Showing posts with label Bud POWELL. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bud POWELL. Show all posts

Friday, February 12, 2010

Bud POWELL - Dance Of The Infidels

Bud POWELL - Dance Of The Infidels

Jazz

Accompanied by Paudras, Powell arrived in New York on August 1, 1964. Powell played an extended engagement at Birdland where, in March of 1965, he appeared at a concert commemorating the tenth anniversary of Charlie Parker's death. During the summer of 1965, Powell discovered that he had severe liver damage. He continued to perform, but his musical skills were severely reduced. On July 31, 1966, Powell died in New York City's Kings County Hospital. An estimated 5,000 people lined the streets to bid farewell to Powell as his body passed in funeral procession. The procession was led by a Jazzmobile on which Barry Harris and Lee Morgan played Monk's "Round Midnight," **Dance of the Infidels,** and "Bud's Bubble."

As jazz writer Ira Gitler noted in his work Jazz Masters of the Forties, "Despite the deterioration suffered by Bud Powell through his many and varied encounters with illness, his mark has been ineradicably stamped on the music of his native country." As the founder of an entire school of modern jazz piano, Powell's music has inspired musicians such as Bill Evans and Cecil Taylor. He remains an important influence for all who perform post-bebop acoustic jazz piano.
**
It is generally agreed that his best recordings are those made prior to 1954, both for Blue Note Records and for Norman Granz (at Mercury Records, Norgran Records, Clef Records and later on Verve Records). The first Blue Note session, in August 1949, features Fats Navarro, Sonny Rollins, Powell, Tommy Potter and Roy Haynes, and the compositions Bouncing with Bud and **Dance of the Infidels.**
**
Oscar Pettiford, Charlie Mingus, George Duvivier, Curley Russell- Bass
Roy Haynes, Art Taylor, Max Roach- Drums
Bud Powell- Piano
**
01. Tea For Two 5:18
02. Lover Come Back To Me 6:40
03. I want To Be Happy 3:21
04. Woodin' You 2:56
05. Salt Peanuts 4:17
06. Budo 3:01
07. Dance Of The Infidels 4:03
08. Un Poco Loco 4:19
09. Parisian Thoroughfare 2:55
10. Glass Enclosure 2:22
11. Embraceable You 4:11
12. Oblivion 2:41
**
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Friday, January 22, 2010

Bud POWELL - Bud Plays Bird 1957-1958


Bud POWELL - Bud Plays Bird 1957-1958
Recorded in New York, between October 14, 1957 and January 30, 1958.

Jazz

These late 1950s tracks originally recorded for Roulette, were rediscovered and rescued by Michael Cuscuna (kudos for his work). A solid, relatively good performance from that period of Powell's recording career. Powell shows flashes, but there is a casual repetitive undercurrent, a lack of dynamic tension, even when Powell hits top speed ("Big Foot", "KoKo", "Moose the Mooche"). Part of the blame is Art Taylor's somewhat boring drumming. He had already moved into a sparer, more Monk-like sound, his terrifying brilliance from his earlier days, dimmed. Compare his treatment of "Ornithology" here to his Blue Note 1949 recording ("Amazing Bud Powell" v.1). Bud Plays Bird ranks with Bud's later Blue Notes. While individual cuts are brilliant, the date as a whole is simply "pretty okay".
**
The master bebop pianist Bud Powell was in fine form when he recorded these classic works from his friend Charlie Parker's songbook. With bassist George Duvivier and drummer Art Taylor, the trio swung its way through such Parker gems as "Confirmation," "Relaxin' At Camarillo," "Billie's Bounce" and "Ornithology." As one of the leaders of the original bebop movement, Powell is in his element and pulls off some shining improvisations. The trio is a tight unit as Duvivier and Taylor catch every nuance of Powell's streaming right hand runs. In all, Parker and Powell's genius converge to produce a recording of the utmost significance.
**
Previously unissued until 1996, this trio session by pianist Bud Powell with bassist George Duvivier and drummer Art Taylor is better than his Verve recordings of the period if not quite up to the level of his earlier classic Blue Note dates. Actually it is a mystery how such excellent music could be unknown and go unreleased for so long. Powell performs 13 Charlie Parker compositions (including two versions of "Big Foot") and Dizzy Gillespie's "Salt Peanuts." Although there are some minor missteps, the music is quite enjoyable and generally hard-swinging with the more memorable performances including "Straw 'Nuff," "Yardbird Suite," "Confirmation" and "Ko Ko."
**
Bud Powell- (Piano);
George Duvivier- (Bass);
Arthur Taylor- (Drums).
**
01. Big Foot (Long Version)  6:24
02. Shaw 'nuff  4:10
03. Buzzy  4:02
04. Yardbird Suite  4:04
05. Relaxin' at Camarillo  4:27
06. Confirmation   5:50
07. Billie's Bounce  4:02
08. Ko Ko  5:40
09. Barbados  4:09
10. Dewey Square  4:14
11. Moose The Mooche  3:37
12. Ornithology  5:06
13. Scrapple From the Apple  3:51
14. Saly Peanuts   2:41
15. Big Foot (Short Version)  3:30
**
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Wednesday, January 20, 2010

Bud POWELL and Don BYAS - A Tribute To Cannonball 1961


Bud POWELL and Don BYAS - A Tribute To Cannonball 1961
1979 Issue. JC 35755

Jazz

When he left for Europe in the fall of 1946 with the Don Red man band, Don Byas' reputation was at its peak. Admired by the modernists at Minton's no less than by the swing-styled players of his own generation on 52nd Street, he was celebrated as a tireless, original and influential saxophonist. His solo on Basie's "Harvard Blues" had created a stir in 1941 and he followed it with a remarkable series of recordings for small labels. In his romantic approach to "Laura," he had something of a hit. He stayed in Europe, becoming the first in a continuously expanding family of expatriate jazzmen, and although the great Don Byas was much in demand by the jazz-appreciative Europeans, he was largely forgoffen back home. Few of his records were available here and without personal appearances it is difficult, if not impossible, to sustain a following. He returned to the U.S. once, in the summer of 1970, received little of the money or adulation he might have expected, and returned to Holland where he died in August 1972 of lung cancer. He was 59.

Don Byas was a seminal figure in the development of the tenor saxophone and a transitional one twixt the schools of swing and bop. Born in Muskogee, Oklahoma, in 1912, he played alto as a teenager, subbing in territorial bands like Bennie Moten's and Walter Page's Blue Devils. As a student at Langston College, he led his own band, Don Byas and the Collegiate Ramblers. Between 1933, when he switched to tenor, and 1941, he worked with a variety of bands, first in California and then New York -among them: Buck Clayton, Lionel Hampton, Eddie Barefield, Eddie Mallory, Lucky Millinde, Andy Kirk and Redman. In January '41, he became Lester Young's successor in the Count Basie band and quickly established his abilities, cementing his reputation.

Byas' style evolved in the lush, rococo, full-bodied tenor tradition of Coleman Hawkins, but his sound was unmistakably his own, immediately recognizable. A master of technique, he accomplished both the tenderest warmth and the most strident sting. His sense of drama coupled with a brilliant use of dynamics and timbre, a deeply-felt romanticism-which on occasion dripped into sentimentality, his worst piffall-and an unsurpassable sense of swing made his improvisations unique.

When these sides were made in Paris in late 1961- and they are a treasure now exposed to light for the first time-Byas found himself the unofficial patriarch of an expatriate jazz community boasting some of the major figures in the new music. Kenny "Klook" Clarke, virtually the father of modern drumming and a co-founder of the Modern Jazz Quartet, arrived in 1956. Three years later, pianist Bud Powell, the unpredictable genius who could count even Art Tatum among his admirers, arrived and with Clarke and the much-admired French bassist Pierre Michelot formed The Three Bosses. Idrees Sulieman, one of the most astute disciples of Dizzy Gillespie, made the leap shortly after, settled in Stockholm, became an expert saxophonist, and eventually a member of the extraordinary big band Kenny Clarke co-leads with Francy Boland.

This session is significant-well, "significant" is so coldly academic, perhaps I should say "wonderful" instead-for a number of reasons. Chiefly, it captures great players playing great music. Perhaps the most striking aspect of the music we call jazz-at least to a Western mind-is the way in which undiluted individuality is magically meshed with supplication [surely this last word is an editor or typesetter's mangling ofthe writer's intended "subordination"-O.K.] to the group. Byas and Powell, although they played together on numberless occasions going back to the mid-'40s, represent two approaches to the music reflecting two eras: Before (Charlie) Parker and After Parker. Byas was a masterful swing player with his own style, and advanced sense of harmony and a confidence and adventurousness that found him hanging around the beboppers and asking to play. He held his own and did so while insistently remaining himself: he never picked up the rhythmic phrases, the lightning triplets, that are indigenous to bop. Yet Parker said of him that Byas was playing everything there was to play.

Powell and Clarke are the quintessential beboppers. Listen-and consider all the revolutionary chaos bebop was supposed to have inflicted on jazz-to how lovingly they communicate with Byas. Listen to how the saxophone and piano solos complement and enhance each other though the syntax is different. And listen to the way Clarke of Pittsburgh and Michelot, once of the Paris Opera, cook together.

The three standards represented are given exceptional performances. "Cherokee" features particularly vigorous work from Byas, including a stunning coda. Bud is in rare form, ripping through the changes, creating his own cosmos. "All The Things You Are" is introduced by Michelot playing the familiar bop rift, but the theme isn't stated until the out chords. Sulieman has a solid spot and Byas follows with an explosive chorus that is a tale unto itself. The rhythm section is boiling on "Just One Of Those Things." Byas authoritatively takes charge, his passion nicely contrastpd by Powell's exquisite and deliberate exploration.

"Good Bait" is one of the best known compositions by Tadd Dameron, whose largely unheralded work in a too- brief and tortured career has since provided nice incomes for dozens of TV composers and Hollywood hacks. This is a special performance: Byas, obviously in a good mood, toys with strict bop phraseology, showing that he could do pretty much whatever he chose.

Sulieman is in excellent form. Benny Golson's haunting "I Remember Clifford" was a favorite with both Byas and Powell. It is a beautiful but mournful tune that each was to record again at later times. For Bud, there must have been a special meaning: his younger brother, Richie, was killed in the same accident that took Clifford Brown's life. Byas is featured movingly and Powell has a brief but impeccably lush passage.

"Jeannine" is a 16-bar line with an eight bar release. [It had been recorded the previous year by Cannonball's own quinteL -O.K.] Clarke opens and closes it with everyone getting one relaxed chorus. "Myth" is a 16-bar blues. On the ballad "Jackie My Little Cat," Byas is featured for two choruses except for an eight bar piano interlude. He sticks close to the melody, demonstrating how much a great player can say with sonority and graceful embellishment.

Bud Powell preceded Byas in returning to his homeland. He came back in 1964 and spenttwo years in a state of despondency and frustration, playing hardly at all. He died in July 1966, the most brilliant pianist of his time, at the age of 41. Byas' playing was also to suffer in his last few years; he seemed tired, he was losing a battle with alcohol. The music they fashioned continues, however, outside of time and the inequities of life. It sings with vitality of love and sorrow, transforms the moment with grand sunsets and pathetic drizzles, defies indifference with the preachment of hope.
By  D. Orlando . 
**
Idrees Sulieman- Trumpet
Bud Powell- Piano
Pierre Michelot- Bass
Kenny Clarke- Drums
Cannonball Adderley- Alto Sax
**
A1. Good Bait (Count Basie) 6:31
A2. Jeannine 5:59
A3. All the Things You Are 7:24
A4. Myth 5:30
B1. Just One of Those Things (Cole) Porter 5:08
B2. Jackie My Little Cat 4:48
B3. Cherokee 6:19
B4. I Remember Clifford 6:15
B5. Jackie My Little Cat 4:48
**
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Monday, January 18, 2010

Bud POWELL - Hot House 1963


Bud POWELL - Hot House 1963
Hotel-Restaurant La Belle Escale", Edenville, France, August 8-14, 1964

Jazz

A breakdown in 1951 and hospitalization that resulted in electroshock treatments weakened him, but Powell was still capable of playing at his best now and then, most notably at the 1953 Massey Hall Concert. Generally in the 1950s his Blue Notes find him in excellent form, while he is much more erratic on his Verve recordings. His warm welcome and lengthy stay in Paris (1959-1964) extended his life a bit, but even here Powell spent part of 1962-1963 in the hospital. He returned to New York in 1964, disappeared after a few concerts, and did not live through 1966.

In later years, Bud Powell's recordings and performances could be so intense as to be scary, but other times he sounded quite sad. However, his influence on jazz (particularly up until the rise of McCoy Tyner and Bill Evans in the 1960s) was very strong and he remains one of the greatest jazz pianists of all time.
By Scott Yanow, All Music Guide.
**
Johnny Griffin- (Tenor Sax -5/7)
Bud Powell- (Piano)
Guy Hayat- (Bass)
Jacques Gervais- (Drums)
**
A1. Straight No Chaser 13:47
A2. Salt Peanuts 3:16
A3. Move 3:17
A4. Bean And The Boys 6:20
B1. Wee 11:03
B2. 52nd Street Theme 2:50
B3. Hot House 5:23
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Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Bud POWELL and Thelonious MONK - Pianology 1961


Bud POWELL and Thelonious MONK - Pianology  1961
MCD 055-2
1995 Issue
Recording: 1961-70

Jazz

Comment will be useless.
**
01 John's Abbey   06:03 Bud Powell Trio
02 I Remember Clifford   06:23
03 Dance Of The Infidels   05:26
04 Barney's Blues   06:42
05 Yesterdays  T    05:00
06 Move   05:42
07 Epistrophy   04:08 Thelonious Monk Quartet
08 Round About Midnight   04:07
09 Nutty   06:22
10 Bemsha Swing   04:42
11 I Mean You   04:59
**
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Saturday, December 26, 2009

Bud POWELL – The Amazing Bud Powell, The Scene Changes 1958


Bud POWELL – The Amazing Bud Powell, The Scene Changes 1958
1987 (CDP 746529 2)

Jazz

"The Scene Changes" is a classic jazz trio album by one of the great jazz pianists of all time. While Bud Powell's best recordings for Blue Note are from the late 40s and early 50s in my opinion (captured on the two volumes of "The Amazing Bud Powell"), this is one of three sessions he made for the label in 1957-58. (The other two are "Bud!" and "Time Waits," and while the former is hard to find as a single issue, all of the above sessions are available as part of "Bud Powell - The Complete Blue Note and Roost Recordings.") The hallmark of Bud's second stint at Blue Note for me is the wonderful sound of these recordings. It might just be the difference between the mono recordings of five and ten years earlier, and the distinct stereo sound of the late 50s, but it makes the music come to life. You can even pick out Bud's trademark moans during his solos (which sometimes get a little old, but they are endearing nonetheless). Sure, his playing wasn't quite what was back in the day, but they are terrific nonetheless. Anyone interested in great piano trio jazz should be thankful that "The Scene Changes" is back in print courtesy of the RVG Edition series.
By Michael B. Richman.
**
This session is quite unsimilar to Bud Powell's earlier and even later recordings. It seems like if Bud had spent some time listening to the recordings done by younger guys like Sonny Clarke. Most of Bud's originals for this session are written in a minor key, and stylistically he uses a more hard-boppish, "funky" touch, especially on "Duid Deed", "Danceland" and "Gettin'There". Ohter tunes like "Down with it", based on Dizzy Gillespie's "Be-Bop", also featuring Paul Chambers with a great arco-solo, or "Crossin'the Channel" sound much more like typical Bud Powell-stuff. By the way: "Crossin'the Channel" turned out to be the only tune on that album, which "survived" on terms of entering in Powell's repertoire on life performances. "Comin'up" as the longest track (with a shorter alternative take as bonus) is another example of Powell playing latin-based material (others are "Un Poco Loco" and "Buster Rides Again" on earlier BlueNote-albums).
This recording from late 1958 was Bud's last session as a leader for BlueNote (5 years later he played with Dexter Gordon on "Our Man in Paris")
By G. Schramke.
**
Bass- Paul Chambers
Drums- Art Taylor
Bud Powell- Piano
**
01. Cleopatra's Dream   4:21
02. Duid Deed   5:05
03. Down With It   3:58
04. Danceland   3:41
05. Borderick   1:58
06. Crossin' the Channel   3:29
07. Comin' Up   7:55
08. Gettin' There   5:02
09. The Scene Changes   4:00   
10. Comin' Up (Alternate Take)   5:25
**
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Bud POWELL - Ultimate Bud Powell 1998


Bud POWELL - Ultimate Bud Powell 1998

Jazz

Although serious fans and collectors will have little use for the disc, Ultimate Bud Powell is a solid collection of 12 highlights from the pianist's Verve recordings as selected by Chick Corea. For the curious neophyte, the disc offers a good overview of Corea's time at the label, featuring the pianist in a variety of different settings, including combos with Percy Heath, Max Roach, Kenny Clarke, Ray Brown and Art Taylor. Certainly, the disc should be thought of as an introduction, not the final word, but on that level it works very well. Among the featured numbers are "Celia," "I'll Keep Loving You," "Strictly Confidential," "Oblivion," "Hallucinations," "Buttercup," "Fantasy in Blue," "Willow Grove"
and "Elegy."
By Stephen Thomas Erlewine, All Music Guide.
**
Bud Powell- (Piano);
Ray Brown, Percy Heath, George Duvivier- (Bass);
Max Roach, Art Taylor, Kenny Clarke, Osie Johnson- (Drums).
**
01. Tempus Fugit 2:28
02. Celia 3:00
03. I'll Keep Loving You 2:43
04. Strictly Confidential 3:10
05. So Sorry, Please 3:17
06. Parisian Thoroughfare 2:31
07. Oblivion 2:11
08. Dusk In Sandi 2:15
09. Hallucinations 2:27
10. The Fruit 3:19
11. Buttercup 3:02
12. Fantasy In Blue 3:07
13. Mediocre 2:58
14. Dance Of The Infidels 2:19
15. Willow Grove (Willow Groove) 4:26
16. Elegy 2:56
**
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Tuesday, October 27, 2009

Bud POWELL - A Portrait of Thelonious 1961 (REPOST)


Bud POWELL - A Portrait of Thelonious 1961 (REPOST)

Jazz

This CD reissue is one of the most rewarding Bud Powell recordings to come from his period in France. Powell (along with bassist Pierre Michelot and drummer Kenny Clarke) explores four of Thelonious Monk's tunes, Earl Bostic's "No Name Blues" and the standard "There Will Never Be Another You" but it is the final two numbers ("I Ain't Foolin'" and "Squatty") which really find the bop master at his most spirited and swinging. This very rewarding CD releases for the first time the alternate take (a faster rendition without a clear melody) of "Squatty," a song that (based on its original version) deserves to be revived. One oddity: the applause heard throughout this release was added on later because this was actually a studio album.
By Scott Yanow. AMG.
**
I bought this record twenty years ago on the tip of a friend.
When I went all-CD and mothballed my vinyl, this record was an unfortunate casualty. So it was with great joy that I finally got around to re-buying Tribute To Thelonious on CD.
This is simple, strightforward, powerful be-bop. It's only a trio, bass, drums, piano, but Bud's flying, syncopated fingers fill the space. While playing the tinkling and swinging melodies on the top end, his punching left hand motivates the music from below.
I buy a lot of jazz, and this is one of my top ten all time favorites. Buy it now and you'll be happy for the rest of your life.
By Steven Falk.
**
Bud Powell- Piano
Pierre Michelot- Double Bass
Kenny Clarke- Drums.
**
01. Off Minor (Thelonious Monk) 5:21
02. There Will Never Be Another You (Mack Gordon/Harry Warren) 4:20
03. Ruby, My Dear (Thelonious Monk) 5:49
04. No Name Blues (Earl Bostic) 6:39
05. Thelonious (Thelonious Monk) 3:48
06. Monk's Mood (Thelonious Monk) 7:08
07. I Ain't Foolin' (Charles Albertine) 3:21
08. Squatty (Brian Fahey) 5:50
09. Squatty (Alternate Take) (Brian Fahey) 5:06
**
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