmusicpr.com

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Philly Jazz - John Swana - On Target

This piece was originally written for a non-musician friend to help him follow along with what was happening in the music.  


The tune is Philly Jazz.  It was written by trumpeter John Swana who, as you would imagine, hails from Philadelphia, and it appears on his On Target Criss Cross CD [1241].  Joining with him on the album are Dutch guitarist Jesse van Ruller, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Eric Harland.


After reading a brief introduction about how the tune is structured, just follow the timings listed under each musician’s name under the video, open your ears and you’ll hear it all fall into place. You can always pause or re-set the video if you lose your place or wish to hear something again.


Philly Jazz is a typical 32-bar tune that is formed around four [4], eight [8]-bar sections.


This song structure is often referred to as “A-A-B-A.”


This first “A” = 8 bars or measures of the theme or melody [0-7 seconds of the video]


The second “A” = 8 bars or measures of the theme or melody repeated [8-14 seconds].


“B” = 8 bars or measures of an alternative melody sometimes called the release or the bridge [15-20 seconds]


The third “A” = 8 bars of the theme or melody restated [21-27 seconds].


Philly Jazz’s entire 32-bar A-A-B-A configuration is thus heard in the first 27 seconds of the video.


The melody and the related chords for the A-A-B-A song structure then become the basis upon which subsequent improvisations are developed; in this case by Swana, then by van Ruller and lastly by Harland: first in conjunction with Swana and van Ruller and then he solos alone. Patitucci does not solo on Philly Jazz.


To put it another way, the musicians repeat the 32 bar A-A-B-A sequence, each time making up and super-imposing new melodies on the tune’s chord progressions.


Every time a musician completes a 32-bar improvisation, this is referred to as a “chorus.”


On Philly Jazz, Swana takes 5 choruses [from 28 seconds to 2:39 minutes], van Ruller takes 3 choruses [from 2:40 to 3:55] and Harland takes 4 choruses, sharing the first two with Swana and van Ruller [from 3:56 – 5:38, en toto].


Following these solos, the tune’s A-A-B-A pattern is repeated at 5:39 [A], 5:45 [A], 5:51 [B] and 5:58 [A], thus closing the track.

Saturday, April 8, 2023

A Jump Ahead (Remastered)

As Herbie explains in the Nat Hentoff quotation, A Jump Ahead does not have a conventional melody or theme.

Instead, the tune gets its structure from a four-bar ostinato played by bassist Paul Chambers.

An ostinato is a short melody pattern that is constantly repeated in the same part at the same pitch.

According to Nat Hentoff’s notes:

“The rule which Hancock set for A Jump Ahead was for Paul Chambers to select an introductory four-bar pedal tone. ‘Then there come sixteen bars of time,’ Hancock points out, ‘in which what I improvise is based on the pedal tone Paul played during the first four bars. Another four-bar break follows, for which Paul selects another note. I never knew what Paul would play, and that's how this one got titled. He was always a jump ahead. Incidentally, since any one note can be related to all twelve tones on the keyboard, I had complete freedom to utilize Paul's pedal notes any way I wanted to. Those notes acted as a note in a chord, but I formed the chords in my own way. Again, there was no preconceived melody, and the harmony came from the notes Paul chose.’”

Structurally, A Jump Ahead is what may be referred to as tonal music.

And in tonal music, a pedal tone is a sustained tone, played typically in the bass. Sometimes also called a pedal point, a pedal point is a non-chord tone.

The term “pedal tone” comes from the organ’s ability to sustain a note indefinitely using the pedal keyboard which is played by the feet; as such, the organist can hold down a pedal point for lengthy periods while both hands perform higher-register music on the manual keyboards.

In effect, Chambers acts like the organ pedal keyboard while Herbie plays over it using both hands on the piano keyboard.

One other point that may be of interest is Willie Bobo’s use very thick/heavy drumsticks that really serve to crackle & pop the snare drum and crash the cymbals. He generates tremendous swing on this six-and-a-half minute cut.

Paul’s four-bar ostinato can be heard at the outset, again at 18 second, and again at 35 and 53 seconds and so on.

Each time it is followed by a 16-bar improvisation that Herbie conceives based on the pedal tone that Paul selects.

In effect, A Jump Ahead is akin to the geometric head-start in which one never catches-up.

To my ears, Herbie’s solo really hits its stride on A Jump Ahead at around the 2:41 mark and just soars thereafter.

See what you think.

Monday, April 3, 2023

Louis Stewart - Out on His Own [Livia Records LRCD 2201]

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


“Born in the Irish town of Waterford, Stewart worked in showbands (an Irish manifestation of a dance orchestra with a slightly more Gaelic bent to it) before a visit to New York fired his interest in playing jazz. He then began backing visiting players, including Lee Konitz, and at the end of the 6os he joined Tubby Hayes's group before undertaking touring work with Benny Goodman. He was a sideman with Ronnie Scott and George Shearing l and since then has worked as a freelance in a variety of settings, recording as a leader mostly for the independent Jardis label. A perennially unruffled bebop stylist somewhat in the Tal Farlow mold, Stewart has rather more of a reputation among musicians than listeners, partly because he comes from a territory with very little jazz clout, and further because he has never had much interest from record labels: a sympathetic company could yet get a classic out of him.”

- Richard Cook’s Jazz Encyclopedia [2005]


“Mr. Stewart, who has the staid and sober appearance of a prosperous greengrocer, seems to have his musical roots in be-bop. He leans toward material associated with Charlie Parker and he spins out single-note lines that flow with an unhurried grace, colored by sudden bright, lively chorded phrases. His up-tempo virtuosity is balanced by a laid-back approach to ballads, which catches the mood of the piece without sacrificing the rhythmic emphasis that keeps it moving.”

- John S. Wilson, The New York Times


“There is no doubt that Irish jazz guitarist Louis Stewart is one of the all-time greats, and it is obvious from the first notes he plays on any occasion. Quick witted, clean and clear, original, inventive, steeped in tradition, astonishing at most turns and only remarkable on the others, the only reason most of you don't know him is that he works in Europe, barely visiting the continental America's during his five decades of performing.” 

Allmusic.com


“In the late 1960s, he rose to international prominence, winning successive awards at the prestigious Montreux Jazz Festival, including the offer of a full scholarship to Berklee College of Music in Boston - an offer which he never took up.

Instead, he returned to Dublin in the 1970s to raise his family, and became the lynchpin of a burgeoning domestic scene. His peers, by whom he was hugely respected, included pianists Jim Doherty and Noel Kelehan, saxophonist Dick Buckley and drummer John Wadham.

It was in this company that Louis was most comfortable, and his residencies in basements and upstairs rooms around Dublin - at Conways on Parnell Street, Slatterys of Capel street, and latterly in JJ Smyths on Aungier street - provided the proving ground for a new generation of jazz musicians….


His oldest friend and musical partner, pianist Jim Doherty, who has the distinction of playing on Stewart's first and last public performances - separated by some 56 years - told The Irish Times how a fan once asked him if it was true that Louis Stewart was one of the three best guitarists in the world. "Well", replied Doherty, "the other two certainly think so".


Bassist and composer Ronan Guilfoyle, who began his career with Stewart in the late 1970s, said: “For young aspirant jazz musicians of my generation, Louis was a god. He showed by example the heights to which an Irish jazz musician could aspire and for that alone we should be grateful.

“To listen to him at the height of his powers was to witness the playing of one of the world’s greatest jazz guitarists.”

Prominent New York-based guitarist Dave O’Rourke, who was mentored by Stewart, said: “Louis Stewart set the bar so high in Dublin that those of us who moved abroad to play, especially me in New York, had already been exposed to jazz played at its highest level.”

Acknowledging his own personal debt to Stewart and his playing, O’Rourke added: “His legacy can be heard, and will live on in those of us who came after him.”

- Cormac Larkin, The Irish Times Obituary August 21, 2016



Thanks to Amanda Bloom, Publicity and Communication Manager with Crossover Media [and a New York City-based Jazz vocalist], and Dermot Rogers who has recently reactivated Livia Records in Dublin, Ireland, I’m the recent recipient of this wonderfully engaging Jazz guitar recording by the late Louis Stewart [1944-2016]. 


Although Louis was based in Ireland for much of his career, I had the pleasure of hearing him in person in 1996 when he appeared as a member of pianist George Shearing’s newly reformed quintet at the San Francisco Jazz Festival along with vibraphonist Steve Nelson, bassist Neil Swainson and drummer Dennis Mackrel.


I had heard Louis a couple of years earlier when, after a 20 year hiatus, George recorded this new version of his quintet with this personnel and issued The New George Shearing Quintet: That Shearing Sound on Telarc CD [83347].


And, if you are so inclined to a bit of irony, Louis was also a recent “visitor” in the form of a series of recordings he made in the late 1970s with George and bassist Niels Henning Orsted Pedersen for the MPS label which I found as a CD compilation at a fairly reasonable price from a reseller. If truth be told, I didn’t even know these existed as I missed the initial LP release.


So it would appear that Louis Stewart was to be a factor in my musical life yet again with the arrival of his splendid Out on His Own [Livia Records LRCD 2201].


Guitar is a very unforgiving instrument, especially in a Jazz environment where so much seems to happen so quickly. Mistakes are glaring when they happen on any instrument, but they seem to sound particularly harsh on those that are amplified.


To put it another way, in Jazz, there are only good guitarists, those who have a command of the instrument such that they are able to improvise on it flawlessly and, even more importantly, to be able to create beautiful music on what is essentially a wooden box with a whole cut into it and six strings stretched over it.


Occasionally - think Django Reinhart, Charlie Christian, Tal Farlow, Johnny Smith, Barney Kessel, Wes Montgomery, Jim Hall, Joe Pass, Pat Martino, Lenny Breau, George Benson and Pat Metheny - there are guitarists who are able to elevate their playing to a level of greatness recognized and respected by the Jazz community as a whole.


Louis Stewart belongs to this group of guitar artists. To quote Ronnie Scott: “Louis is a superbly talented natural musician. In my book he's one of the world's great jazz guitarists”


For an instrument so demanding, Louis’ guitar playing sounds almost effortless: he hears it, he plays it and it all comes out with a beautifully warm sound.


Perhaps, one some of the reasons for Louis’ special qualities as a player came about as a result of some of the developments noted in this excerpt from Cormac Larkin’s booklet notes to Louis Stewart - Out on His Own [Livia Records LRCD 2201]:


[Visiting New York with an Irish show band]Louis also heard Miles Davis' legendary 50s quintet during that visit to New York and he returned to Dublin with his mind made up. 'Being in the showband, I really thought I was getting into being a professional musician', he told the Irish Times, 'but in fact I was getting further and further away from music. So I quit and I spent about six months doing hardly any gigs at all - just started trying to figure out the guitar.’


It was perhaps the first time in Irish jazz that a musician had decided to devote his entire career to this music, There followed an intense period of self-education for Louis, when he sat at home in his room, poring over the records by Barney Kessel, Tal Farlow, Charlie Christian and others, teaching himself to play his instrument, 'in those days there wasn't all the material that's available to players now showing how to do it. You bought the records by the players and tried to figure out how these lines they played evolved over the chords. It was a very slow process, but in another way, you absorbed it in a special way, rather than having it all laid out for you on paper'


Of course, today’s online courses and instructional videos are wonderful educational tools for those interested in learning Jazz technique, but my own personal experience in learning how to play the music echoes that of Louis’ in that something deeper evolves from listening and applying what you are hearing to practicing on the instrument.


Whatever the ultimate source for how it came about, what is on hand for the listener in Louis Stewart - Out on His Own is best summed up this way:


"In his liner note for the original vinyl release, Sunday Times critic Derek Jewell remarks that Louis ‘is revealed here as a guitar virtuoso already of

_ considerable maturity. A virtuoso in anyone's language, and ... a musician to be spoken of in the same league as Django Reinhardt, Wes Montgomery or, among contemporary virtuosos, Joe Pass.’ My own esteemed predecessor as Irish Times jazz critic, Ray Comiskey, called it 'a performance of such virtuosity, that very few guitarists of any era could ever hope to match it ...a brilliant combination of melodic inventiveness, harmonic ingenuity, technical virtuosity and sheer joy in playing that seems certain to win for it an outstanding place in the record of Jazz guitar'” 


Louis’ discography is composed of recordings that, by and large, are difficult to find.


Given that fact, you won’t want to miss this one. Hats off to Dermot Rogers for making this beautiful recording by Jazz Master Louis Stewart readily available via Livia Records.



The particulars about the recording are listed below on Crossover’s “Radio Release” sheet.


  • Livia Records announces the release of a newly remastered edition of Louis Stewart’s milestone and solo album, “Out On His Own”. Released in 1977 on LP and cassette and on CD in 1995, this new edition includes 3 previously unreleased tracks along with a 16-page booklet with several previously unseen photographs. “Out On His Own” is a fitting title for Louis Stewart as he is perhaps the only Irish jazz musician to attain international front-rank status. This solo record features a mix of lead only and rhythm with lead tracks with a repertoire of Jazz and American Songbook standards, contemporary composers (Chick Corea, Steve Swallow etc.) plus an interpretation of an Irish traditional tune and a self-composed blues.


  • The album was recorded in Bray, just south of Dublin, while Louis was at his peak and alternating between playing with Ronnie Scott’s band in London with the best of visiting musicians, and his frequent trips back to Dublin to play to packed clubs and bars. “Out On His Own” was Livia Records first release meeting with excellent press reviews as follows: Sunday Times critic Derek Jewell: “Louis is revealed here as a guitar virtuoso already of considerable maturity. A virtuoso in anyone's language, and ... a musician to be spoken of in the same league as Django Reinhardt, Wes Montgomery, or, among contemporary virtuosos, Joe Pass.” Irish Times critic, Ray Comiskey: “a performance of such virtuosity, that very few guitarists of any era could ever hope to match it ...a brilliant combination of melodic inventiveness, harmonic ingenuity, technical virtuosity and sheer joy in playing that seems certain to win for it an outstanding place in the record of Jazz guitar” Ronnie Scott: “Louis is a superbly talented natural musician. In my book he's one of the world's great jazz guitarists”


  • Tracks Brief Notes:


  • 1.BLUE BOSSA* (Kenny Dorham)Virtuoso up-tempo flight of melodic daring


  • 2.WINDOWS* (Chick Corea)Influenced by the Stan Getz version


  • 3.DARN THAT DREAM (Van Heusen)Mining the chord sequence inside out


  • 4.WAVE* (A.C. Jobim)Filled with wit and harmonic wisdom


  • 5.SHE MOVED THROUGH THE FAIR (Trad. arr. Stewart) A unique arrangement of traditional tune


  • 6.MAKE SOMEONE HAPPY* (Styne/Green)Reflecting the greats of jazz guitar history


  • 7.I’M ALL SMILES* (Leonard/Martin)Waltz probably inspired by Bill Evans version


  • 8.STELLA BY STARLIGHT* (Young/Washington)Tour de force version of a difficult standard


  • 9.LAZY AFTERNOON (Morros)A tone poem with striking ringing harmonics


  • 10.INVITATION*(Kaper)With harmonically adventurous soloing


  • 11.I’M OLD FASHIONED (Kern)Displays mastery of the chordal melody


  • 12.GENERAL MOJO’S WELL LAID PLAN* (Swallow)With plangent chords and folksy melody.


  • 13.WHAT’S NEW (Haggard/Burke)Pensive mood, tender and poignant


  • 14.I’LL REMEMBER APRIL (Raye/de Paul/Stone)A fixture in Louis’ live repertoire


  • 15.SPRING IS HERE (Rodgers/Hart)Effortless and playful


  • 16.BLUES (Louis Stewart)Masterful exploration of deep-rooted form


  • 17.FOREST FLOWER (Charles Lloyd)** From his 70s repertoire


  • 18.WHAT’S NEW (Haggard/Burke)**–alt take


  • 19.SPRING IS HERE (Rodgers/Hart)**–alt take


  • *Louis on rhythm and lead.

  • ** New to this release


  • On Louis Stewart:


  • While revered in Ireland, Louis’ fame was always greater abroad. Towards the end of his life, he gained honours at home as Ireland began to realise that he was one of the great geniuses of modern music, and an Irish artist to stand alongside Heaney, Beckett, and Le Brocquy as one who transcended his artform and earned the respect and admiration of his peers around the world. Over the course of a long career, Louis Stewart would appear on over seventy albums, and tour the world in the company of some of the foundational stars of the music he loved, including Benny Goodman, JJ Johnson and George Shearing. He was awarded an Honorary Doctorate by Trinity College Dublin (1998) and Aosdána membership (2009) (Arts Council body to acknowledge outstanding contribution to the creative arts in Ireland). Louis died in2016.


  • Gerald Davis and Livia Records: Gerald Davis, a Dublin painter and friend of Louis produced his first 1975 recording ”Louis the First'' and then founded Livia Records to release, “Out On His Own”, establishing Ireland’s first jazz record label with a name inspired by the works of James Joyce. Several other Livia releases followed, each featuring Louis in different line ups: duos, and small to medium size groups, e.g., “Alone Together” “Spondance” and “Super Session”. Livia ceased operations following Gerald’s death in 2005. With his family’s support, Dermot Rogers started a rediscovery and reactivation project in 2021 that led to this release and has unearthed a wealth of other live and studio recordings that are intended for future releases.


  • Epilogue: “Out On His Own” still stands as the most personal and completely assured recording that Louis Stewart made under his own name. Thanks to the foresight of original producer, Gerald Davis, and the dedication and hard work of executive producer Dermot Rogers who led the retrieval and reactivation of the Livia archive from obscurity, it can be heard again, and a new generation of listeners can bear witness that such a guitarist as this once lived and played in Dublin’s fair city. Enjoy this one and look forward to more releases from Livia Records.


  • Credits: Original Production: Gerald Davis, Reissue Production: Dermot Rogers, Mastering: Michael Buckley at House of Horns Studio, Sleeve Notes: Cormac Larkin, Design and Artwork: Jon Berkeley at Holy Trousers, Cover Photograph: Roy Esmonde, Masters Retrieval and Reissue Support: The Davis Family, Project Support: The Stewart Family.