Wednesday, April 15, 2015

John Patton - The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (3-Disc Set)

John Patton, often known as Big John Patton, was one of Blue Note's busiest soul-jazz organists during the golden age of the Hammond B-3s. Between 1963 and 1970 Patton cooked up 11 albums' worth of material as a leader and sat in with a dizzying procession of skilled improvisers, and his best work has since been compared with that of tragically short-lived innovator Larry Young. Patton also enjoyed a long overdue comeback during the '90s when he collaborated with saxophonist and composer John Zorn.

Patton was born in Kansas City, MO, on July 12, 1935. His mother was a church pianist who encouraged her son to learn the instrument, which he began to play regularly at the age of 13. During the mid-'50s Patton worked in bands accompanying rhythm & blues singer Lloyd Price. By 1961 he had switched over to the organ, advancing along the trail blazed by Jimmy Smith, Shirley Scott, and Brother Jack McDuff. It was alto saxophonist Lou Donaldson who initially took Patton the organist into a recording studio -- first on May 9, 1962, to tape an LP to be called The Natural Soul, then on January 24, 1963, for a lengthy session that yielded enough material for the albums Good Gracious and Signifyin'.

On February 2, 1963, Patton sat in -- playing only the tambourine -- on Jimmy Smith's Rockin' the Boat session. Within weeks he had found his own groove and spent the rest of that year making great music as leader and sideman, exchanging ideas and energies with his close collaborator guitarist Grant Green (on the album Am I Blue?) and with saxophonists George Braith (on Patton's Blue John), Harold Vick (on Steppin' Out!), Johnny Griffin (on Soul Groove), Don Wilkerson (on Shoutin'), and Red Holloway (on Burner). Over the next few years Patton recorded with trumpeter Richard Williams (on Patton's Way I Feel) and vibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson (on Patton's Let 'Em Roll), and also appeared as a catalytic agent on Grant Green's album Iron City, George Braith's Laughing Soul, Clifford Jordan's Soul Fountain, and drummer Grassella Oliphant's Grass Is Greener with trumpeter Clark Terry and saxophonist Harold Ousley. In 1968 Patton's recording unit included saxophonists Junior Cook and Harold Alexander. The last of his albums from this period (Accent on the Blues and Memphis to New York Spirit) featured saxophonists Marvin Cabell and George Coleman as well as guitarist James Blood Ulmer.

After 1970 Patton quit the scene for a long while, quietly residing in East Orange, NJ. He contributed to vibraphonist Johnny Lytle's Everything Must Change in 1977, recorded his own Soul Connection in 1983 with guitarist Melvin Sparks and visionary trombonist Grachan Moncur III, then cut two albums with guitarist Jimmy Ponder: Mean Streets: No Bridges (1987) and Jump (1988). Big John Patton's comeback began in 1993-1994 with two albums featuring saxophonist John Zorn: Blue Planet Man and Minor Swing. Here he touched upon edgy ground similar to that which he had explored in 1968. His last major album, This One's for J.A., was recorded in December 1996. On March 19, 2002, 66-year-old John Patton succumbed to diabetes and renal failure. Overshadowed by organists who for one reason or another enjoyed greater popularity, and still underestimated by many jazz critics and historians, Patton and his recorded legacy are ripe and ready for open-minded reevaluation. ~bio by arwulf arwulf

Album: The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc1)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 71:17
Size: 163.2 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Soul jazz
Year: 2011

[5:38] 1. The Silver Meter
[5:01] 2. I'll Never Be Free
[5:58] 3. Spiffy Diffy
[5:59] 4. Along Came John
[5:59] 5. Gee Gee
[5:41] 6. Pig Foots
[7:26] 7. The Rock
[8:36] 8. The Way I Feel
[6:42] 9. Jerry
[7:22] 10. Davene
[6:49] 11. Just 3 4

The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc1)

Album: The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc2)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 61:50
Size: 141.6 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Soul jazz
Year: 2011

[7:38] 1. Fat Judy, Pt. 1
[6:15] 2. Oh Baby
[5:36] 3. Each Time
[7:49] 4. One To Twelve
[6:32] 5. Night Flight
[6:29] 6. Good Juice
[5:39] 7. String Bean
[8:33] 8. I Want To Go Home
[7:15] 9. Early A.M

The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc2)

Album: The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc3)
Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 58:20
Size: 133.5 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Soul jazz
Year: 2011
Art: Front

[6:06] 1. Dirty Fingers
[6:36] 2. Minor Swing
[6:44] 3. Daddy James
[5:32] 4. Ding Dong
[9:08] 5. Congo Chant
[4:38] 6. Alfie's Theme
[6:07] 7. Soul Man
[6:52] 8. Understanding
[6:33] 9. Chitlins Con Carne

The Capitol Vaults Jazz Series (Disc3) 

14 comments:

  1. Great.
    '60s BlueNote organ-based groovers are just my cup of tea - so I'm very happy getting to hear the Patton tracks that I didn't have.
    I have personnel info for all titles in this collection: if that sort of detail interests anyone else, I would be happy to share.
    Thanks for the availability, Mats.

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  2. Disc 1 Tracks 1-6 from Along Came John (1963); John Patton - organ Fred Jackson, Harold Vick - tenor saxophone Grant Green - guitar Ben Dixon – drums - Tracks 7-11 from The Way I Feel (1964); John Patton - organ
    Richard Williams - trumpet (7-9, 11) Fred Jackson - tenor saxophone, baritone saxophone (7-9, 11) Grant Green - guitar Ben Dixon – drums

    Disc 2 Tracks 1-6 from Oh Baby! (1965); Big John Patton - organ Blue Mitchell - trumpet Harold Vick - tenor saxophone Grant Green - guitar Ben Dixon – drums - Tracks 7-9 from That Certain Feeling (1968) Big John Patton - organ Junior Cook - tenor saxophone Jimmy Ponder - guitar Clifford Jarvis – drums

    Disc 3, Tracks 1-3 also from That Certain Feeling (1968) Big John Patton - organ Junior Cook - tenor saxophone Jimmy Ponder - guitar Clifford Jarvis – drums - Tracks 4-9 from Understanding(1969) Big John Patton - organ Harold Alexander - tenor saxophone, flute Hugh Walker – drums

    All Rudy Van Gelder Englewood Cliffs

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  3. Can you provide new links for this album? Thank you very much!

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  4. Hello! Any chance of a re-up of this? :)

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    Replies
    1. Hey monkeeboy, I validated the links for you. Enjoy!

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    2. Thanks so much. Stay safe. :)

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    3. You too, take good care of yourself.

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  5. great album, many thanks Yara!

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    Replies
    1. Thank you, Dan for your kind remarks.

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