Jazz Messages
Jazz Messages | |
---|---|
Studio album by | |
Released | 1957 |
Genre | Jazz |
Label | Jazztone |
Jazz Messages is a 1957 LP re-issue and compilation of tracks by (i) the Clifford Brown Ensemble and (ii) The Jazz Messengers with Art Blakey. It was released on Jazztone Records (catalog #J-1281).
Comments
[edit]"Ritual" – For the purpose of improving his art, Blakey, in 1947, worked his way over to Nigeria on a ship, and, while there, visited, Ghana. He stayed for a little over a year. Later, in the New York Jazz scene, Blakey became influential in raising awareness of African-based percussion. Among other things, he composed "Ritual" out of inspiration from his experiences in Africa.[1] Jazz critic Norman Weinstein opined that "Ritual" was one of several projects where Blakey showed an interest in African diasporic musical connections, expressed in "quasi-Afro-Cuban and Afro-Caribbean terms."[2]
"Daahoud," sometimes spelled "Dawud," means "David" in Arabic. Brown named the composition after Talib Dawud, a trumpet-playing acquaintance – with Dizzy and Lee Morgan – in Philadelphia from the early 1950s.
Brown, on June 26, 1954, married LaRue Anderson (maiden; 1933–2005).[i] He called her "Joy Spring," and, in her honor, composed a piece in her name in 1954. They had been introduced by Max Roach.
Track listing
[edit]- Jazztone re-issue
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Gone with the Wind" (recorded September 8, 1954) | Allie Wrubel | 3:37 |
2. | "Tiny Capers" (recorded September 8, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 4:13 |
3. | "Joy Spring" (recorded August 12, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 3:13 |
4. | "Blueberry Hill" (recorded September 8, 1954) | Vincent Rose | 3:13 |
5. | "Daahoud" (recorded August 12, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 4:11 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Once Upon a Groove" (recorded January 14, 1957, New York) | Owen Eugene Marshall | 8:36 |
2. | "Touche" (recorded January 14, 1957, New York) | Mal Waldron | 6:16 |
3. | "Blakey's comments on 'Ritual'" (Blakey; February 11, 1957, New York) | Blakey | 1:55 |
4. | "Ritual" (recorded February 11, 1957, New York) | Art Blakey | 9:59 |
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- Original releases
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Gone with the Wind" (recorded September 8, 1954) | Allie Wrubel | 3:37 |
2. | "Joy Spring" (recorded August 12, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 3:13 |
3. | "Finders Keepers" (recorded August 12, 1954) | Jack Montrose | 3:49 |
4. | "Blueberry Hill" (recorded September 8, 1954) | Vincent Rose | 3:13 |
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Tiny Capers" (recorded September 8, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 4:13 |
2. | "Bones for Jones" (tecorded September 8, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 4:13 |
3. | "Daahoud" (recorded August 12, 1954) | Clifford Brown | 4:11 |
- Personnel
- Clifford Brown – trumpet
- Stu Williamson – valve trombone
- Zoot Sims – tenor sax
- Bob Gordon – bari sax
- Russ Freeman – piano
- Joe Mondragon – bass (August 12 session)
- Carson Smith – bass (September 8 session)
- Shelly Manne – drums
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Once Upon a Groove" (recorded January 14, 1957, New York) | Owen Eugene Marshall | 8:36 |
2. | "Touche" (recorded January 14, 1957, New York) | Mal Waldron | 6:16 |
3. | "Ritual" (recorded February 11, 1957, New York) | Art Blakey | 9:59 |
Personnel
[edit]- Jackie McLean – alto sax
- Bill Hardman – trumpet
- Sam Dockery – piano
- Spanky DeBrest – bass
- Art Blakey – drums
Notes and references
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^ Brown and Anderson had three marriage celebrations, partly because their families were on opposite coasts and partly because of their differing religions – Brown was Methodist and Anderson was Catholic. They were first married on June 26, 1954, in Los Angeles (on Anderson's 21st birthday), then again in a religious ceremony on July 17, 1954, in Los Angeles, then, Anderson's parish priest followed them to Boston, and, on August 1, 1954, performed their marriage ceremony at Saint Richards Church in the Roxbury neighborhood. ("Clifford Brown in Los Angeles," by Eddie Spencer Meadows, PhD; born 1939; Black Music Research Journal, published by the Center for Black Music Research, Columbia College Chicago and University of Illinois Press, Vol. 31, No. 1, Spring 2011, pps. 45–63; JSTOR www
.jstor .org /stable /10 .5406 /blacmusiresej .31 .1 .0045; OCLC 729620529, 6733333114, 778359559; ISSN 0276-3605)
References
[edit]- ^ "Jazz Records," by Edwin R. McDonald (né Edwin Ruthven McDonald; 1906–1991), St. Joseph News-Press Gazette, October 27, 1957, p. 8C (accessible via Newspapers.com, subscription required)
- ^ The African Diaspora: A Musical Perspective, by Ingrid T. Monson, Routledge (2003); OCLC 57124953Chapter 11: "Art Blakey's African Diasporo," pps. 334–353
Section: "African Independence and AfroCuban Collaborations," pps. 342–350 - ^ "Clifford Brown in California - The 1954 Sessions," James A. Harrod, Jazz Research (on Blogspot; research blog of James A. Harrod), June 2016 (retrieved June 26, 2019)
- ^ a b "Clifford Brown" (Musician detail: B13511 & B13513), The Jazz Discography Online (lordisco
.com), Tom Lord (ed.) (retrieved June 19, 2019); OCLC 182585494, 690104143
Additional reading
[edit]- Clifford Brown: The Life and Art of the Legendary Jazz Trumpeter, by Nick Catalano, Oxford University Press (2000; paperback 2001), p. 129; OCLC 48236845