Showing posts with label Sal Nistico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sal Nistico. Show all posts

Sunday, February 26, 2023

Buck Clayton - A Buck Clayton Jam Session

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1975
File: MP3@256K/s
Time: 75:39
Size: 138,9 MB
Art: Front

(17:43)  1. Sidekick
(11:52)  2. Change For A Buck
(12:12)  3. The Duke We Knew
(15:11)  4. Glassboro Blues
( 5:10)  5. Glassboro Blues Rehearsal
(13:29)  6. The Duke We Knew Rehearsal

Jazz suffered a major loss when, in the late 1960s, Buck Clayton had to retire from playing due to problems with his lip. But instead of permanently retiring from jazz altogether, he continued to make his mark as an arranger, bandleader, and educator. Clayton doesn't play at all on A Buck Clayton Jam Session: 1975; instead, this blowing date finds him overseeing and directing a 12-piece band that includes Joe Newman and Money Johnson on trumpet, Vic Dickenson and George Masso on trombone, Buddy Tate, Buddy Johnson, and Sal Nistico on tenor sax, Lee Konitz and Earle Warren on alto sax, Tommy Flanagan on piano, Milt Hinton on bass, and Mel Lewis on drums. To be sure, that's a variety of musicians some have strong swing credentials, others were primarily hard boppers, and you even have a musician who came out of the Cool School (Konitz) and went on to explore post-bop. But they manage to find common ground on this swing-oriented jam, which concentrates on Clayton's own compositions and emphasizes blowing, blowing, and more blowing. Thankfully, the liner notes list the order of the solos. Originally a vinyl LP in the '70s and reissued on CD in 1995 (when Chiaroscuro added two previously unreleased bonus tracks), A Buck Clayton Jam Session is less than essential but is an enjoyable jam that die-hard swing fans will appreciate.~ Alex Henderson 
http://www.allmusic.com/album/a-buck-clayton-jam-session-1975-mw0000076132

Personnel: Buck Clayton (conductor, trumpet); Earle Warren, Lee Konitz (alto saxophone); Budd Johnson, Buddy Tate, Sal Nistico (tenor saxophone); Joe Newman, Money Johnson (trumpet); Vic Dickenson, George Masso (trombone); Tommy Flanagan (piano); Milt Hinton (bass); Mel Lewis (drums).

A Buck Clayton Jam Session 1975

Sunday, July 17, 2022

The Jazz Brothers (Chuck Mangione, Gap Mangione, Sal Nistico) - Spring Fever

Styles: Jazz,Bebop
Year: 1961
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:32
Size: 95,9 MB
Art: Front

(7:09) 1. First Waltz
(5:47) 2. What's New?
(7:01) 3. Spring Fever
(5:19) 4. Brooks' Brothers
(9:13) 5. Softly, As In A Morning Sunrise
(6:00) 6. Not Too Serious

Brothers in jazz seems to be a Riverside specialty. If this label had a coat of arms, it might well be two crossed horns on a field of cornering sports cars, and under that banner you'd find albums featuring many fraternal combinations: the Adderleys, Cannonball and Nat; the Montgomerys, Wes, Buddy and Monk; the Heaths, Jimmy, Percy and Al and the Mangiones, Chuck and Gap. But while all are brothers in jazz, only the Mangiones are The Jazz Brothers.

That name of course extends beyond the two actual relatives to include all the members of this close-knit quintet. Sal Nestico has been a "Brother" since before their 1960 recording debut; and in this, the groups third album for Riverside, two new members, on bass and drums, have joined the fraternity.

The changes in the rhythm section are not all that is "new" here. There is also, I think, a further step towards increasing musical maturity. Experience is what young players need most, and often find hardest to obtain. For the usual process of individual "scuffling" for jobs with one pick-up group or another is a decidedly erratic, hit-or-miss affair, not calculated to promote steady progress. But The Jazz Brothers, although they have (like most young musicians) discovered that it is not easy to find those elusive club bookings as often or as regularly as one would like to, have managed to stick together. The tangible results of mutual playing experience are evident on the present album in tighter ensembles and more confident soloing. The spirit of youth that distinguishes the group (all of them 24 or younger at the time of this recording) has not diminished at all; it is just framed more and more professionally as time goes by.

(With the scarcity of big bands, once the natural "school" in which young players gained their earliest experience, the small band has become the nursery as well as the college. For example, young as they are, the Jazz Brothers boast at least one graduate the smooth Roy McCurdy, considered by some to be the best drummer for the Jazztet that Art Farmer and Benny Golson have had, is an alumnus of the group.)

As for the personnel, pipe-smoking pianist Gap is the oldest, although not scheduled to be 24 until the Summer of 1962. His solos have thought and order, but that doesn't at all mean that he forgets to swing. Brother Chuck is now 21. Until recently he played an upswept Dizzy Gillespie-model horn a gift from Diz himself, who does not make such gestures lightly. His switch to conventional horn has apparently done nothing to alter the passion and vigor with which he delivers an assortment of modern trumpet sounds. In his playing there is much conviction for one so young.

Tenorman Nestico, although only one year older that Chuck, has more playing experience under his belt than the others. A native of Syracuse NY, he started at an early age and was on the road with rhythm and blues outfits before The Jazz Brothers got together. He plays hot and hard, with a soaring attack that shows links to todays tenor titans but also speaks with a voice of its own.

Of the two new members of the group, Frank Pullara is the older. A 24-year-old and (like the Mangiones) a native of Rochester NY, he taught himself to play bass at the age of 17. Frank also plays several other instruments, has studied at the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, and has worked with Kai Winding, Carl Fontana and Frank Strazzeri. Since joining The Jazz Brothers Pullara has done much of the composing and arranging for the group; two examples of his writing are included here. Drummer Vinnie Ruggieri, whose taste and poise beile his years, was born in Brooklyn in 1941. Originally self-taught, he began playing at 15, has worked with Kenny Drew and J.R. Monterose, is currently dividing his time between the Brothers and Slide Hamptons band, and particularly digs the playing of Philly Joe Jones.

The mode of expression for The Jazz Brothers is a modern, hard-swinging one, tempered by softer (but no less swinging) performances. The former vein is exemplified by Chuck Mangiones Brooks Brothers (a punning reference to an up-state New York disc jockey) and Spring Fever, and by Frank Pullaras Not Too Serious. The quietest moments are found on the celebrated standard ballad, What's New?, which contains a long, expressive Nestico solo, sandwiched by some sensitive muted work by Chuck.

Not as quiet, but gaining much of the impact by the quiet way in which it does its cooking, is an extended Softly, as in a Morning Sunrise, again showing off a muted Chuck and featuring a building solo by Gap as well as a convincing Nestico stint and an impressive plucked bit by Pullara. Somewhere in between is Pullaras First Waltz, in which I find some echoes of the mood of Randy Westons Little Niles, but which definitely has its own haunting personality.

Two things you can be sure of from these Jazz Brothers are enthusiasm and sincerity. If their playing reflects those older musicians who have influenced them, this is no more than a natural, healthy sign that they are genuinely involved with what they really feel is the best in modern jazz. This is one case of "Spring Fever" that needs no sulphur and molasses.~ Ira Gitlerhttps://www.mangionemagic.com/spring-fever.html

Personnel: Chuck Mangione - Trumpet; Sal Nistico - Tenor Saxophone; Gap Mangione - Piano; Frank Pullara - Bass; Vinnie Ruggieri - Drums

Spring Fever

Monday, May 30, 2022

Sal Nistico - Empty Room

Styles: Saxophone Jazz
Year: 2010
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:15
Size: 96,9 MB
Art: Front

(4:38)  1. Come Rain Or Come Shine
(9:04)  2. Lush Life
(9:10)  3. Inner Urge
(7:02)  4. Empty Room
(6:13)  5. I Should Care
(6:05)  6. The Hymn

Sal Nistico's explosive tenor solos with Woody Herman in the mid-'60s helped make that edition of Herman's Herd into a success. Originally an altoist, Nistico switched to tenor in 1956 and played with R&B bands for three years. He gigged with and made his recording debut in 1959-1960 with the Jazz Brothers, a band also including Chuck and Gap Mangione. But it was while with Herman in 1962-1965 that Nistico made history. In 1965, he spent five months with Count Basie. He returned to Basie in 1967 and to Herman on several occasions (1968-1970, 1971, 1981-1982), although without the impact of the first stint. Otherwise, the tenor freelanced throughout his career, playing with Don Ellis and Buddy Rich but mostly working with pick-up groups. Nistico recorded for several labels as a leader including Riverside, Red, and Beehive. Bio ~ https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/sal-nistico/id5056531#fullText
 
Personnel: Sal Nistico (tenor saxophone); Rita Marcotulli (piano); Roberto Gatto (drums).