Recent listening, current
Archived listening, 2013-2016
Showing posts with label johnny hodges. Show all posts
Showing posts with label johnny hodges. Show all posts
Friday, December 20, 2013
160. Duke Ellington & Johnny Hodges / Side By Side (1959)
I put this album in the "essential" pile. From the first punchy, rather
Dukelike chords in "Stompy Jones," we're off to the races with two sessions
comprised of Ellington and Basie alumni. I love listening to Sweets
Edison in the context of a small group. His lines in "Stompy" are clean, concise,
and eloquent, ringing out above the swinging bass, Jo Jones' crashing cymbals and Duke's
rhythmical encouragement. Those two guys -- Duke Ellington and Jo Jones
-- make quite the pair midway through the tune when the front line lays
out and lets them have a round of aggressive chords and
crashing percussion. Hodges comes back just in time for a
joyous, New Orleans style melee at the end. The lineup with Ellington
and Sweets only does three of the album's nine tracks ("Stompy,"
"Squeeze Me" and "Going Up"). The second session is a septet recorded
six months earlier with Billy Strayhorn, Ben Webster, Roy Eldridge,
Wendell Marshall, and Lawrence Brown. The character is similar but the
different chemistry is easy to hear. Of course the soloists change, Eldridge's style is flashier than Sweets', but
there's also a different sentimental quality and certain reserve presiding over cuts like "Let's Fall in
Love" that is absent from the music with Ellington. Maybe it's Webster. Or maybe it's Strayhorn? Who knows. Regardless of which band you prefer, this disc is wonderful.
Labels:
1958,
1959,
al hall,
ben webster,
billy strayhorn,
duke ellington,
harry sweets edison,
jo jones,
johnny hodges,
lawrence brown,
les spann,
roy eldridge,
septet,
sextet,
side by side,
verve,
wendell marshall
Saturday, July 20, 2013
116. Duke Ellington / Such Sweet Thunder (1957)
In 1999, Such Sweet Thunder was released on CD, expanded and including outtakes. It's a fantastic stereo reconstruction of the originally intended program, complete with inter-track studio ambience akin to a concert hall, formerly available only in mono due to a flawed production. The album's original 12 selections are Duke's musical interpretations of various Shakespearean characters. It's another of his concept pieces, a tone parallel like Black, Brown, and Beige. The music is filled with quirky grinners, as in "Lady Mac," where Duke writes new personality into Lady Macbeth. It shows an indulgently swinging streak to the infamous noblewoman, hitherto unseen on stage. And who's to say that's incorrect? It's refreshing. Most notably, the Ellington-Strayhorn team uses soloists in the band to great effect in pieces like "Sonnet for Caesar," the first of four such sonnets on the album that emulate the 14 line poetic form. The soloists actually play the characters with their instruments, so I wonder, wryly, if the union rep had anything to say about that. "Caesar" features Sam Woodyard imparting an appropriately martial atmosphere while Jimmy Hamilton takes the lead (literally) to portray history's great general in a stately and beauteous, but ultimately tragic, melody. The arrangements for other songs continue the trend of band-as-cast in brilliant works like "Up and Down." Here, Puck (played by Clark Terry) quotes mischievously while working the play's couples into increasingly awkward situations. Just three examples, there are nine more to enjoy. It's ambitious, and the CD release is a treasure. It's sound is brilliantly spacious and clear, and we have all the session's complete takes in one place..
Tuesday, July 9, 2013
113. Duke Ellington / Far East Suite (1967)
Last month, I rolled down the windows of my car after working a 12-hour day, twisted the cap off an ice cold Virgil's Orange Cream soda, and enjoyed the drive
home while listening to this record. The Far East Suite is one of Duke's last recorded works, and one whose material might sport the familiar names and faces of orchestras past but its compositions have a unique flavor among others in the Duke canon. It's been on regular rotation at my house since that evening with the soda pop. Between the grooves are yards of punchy counterpoint between reeds and brass, and some of Johnny Hodges' sweetest work on wax ("Isfahan"). And of course we are treated to equally fine work by the likes of Cootie Williams, Cat Anderson, Russell Procope, Harry Carney, et al. The recording is memorable throughout thanks to Duke's direction of the sublimely cohesive band. It is nice to hear Duke melding his percussive piano blues with sophisticated orchestral textures and touches of middle eastern music or orientalism in tracks like "Mount Harissa," "Ad Lib on Nippon" or the opening "Tourist Point of View." I was swept up by the tidal wave of sound, which is what usually happens when I listen to Mr. Ellington.
Labels:
1967,
big band,
bluebird,
cootie williams,
duke ellington,
far east suite,
harry carney,
isfahan,
jazz,
johnny hodges,
orientalism,
paul gonsalves,
piano,
rca,
review,
russell procope
Sunday, March 31, 2013
67. Duke Ellington Meets Coleman Hawkins (1962)
By all accounts a long time in the making, the result of this collaboration is worth the wait. Scaled back arrangements showcase the soloists and focus, of course, on the eloquent, mellifluous tenor of Coleman Hawkins. It's a relaxed and familiar session, with some hot blowing by everyone, especially Ray Nance ("Wanderlust"), Johnny Hodges ("You Dirty Dog"), and Lawrence Brown, who are clearly inspired by Hawk's presence. The affair starts with the loose and tumbling Latin groove of "Limbo Jazz," recorded secretly by Van Gelder and capturing a riotous continuo scat vocal by Sam Woodyard. Late in the tune, Hawk is invited to join the fun. We are treated to a sublime "Mood Indigo," where the star takes chorus after chorus until bowing out in the last bar. This exhilarating performance always leaves me excited for what comes next. The record really feels like Duke during "Ray Charles' Place" when they do some ensemble figures in powerful, transcendent chords. Hawk dives right in the middle and has ample support from the group who seem to draw up the whole tune up around him. Lawrence Brown has some nice solos throughout the album, notably on 'Wanderlust" and "The Jeep is Jumpin'." I think Hawk's best moments occur in the aforementioned "Mood Indigo" but the honorary "Self Portrait of the Bean" runs a close second and is as near to Hawk's thesis as we're going to get this side of "Body and Soul."
Labels:
1962,
coleman hawkins,
duke ellington,
duke ellington meets coleman hawkins,
impulse,
jazz,
johnny hodges,
lawrence brown,
octet,
ray nance,
review,
sam woodyard,
tenor sax,
tenor saxophone
Wednesday, March 6, 2013
52. Gerry Mulligan Meets Johnny Hodges (1959)
Once upon a time, Verve (and the other labels, too) did a handful of records where one player "meets" another. These albums are like fantasy baseball for jazz. Some are really good, while others start and finish without really accomplishing anything. This time it clicks. Together, Mulligan and Hodges do a smooth and balanced set comprised of six originals, three from each. On Side 1, Mulligan's "Bunny" and the self-descriptive "What's the Rush?" set the mood, before moving into the swank, bluesy territory of Hodges' "Back Beat" and "What It's All About." Claude Williamson, Buddy Clark and Mel Lewis are the rhythm section, and are good at keying in on what the leaders are doing. Sonically, the saxes are a sweet blend with Claude Williamson and the carefully considered bass lines of Buddy Clark. When Mulligan and Hodges take choruses, the one will start developing where the other left off. There's no requirement for this, it's just good artistry. So instead of going in two personal directions with the rhythm section plodding in tow, Mulligan and Hodges make the album a cohesive and jointly constructed product. No surprises musically speaking, nothing groundbreaking, no one trying to bring down the roof. But does there need to be? It's just really good jazz from five great musicians.
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