Showing posts with label Brew Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brew Moore. Show all posts

Monday, January 9, 2023

Howard Mcghee - Introducing The Kenny Drew Trio

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1998
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:38
Size: 129,3 MB
Art: Front

(2:36) 1. Meciendo
(2:50) 2. Lo-flame
(2:52) 3. Fluid Drive
(2:53) 4. I'll Remember April
(3:10) 5. Fuguetta
(2:51) 6. Donnellon
(2:54) 7. Lo-flame (Alt. Take)
(5:21) 8. Yesterdays
(2:29) 9. Stella By Starlight
(3:24) 10. Gloria
(2:45) 11. Be My Love
(3:33) 12. Lover Come Back To Me
(4:43) 13. Everything Happens To Me
(2:50) 14. It Might As Well Be Spring
(2:27) 15. Drew's Blues
(4:23) 16. Yesterdays (Alt. Take)
(3:29) 17. Everything Happens To Me (Alt. Take)

This 1998 CD has all of the music from two formerly scarce 10" LPs. Trumpeter Howard McGhee heads an all-star group that includes trombonist J.J. Johnson, tenor saxophonist Brew Moore, pianist Kenny Drew, bassist Curly Russell, and drummer Max Roach on "I'll Remember April," an original by the leader and four songs (plus an alternate take) by Drew, who was making his recording debut.

Because it was the tail-end of the 78 era, all of the performances are between 2:34 and 3:07 in length but the concise solos are generally quite strong. Although McGhee gets the top billing on this CD, the second half of this disc is actually by the Kenny Drew Trio (with Russell and drummer Art Blakey) from three years later, Drew's debut as a leader. Other than his "Gloria" and the basic "Drew's Blues," all of the music (which is augmented by two alternate takes) is standards including "Be My Love," "Yesterdays," and a surprisingly heated rendition of "It Might As Well Be Spring." Easily recommended to bebop collectors. By Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/introducing-the-kenny-drew-trio-mw0000601264

Personnel: Howard McGhee - Trumpet; J.J. Johnson - Trombone; Brew Moore - Saxophone; Kenny Drew - Piano; Curly Russell - Bass; Max Roach - Drums

Howard Mcghee Introducing The Kenny Drew Trio

Wednesday, September 14, 2022

Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Allen Eager, Brew Moore - The Brothers

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1989
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 43:50
Size: 102,3 MB
Art: Front

(3:12) 1. Five Brothers
(3:36) 2. Five Brothers (Alternate Take)
(3:54) 3. Battle Of The Saxes
(3:48) 4. Four And One Moore
(3:33) 5. Four And One Moore (Alternate Take)
(3:23) 6. Battleground
(3:17) 7. Battleground (Alternate Take)
(4:35) 8. The Red Door
(4:22) 9. Zootcase
(4:28) 10. Tangerine
(5:37) 11. Morning Sun

The music on this LP recalls the airy "Four Brothers" sound that tenor saxophonists Stan Getz, Zoot Sims and Herbie Steward, and baritone saxophonist Serge Charloff, plied in Woody Herman's band of 1947. For this outing, Steward and Charloff exit, and four become five with the addition of tenor luminaries Al Cohn, Brew Moore, and Allen Eager. The set appropriately kicks off with Gerry Mulligan's "Five Brothers," a tune reminiscent of Jimmy Giuffre's original "Four Brothers" in its fluid and bouncy arrangement.

Three other attractive and similarly disposed originals (one more by Mulligan and two by Cohn) complete the saxophone session from 1949, all featuring swinging statements by each soloist. A 1952 sextet date led by Sims and Cohn is also included, offering up another round of original and buoyantly swinging cuts, bolstered by lively contributions from trombonist Kai Winding and solid rhythmic support by pianist George Wallington, bassist Percy Heath, and drummer Art Blakey. A fine release that nicely showcases the cool, proto-West Coast bop forged by both these soloists and Miles Davis.~ Stephen Cook https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-brothers-mw0000652734

Personnel: Piano – George Wallington, Walter Bishop, Bass – Gene Ramey , Percy Heath; Drums – Art Blakey, Charlie Perry; Tenor Saxophone – Al Cohn, Allen Eager, Brew Moore, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims; Trombone – Kai Winding

The Brothers

Sunday, June 26, 2022

Brew Moore - Zonky

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1966
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:42
Size: 112,2 MB
Art: Front

(15:56) 1. Gene's Blues
( 0:17) 2. Introduction
(10:34) 3. I Should Care
( 0:10) 4. Introduction
(13:41) 5. Donna Lee
( 0:15) 6. Introduction
( 7:48) 7. Zonky

Brew Moore once said that "Anyone who doesn't play like Lester Young is wrong," a philosophy he followed throughout his career. In the early '50s, he recorded on a session with fellow tenors Stan Getz, Al Cohn, Zoot Sims, and Allan Eager; at the time, they all sounded identical. Moore was the only one of the five who did not change his sound through the years. During 1942-1948, he worked with local bands in New Orleans and Memphis, moving to New York in 1948 and playing with Claude Thornhill's Orchestra (1948-1949). During the next few years, he freelanced, working with Machito, Kai Winding, and Gerry Mulligan, among others. In 1954, he moved to San Francisco, where he led his own groups and played with Cal Tjader. Moore, whose cool sound became out of fashion, moved to Copenhagen in 1961 and, other than three years in New York (1967-1970), stayed overseas until his death. He recorded as a leader for Savoy (1948-1949), Fantasy (1955-1957), Jazz Mark, Debut, SteepleChase, Sonet, and Storyville.~Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/artist/brew-moore-mn0000624818/biography

Personnel: Brew Moore, tenor sax; Kenny Drew, piano; Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen, bass; Makaya Ntshoko, drums.

Zonky

Tuesday, June 21, 2022

Brew Moore - The Brew Moore Quintet

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:02
Size: 92,1 MB
Art: Front

(4:55) 1. Them There Eyes
(4:05) 2. Them Old Blues
(5:03) 3. Tea For Two
(4:40) 4. Rose
(4:23) 5. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
(4:21) 6. Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear To Thread)
(4:21) 7. Rotation
(3:24) 8. I Want A Little Girl
(4:46) 9. Five Planets In Leo

That Brew Moore was a disciple of Lester Young is a cliché ¢y now, but too few are aware of how good a saxophonist Brew Moore could be. The Brew Moore Quintet was originally recorded in 1956. It has been recently re-mastered, presenting Moore in a relaxed setting playing solo after solo of swinging, soulful jazz.

Moore is obviously very comfortable with this attentive San Francisco band. These musicians play a supportive role, highlighting Moore's extended solo work while adding their own concise solo statements. Dickie Mills on trumpet is a consistently interesting contributor with a warm, bluesy tone. Pianist John Marabuto adds thoughtful solos throughout. Max Hartstein and Gus Gustofson on bass and drums are tasteful and low-key, providing a solid, swinging foundation.

During the late 1940's and early 1950's, Brew Moore was a young, talented tenor on the New York scene before moving to the West Coast and later to Europe. His erratic career has not been well documented but we can be thankful for this recording of standards and blues. Moore's rhythmic and melodic gifts are most evident on slower and medium tempo numbers. His long solos on "I Want A Little Girl" and "I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me" are particularly memorable. In short, this is a warm, appealing session that gets better and better with repeated listening. Moore may sound at times like Lester Young, but on this recording I'd say he sounds like "late" Lester Young on a night when the ideas were flowing and the local band was tight.~ Mike Neely https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-brew-moore-quintet-brew-moore-fantasy-jazz-review-by-mike-neely

Personnel: Brew Moore, tenor saxophone; Dickie Mills, trumpet; John Marabuto, piano; Max Hartstein, bass; and Gus Gustofson, drums.

The Brew Moore Quintet

Saturday, June 18, 2022

Brew Moore - Special Brew

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 55:20
Size: 127,1 MB
Art: Front

(9:02) 1. Manny's Tune (ver. 1)
(6:30) 2. I Want To Be Happy
(8:18) 3. Yardbird Suite
(3:54) 4. Tiny's Blues
(7:25) 5. Scrapple From The Apple
(9:03) 6. Manny's Tune (ver. 2)
(6:39) 7. My Funny Valentine
(4:26) 8. Special Brew

The tenor saxophonist Brew Moore (Milton Aubrey Moore) was born in Indianola, Mississippi on March 26th 1924. He showed musical prowess at an early age. As a child of 7 he started playing popular tunes on a toy harmonica that he had received as a gift for his birthday. After a few years he played in his junior high school’s band and after graduating he entered Mississippi University to study music but left after only one semester to pursue a career as a tenor saxophonist. He arrived in New Orleans nearly broke but was quickly hired by the Fred Ford’s Dixielanders. For the next six years he played with different local bands in both New Orleans and Memphis. In 1948 he moved north to New York and started his own quartet. Although this remained his favorite format through out his life, he also briefly played in Claude Thornhill’s orchestra in 1949. In addition he played with different sextets around town led by Kai Winding, Machito and Howard McGee to name a few. His first appearance on record as a sideman was with Howard McGee entitled Howard McGhee's All Stars. For the next few years he continued to record as a sideman with the different groups and sat in on jam sessions with Charlie Parker in New York. In 1953 Brew Moore moved to San Francisco. ?

His firs record as a leader The Brew Moore Qunitet was released in 1955. In 1959 due to alcoholism he fell seriously ill but recovered and in 1960 went on a tour of the Far East. Shortly after that, in 1961, he permanently moved to Scandinavia and lived in both Sweden and Denmark. He remained there the rest of his life, except for a brief time spent in the Canaries, working regularly in local clubs, touring and recording; he led 9 recording session during his dozen years in Scandinavia. After finishing playing at a Copenhagen club on March 19th 1973, a few days shy of his 49th birthday, Brew Moore fell down a flight of stairs. He died on his way to hospital.

From the Jazz Profestional: Long after they die the majority of jazzmen are still remembered. Mention the names of Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Sidney Bechet, Duke Ellington, Lester Young, Benny Goodman, Stan Kenton to the man in the street and he will more than likely reply “Jazzmen weren't they?” But ask the average jazz lover, “Who was Brew Moore?” and you'll probably receive a blank stare.

One can hardly blame them, because Moore was unknown to the majority of jazz buffs, due to the fact that very little of his work has been re-issued. If one were prepared to travel the length and breadth of the country it might be possible to track down a few of his recordings, but one would certainly have to search exclusively at the jazz specialist record shops.

Brew Moore was probably more heavily influenced by Lester Young than any other tenor saxophonist. Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Al Cohn, Herbie Steward, Bill Perkins and many others may have begun their careers by emulating Lester Young, but went on to develop their own styles later on. This does not mean that Brew intentionally copied Young but just felt comfortable and at ease with that particular sound. Moore never became a member of Woody Herman's 'Four Brothers' sax section, as did Stan Getz, Zoot Sims, Herbie Steward, Al Cohn and baritone saxophonist Serge Chaloff. One can only assume that there was never a vacancy at the appropriate moment, or perhaps he didn't want the job, feeling insecure or trapped when touring with a big band for any length of time. Big Bands were not Moore's forte although he was with the Claude Thornhill band for approximately six months and also recorded with Machitos Afro-Cubists. He felt happier in small band surroundings or leading his own quartet.

Perhaps one should begin with the conception of the boy from the small southern town of Indianola, Mississippi, where Milton Aubrey Moore was born on March 26th 1924. When he was seven years old his mother gave him a harmonica for his birthday. He soon taught himself to play the popular tunes of the day and by the time he was eleven he was a member of the local junior high school band.

At the age of eighteen he spent a very short time at Mississippi University, leaving after only a few months. He now possessed a secondhand tenor saxophone, arrived in New Orleans with only three dollars, and quickly found his first professional engagement with Fred Ford's Dixielanders. Moving from the south to New York in 1943, Moore formed his own quartet which was to be his favourite format during the coming years. As already mentioned, Brew played briefly with the big band of Claude Thornhill, who, like Woody Herman, was delving into the be-bop cult during the mid-forties.

Brew Moore was a regular participant at the Roost and Bop City where he played with trombonist Kai Winding's sextet, which spotlighted Gerry Mulligan on baritone sax, and cut several recordings: Crossing the Channel, Sleepy Bop, Broadway and Waterworks. The first two numbers were issued on American Roost, the last one on the New Jazz label. Moore also recorded with a sextet led by the trumpet player, Howard McGee, that also featured J.J. Johnson on trombone. Apart from the standard I'll Remember April the numbers recorded were mostly originals. Fuguetta, Fluid Drive Donellon Square, Meciendo, and Lo Flame were all originally recorded on the Blue Note label.

Moore did eventually record with the Four Brothers team, Getz, Sims and Al Cohn, plus another 'Lester' man, Allen Eager. The title of the album was Battleground. It gives one an insight as to how these tenor saxophone players related to each other musically. They were entirely compatible.Whenever Charlie Parker came to town, Brew Moore was always happy when invited to sit in on his jam sessions. Everything seemed to be happening around the clubs in Greenwich Village, New York, in the '50s. Moore's was always a familiar face, when playing with the jazz greats or featuring himself with a quartet.

When the modem jazz scene faded for a while during the mid-fifties in New York, Brew managed to get a lift in an old Buick with country and western men, Billy Faier, Jack Elliott and Woody Guthrie. They stopped off in Texas to buy some hamburgers and alcohol. After the meal, Faier suggested that Brew should play something with them. Moore did not care for country music. He remarked, “I don't play in your style, it wouldn't mix.” Billy said, “We'll play some blues.” After he heard Moore's version of the blues Guthrie refused to have anything else to do with him, so Moore left to catch the bus to San Francisco. The atmosphere of San Francisco appealed to him, both musically and socially. He made many appearances at the famous Black Hawk, a favourite nightspot with the jazz people. On some occasions, Moore played with a Dixieland band led by Bob Meilke's Bearcats, which of course wasn't his milieu, but as he pointed out to a journalist, “I go where the work is.”

In 1959, through overwork and alcoholism, Moore became seriously ill, but quickly recovered and resumed work to play on a Matson steamer heading for the Far East. Shortly after he toured this exotic part of the world. It was now drawing close to 1961 and numerous top jazz musicians were leaving the States for Scandinavia and Europe. Sidney Bechet, Colman Hawkins, Benny Carter, Bud Powell, Kenny Clark, Oscar Pettiford, Teddy Wilson, Stan Getz, all found the Europeans very receptive to jazz generally. Moore found no difficulty in obtaining work in Sweden and Denmark and alternated between the two countries. He surrounded himself with the best musicians in Scandinavia and with the many Americans who had taken up residency there.

He recorded a fine session in Denmark in 1962, with a line-up that consisted of himself on tenor, Sahib Shibab alto saxophone, Lars Gullin baritone sax, Louis Hjuland, vibes, Ben Axen piano, Niels-Henning Orsted Pedersen bass and William Schiopffe, drums. After a few years Moore took the opportunity to go further south, to the Canaries, where it was certainly much warmer and less expensive than living in Scandinavia. He returned in 1970 to Sweden and formed a fine quartet, consisting of himself on tenor sax, Lam Sjostens, piano, Sture Norden bass and Frank Noren drums.

The album was released on Sonet records, catalogue number SNJF624. It features a wide selection of material. The up-tempo of Lars Sjosten's “Kong” (yes, not 'King') Fredrik's Blues is a medium to fast tempo number, the same applies to Bait, composed by the late Tony Fruscella. On the album is Stockholm Dews, the last number to be heard and composed by Brew. Moore was once again invited back to Denmark and after a successful gig in Copenhagen on March 19th 1973, fell down a flight of stairs. He died in the ambulance on the way to hospital. He was just one week short of his forty-ninth birthday. https://www.allaboutjazz.com/musicians/brew-moore

Personnel: Brew Moore saxophone; Harold Goldberg piano; Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen bass; Alex Riel drums

Special Brew

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Brew Moore - West Coast Brew: Quartet & Quintet Sessions (1955-58)

Bitrate: 320K/s
Time: 75:39
Size: 173.2 MB
Styles: Cool, West Coast jazz, Saxophone jazz
Year: 2012
Art: Front

[4:23] 1. Fools Rush In (Where Angels Fear To Tread)
[4:55] 2. Them There Eyes
[5:02] 3. Tea For Two
[4:45] 4. Five Planets In Leo
[4:22] 5. I Can't Believe That You're In Love With Me
[4:05] 6. Them Old Blues
[4:40] 7. Rose
[4:20] 8. Rotation
[3:24] 9. I Want A Little Girl
[7:29] 10. Edison's Lamp
[3:16] 11. Nancy With The Laughing Face
[7:03] 12. Rhode Island Red
[6:00] 13. Marna Moves
[4:39] 14. Pat's Batch
[7:08] 15. Dues Blues

West Coast Brew: Quartet & Quintet Sessions 1955-1958 combines two of tenor saxophonist Brew Moore's early albums for the Fantasy label: 1956's The Brew Moore Quintet and 1958's Brew Moore. A journeyman musician with an itinerant's penchant for living gig to gig, Moore was a Lester Young acolyte and these dates find him in superb cool jazz form. Joining Moore here is a handful of lesser-known musicians, including pianist John Marabuto, trumpeter Dick Mills, tenor saxophonist Harold Wylie, and others. Interestingly, future Peanuts composer pianist Vince Guaraldi is featured on the latter dates in 1958. Although these dates are available in various reissues, it's nice to have them all collected on one disc, given that they all originate from a specific time and place in Moore's early career. ~ Matt Collar

West Coast Brew: Quartet & Quintet Sessions (1955-58)