Thursday, March 11, 2021

Lucky Thompson - A Lucky Songbook in Europe

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 39:22
Size: 91,3 MB
Art: Front

(6:27) 1. Sauvabelin
(5:31) 2. Lady Gail
(3:53) 3. Street of Dreams
(5:45) 4. Soul City
(6:11) 5. Easy Living
(5:18) 6. I Came from Sunday
(6:12) 7. Centre Ville

In 1968, saxophonist Lucky Thompson moved back to Europe with his family after a five-year stay in the States. He settled in Lausanne, Switzerland, which allowed him to tour in European cities where he found the most work. A year later, in March 1969, he recorded A Lucky Songbook in Europe for MPS, one of the Continent’s great labels. The album would become one of Thompson’s finest works. Lucky Thompson’s first trip to Europe came in 1956, when he relocated to Paris. While he was there, he joined the reed section of Stan Kenton’s orchestra when Kenton was short a baritone saxophonist after Jack Nimitz failed to make the trans-Atlantic tour. When the Kenton orchestra returned to the States, Thompson recorded with the band on Cuban Fire starting in May. Overall, the tour was a rather awkward fit for Thompson, since by the 1950s, his instrumental poetry was better suited to smaller ensembles. The blessing for Thompson is that he fell hard for European life. He returned to Paris for an extended stay in ’57, which enabled him to play the city’s many clubs and tour regionally. He remained in Paris until late 1962, when he moved back to the States before his move to Switzerland in ’68.

If you look at Thompson’s years of migration, he couldn’t have picked worse times to relocate. He left the States in ’57 just as jazz recording was picking up following the release of the 12-inch LP in 1956 and launch of stereo in 1958. Then he returned to the States at the dawn of the pop-rock era, when recording work and gigs were drying up for jazz artists who weren’t household names or studio musicians. On the other hand, Thompson seemed to suffer from mental illness and depression, so a more tranquil, integrated environment with access to healthcare surely meant more than hustling for scraps of opportunity. The good news for Lucky is that Europe was his oyster and he was highly appreciated there, which kept him busy. He also was more comfortable in Europe as a creative artist. But as a result of his detachment from the U.S. jazz scene, Thompson was one of only a few jazz giants who really can’t be classified as a member of one jazz school or another. In essence, if you combine the toughness of Coleman Hawkins and relaxed tones and agility of Lester Young, you’d probably come close to Thompson’s sound. [Photo above of Lucky Thompson and British pianist Stan Tracey]

Thompson also was magnificently inventive as a composer and particularly graceful and slippery on song introductions and improvisational passages. He had great training. Thompson had worked with Count Basie in 1944 and ’45 and then Boyd Raeburn in ’45, two challenging bands. He also worked and recorded with plenty of small groups, including dates with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie. On March 13, 1969, after a flurry of written pleas by the team at MPS in Germany, Thompson finally agreed to record an album for the label at its studios in Villingen, in the Black Forest. Thompson, it turns out, was a perfectionist and something of a gentle control freak. According to the original liner notes for A Lucky Songbook in Europe by album producer Joachim Berendt (above), Thompson hand-picked each musician and insisted they be on the date. The album featured Lucky Thompson (ts,sop), Fats Sadi (vib,bgo), Ingfried Hoffman (org), Rene Thomas (g), Eberhard Weber (b) and Stu Martin (d). Guitarist Rene Thomas (above) and vibist Fats Sadi were Belgians and essential, Thompson said. In a series of letters between Thompson and MPS, Thompson said of Thomas, “Rene is very much worthy of the wonderful comments I had heard about him.” And of Sadi: “He is a must for our session. For not only does he come fully prepared to give 100% of himself but he is always in full possession of a big humor and great spirit.”

Five of the seven songs recorded for A Lucky Songbook in Europe were originals by Thompson while two Street of Dreams and Easy Living were standards. Thompson plays soprano sax on four of the tracks Lady Gail, Street of Dreams, Soul City and Easy Listening and tenor on the balance. Thompson took up the soprano sax during his first European stay between 1957 and late 1962. For the original album, Lucky wrote notes explaining his choices for each song. Perhaps the most telling and revealing were his comments for Sauvabelin: “Sauvabelin is the name of a very beautiful park here in Lausanne, where I often go, and especially so during some of my most depressing moments. For it is there I can be completely sure to find some real friends, who unfortunately are better known as animals. As as a personal gesture for their friendship and the many moments of happiness they always give to me, I composed Sauvabelin, which I do sincerely hope shall please them.” This is an extraordinary album, and I spent much of the weekend listening to it over and over again while writing. There isn’t a bad note or a dull phrase on the entire session. It’s just Lucky Thompson in all his glory recorded by a label that truly understood him and the nuances of jazz. https://jazz.fm/lucky-thompson-on-mps/

Personnel: Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone – Lucky Thompson; Bass – Eberhard Weber; Bongos, Congas, Vibraphone – Sadi; Guitar – René Thomas; Organ – Ingfried Hoffmann

A Lucky Songbook in Europe

Archie Shepp, Jason Moran - Let My People Go

Styles: Saxophone And Piano Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 94:42
Size: 218,5 MB
Art: Front

( 8:20) 1. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
( 6:10) 2. Isfahan
( 6:41) 3. He Cares
( 7:01) 4. Go Down Moses
(13:13) 5. Wise One
( 8:48) 6. Lush Life
( 8:31) 7. Round Midnight
( 3:12) 8. Ain't Misbehavin' - Bonus Track
(12:59) 9. Jitterbug Waltz - Bonus Track
( 9:38) 10. Ujama - Bonus Track
( 6:11) 11. Slow Drag - Bonus Track
( 3:51) 12. Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child - Edit

Now an octogenarian, Archie Shepp's name is quite often spoken in the same sentence as that of John Coltrane. Shepp was born a decade after Trane and is associated with the great one's 'New Thing' and 'Fire Music.' His music though, post-Ascension (Impulse!, 1965), might be better equated to that of Billie Holiday, who was born, incidentally, a decade before Coltrane. Just as Holiday presented her music (especially in the later years) in a frank, warts-and-all manner, Shepp has for decades produced his message with a stark, candid and almost fragile delivery.

This fragility, or better yet vulnerability, is the essence Shepp cognoscenti covet. His unguardedness is on full display in these seven duos with Jason Moran. Culled from performances in 2017 and 2018, they draw a direct reference to the duos Shepp produced with Horace Parlan in the 1980s. Like the Parlan dates, this duo leans heavily on spirituals and standards. "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child," finds Shepp's soprano saxophone following the reverent opening by Moran, before Shepp sings the lyrics. The pair's performance builds upon Paul Robeson's rendition with a weight of world weariness. The same can be said of "Go Down Moses," which is delivered as a slow cortège of notes and voice. The pair tackle two Ellington-Strayhorn standards "Isfahan" and "Lush Life." The latter recalls the Coltrane and Johnny Hartman version from 1963, yet gets stripped down to its essential elements. The same approach is taken on Thelonious Monk's "Round Midnight," where Moran works from an unembellished framework and Shepp's tenor saxophone retells the much-loved story to listeners. Listeners have consumed it many times before, yet are keen for this comfort food. The highlight here may be Coltrane's "Wise One," where the two stretch out a bit on the thirteen-minute rendition. Shepp's tenor is robust yet delicate, and Moran's approach gets roisterous in support. This hour of music will certainly leave listeners wanting more.~ Mark Corroto https://www.allaboutjazz.com/let-my-people-go-archie-shepp-and-jason-moran-archie-ball-records

Personnel: Archie Shepp: saxophone; Jason Moran: piano.

Let My People Go