Showing posts with label J.R. Monterose. Show all posts
Showing posts with label J.R. Monterose. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2016

J.R. Monterose & Tommy Flanagan - A Little Pleasure

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1981
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:20
Size: 106,3 MB
Art: Front

(7:10)  1. Never Let Me Go
(5:43)  2. Pain and Suffering...and a Little Pleasure
(5:30)  3. Con Alma
(5:04)  4. Central Park West
(3:12)  5. Vinnie's Pad
(9:07)  6. Theme for Ernie
(7:30)  7. A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square
(2:58)  8. Twelve Tone Tune

A Little Pleasure is a reunion of sorts for pianist Tommy Flanagan and saxophonist J.R. Monterose, who first recorded together on a stellar 1959 quartet date titled The Message. Here, the pair tackles six fairly obscure repertoire pieces and two of the saxophonist’s originals. It's also Monterose’s first appearance on soprano sax; he’s mostly known as a formidable tenorman. It’s a tense recording in some ways Flanagan’s light touch and pastoral outlines, while loose, are somewhat about-faced from Monterose’s bullish, hard-edged approach, such as on their rendition of “Theme for Ernie.” Yet it’s a tension that creates great jazz; when the pair hits a unison volley, it’s thrilling. The most basic lyricism comes when Monterose switches to soprano, as he does on the title track and “A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square,” with the pianist’s lush chords outlining a reedy quaver. The pairing of these two often-unheralded masters is a fine one. With little of Monterose’s output in print, A Little Pleasure is certainly well worth investigating. https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/a-little-pleasure/id400721259

Personnel: J.R. Monterose (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Tommy Flanagan (piano).

A Little Pleasure

Saturday, November 19, 2016

J.R. Monterose - The Message

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1959
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:49
Size: 86,8 MB
Art: Front

(5:30)  1. Straight Ahead
(2:47)  2. Violets for Your Furs
(5:14)  3. Green Street Scene
(5:38)  4. Chafic
(6:18)  5. You Know That
(5:44)  6. I Remember Clifford
(6:36)  7. Short Bridge

J.R. Monterose (not to be confused with fellow tenor Jack Montrose) is most famous for a gig that he personally did not enjoy, playing with Charles Mingus in 1956 and recording on Mingus' breakthrough album Pithecanthropus Erectus. He grew up in Utica, NY, played in territory bands in the Midwest, and then moved to New York City in the early '50s. Monterose played with Buddy Rich (1952) and Claude Thornhill and recorded with (among others) Teddy Charles, Jon Eardley, and Eddie Bert. After leaving Mingus (whom he did not get along with), Monterose played with Kenny Dorham's Jazz Prophets and recorded a strong set for Blue Note as a leader. Although he performed into the 1980s (doubling on soprano in later years), Monterose never really became famous. In addition to his Blue Note date, he led sets for Jaro (a 1959 session later reissued by Xanadu), Studio 4 (which was reissued by V.S.O.P.), a very obscure 1969 outing for the Dutch label Heavy Soul Music (1969), and, during 1979-1981, albums for Progressive, Cadence, and two for Uptown. ~ Scott Yanow  https://itunes.apple.com/ie/artist/j.r.-monterose/id2750934#fullText

Personnel:  J R Monterose (ts), Tommy Flanagan (p), Jimmy Garrison (b), Pete La Roca (d)

The Message

Friday, November 18, 2016

J.R. Monterose - J.R. Monterose

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1956
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:45
Size: 111,8 MB
Art: Front

(6:59)  1. Wee-Jay
(5:18)  2. The Third
(8:06)  3. Bobbie Pin
(6:33)  4. Marc V
(9:04)  5. Ka-Link
(5:26)  6. Beauteous
(7:17)  7. Wee-Jay (alternate take)

Tenor saxophonist J.R. Monterose (Frank Anthony Monterose, Jr.) made only two appearances on Blue Note, both in 1956 one with trumpeter Kenny Dorham's Jazz Prophets recorded live at the Café Bohemia and the other as a leader of his own crack hard bop unit. It was an early ascendancy for Monterose, who had recorded with bassist Charles Mingus, vibraphonist Teddy Charles, and worked in the big bands of arranger Claude Thornhill and drummer Buddy Rich. But unlike tenor players Sonny Rollins, Hank Mobley and Tina Brooks, Monterose wouldn't make a home (and barely a sonic dent) on Alfred Lion's label, much less in New York. He was soon back in his hometown of Utica and not long for a European sojourn that lasted most of the rest of his life.  Presumably, it had nothing to do with Monterose's abilities that his time with Blue Note was so brief; rather, a loss of the proverbial cabaret card scuttled his appearances in the city and his ability to make work. On this program of three originals and readings of tunes by session drummer Philly Joe Jones, Paul Chambers and Donald Byrd, he's joined by scene regulars in pianist Horace Silver and Jones, as well as Chicagoans bassist Wilbur Ware and multi-instrumentalist Ira Sullivan. Sullivan is heard here on trumpet, but also had baritone, alto saxophone and flute in his arsenal.  Perhaps one reason Monterose's name isn't mentioned even among the heavy birds in Blue Note's stable is because his sound was, even at this fairly early stage, extraordinarily individual echoes of Chu Berry and Coleman Hawkins in his massive tone and the odd, quotable cadences of Sonny Rollins. Yet his influence lay more in pianists. Harmonically, Monterose cited Bud Powell (which would give him a passing affinity with alto saxophonist Jackie McLean), and his solos are odd-metered whirls, half-dissolved licks and emphatic blats that seem directly linked to isolationist pianistic flourishes. The leader's mid-tempo composition "Wee Jay" is the lead-off track here, and is reprised in an alternate take on this Rudy Van Gelder remaster edition.

Monterose probes shards of the theme, a lilting and fragmentary cadence of honks and blats with their edges rounded and velvety, slowly strung together in flourishes and then broken apart. There are echoes of Rollins (circa the contemporaneous Vanguard recordings) in his attack. Lingering a little behind the beat he's still an extraordinarily rhythmic player, riding the rhythm section's wave in alternating swirls and pointillist jabs. Silver is conspicuously absent for the first few bars of Monterose's solo, perhaps trying to find a way in with his comping the tenor man's phrases are obviously a world unto themselves. For those used to Silver's hard, churchy approach, his touch is much lighter here, perhaps because Monterose, Ware and Philly Joe bring such meat to the proceedings. Donald Byrd's "The Third" follows; a jagged and nearly stop-time theme that fits well with Monterose's sinewy and stammering patterns as a soloist. He takes cues from Silver's arpeggiated cascades, hopping and pirouetting into a collective dance with Sullivan. The trumpeter is an excellent front line foil, a brittle and ragged logic that fills the holes in the leader's quixotic play of force and filigree. It's hard to imagine a player like Monterose making cookie-cutter hard bop sessions the likes of which fill out the catalogs of many jazz labels from the period. However, he was certainly up to the task of making a warm and utterly unique contribution to the field, and having this date available again in stunning sound is a welcome homage to an uncompromising and individual saxophonist. ~ Clifford Allen https://www.allaboutjazz.com/jr-monterose-jr-monterose-by-clifford-allen.php

Personnel:  J.R. Monterose: tenor saxophone;  Ira Sullivan: trumpet;  Horace Silver: piano;  Wilbur Ware: bass;  Philly Joe Jones: drums.

J.R. Monterose