Requisites

Minor Move ~ Tina Brooks | By Eddie Carter

This morning’s choice from the library is Minor Move (Blue Note GXF 3072), a 1958 recording by tenor saxophonist Tina Brooks. It was his first session as a leader and should have resulted in his debut but remained shelved until 1980 when it hit the stores in Japan. He’s joined here by Lee Morgan on trumpet, Sonny Clark on piano, Doug Watkins on bass, and Art Blakey on drums. My copy used in this report is the 2019 Blue Note Tone Poet Series Stereo reissue (B0030487-01). Nutville by Tina Brooks opens Side One with the quintet’s blissfully happy theme. Sonny offers a welcoming smile on the opening statement, then Lee invites us to make ourselves at home next. Tina continues the lighthearted mood with an easy-going interpretation. Doug adds a few cool notes leading to the group’s finale.

The Way You Look Tonight by Jerome Kern and Dorothy Fields debuted in the film, Swing Time (1936). Tina and Lee accelerate the beat to uptempo for the melody, then Brooks dives straight into an invigorating lead solo. Morgan moves through the second interpretation with surgical precision, followed by Clark who applies infectious enthusiasm to the third reading. Blakey engages in a brief exchange with the front line before everyone reassembles for the ending. Side Two starts with Star Eyes by Gene De Paul and Don Raye from the musical-comedy, I Dood It! (1943). Lee begins with a brief muted intro preceding the midtempo theme. Tina steps up first with a relaxing performance, then Sonny and Lee follow with two satisfying performances of sheer delight.

Minor Move by Tina Brooks gets underway with the quintet’s collective theme, then Brooks settles into a bluesy groove on the lead solo. Lee and Sonny follow with two interpretations that will have your fingers popping and toes tapping to the inviting beat before the ensemble’s closing chorus dissolves into nothingness. Everything Happens To Me by Matt Dennis and Thomas Adair is one of the most beautiful songs from The Great American Songbook. This is a showcase for Tina who gives two emotionally touching performances of lyricism and poignancy. Sandwiched between them is a gorgeous presentation of reflective beauty by Lee and a warm insightful interpretation by Sonny leading to the tenor’s soft conclusion.

Minor Move was produced by Alfred Lion and Rudy Van Gelder was the recording engineer. Joe Harley supervised the reissue and Kevin Gray did the mastering. The packaging is superb with great photos of the session. The recording is fantastic with an exceptional soundstage and outstanding detail that comes through your speakers as clear as Waterford Crystal. The record was pressed on 180-gram audiophile vinyl and is very quiet until the music starts. Tina Brooks released only one album during his lifetime and appeared on several Blue Note sessions. Sadly, he never got the recognition he deserved. He passed away from liver failure at age forty-two on August 13, 1974. If you’re a fan of tenor sax and don’t already own the Mosaic box set, I offer for your consideration, Minor Move by Tina Brooks. It’s a terrific recording by one of the underrated jazz musicians and an album I highly recommend for your library!

~ The Complete Blue Note Recordings of The Tina Brooks Quintets (Mosaic Records MR4-106), True Blue (Blue Note BLP 4041/BST 84041) – Source: Discogs.com ~ The Way You Look Tonight, Star Eyes, Everything Happens To Me – Source: JazzStandards.com © 2022 by Edward Thomas Carter

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John William Heard was born on July 3, 1938 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and in his early years he played saxophone. He began playing bass at the age of 14. His professional career began in a band that included sax player Booker Ervin, drummer J.C. Moses, pianist Horace Parlan and trumpet player Tommy Turrentine. While in high school, he attended special classes at the Carnegie Museum of Art.

Joining the United States Air Force in 1958 John was sent to Germany. Because of his art experience he was given a job of designing posters for events. He also did some art teaching, teaching the wives of officers. He left the Air Force in 1961 and enrolled at the Art Institute of Pittsburgh. He returned to music and went to Buffalo, New York with a later move to California.

The Sixties saw him playing double bass with Turrentine, Al Jarreau, Jean-Luc Ponty, Sonny Rollins and Wes Montgomery. The 1970s he was with Toshiko Akiyoshi, Count Baie, Louie Bellson, Joe Henderson, Ahmad Jamal, John Cillins, Blue Mitchell and Oscar Peterson. By the Eghties he had moved on to perform with Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, Buddy Montgomery and Pharoah Sanders and Larry Vuckovich. During the decade he teamed with Tom Ranier and Sherman Ferguson to create the group Heard, Ranier, Ferguson in which they released an album in 1983.

Desiring to retire from music in order to spend more time painting, Heard managed to record with Tete Montoliu, Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, Art Pepper, Clark Terry, Pharoah Sanders, Zoot Sims and Joe Williams. He would return to music, record with Benny Carter, release his album The Jazz Composer’s Songbook and form his group, The John Heard Trio that played at Charlie O’s club in Van Nuys, California. With over 52 recording dates as a sideman with a who’s who list of jazz musicians from the 60’s to 2010, double bassist, bandleader and painter John Heard transitioned on December 10, 2021 at the age of 83.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Michael Abene ( was born July 2, 1942 in Brooklyn, New York. Growing up in a musical family he was influenced and inspired by his father, grandfather, and aunt who were musicians. He studied composition at the Manhattan School of Music

His reputation for accompanying singers and for arranging music led Michael to accompany Susannah McCorkle, Julius La Rosa, and others. His debut album was a solo piano project recorded in 1984 and released in 1986 titled You Must Have Been a Beautiful Baby.

He recorded with Maynard Ferguson, Dizzy Gillespie, Cal Tjader during the Sixties and Urbie Green in the Seventies. Abene co-produced the album Avant Gershwin, which won the Grammy Award for Best Jazz Vocal Album in 2007.

Pianist Michael Abene continues to perform, produce and conduct.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Brandee Younger was born on July 1, 1983 in Hempstead, New York and grew up between her birth city and Uniondale, New York. She began her harp studies as a teen under the tutelage of Karen Strauss and continued with several harpists and bassist Nat Reeves. On to undergrad she earned degrees in Harp Performance and Music Business from The Hartt School of the University of Hartford. While at the latter she was mentored by Jackie McLean and the faculty of the Jackie McLean Institute of Jazz and African American Studies.

Off to New York University for grad school six months later with an impressive résumé, she opened for Slide Hampton as a member of Hartford-based collective The New Jazz Workshop. Younger then developed a working relationship with Grammy-nominated producer and artist Ryan Leslie and Grammy Award-winning producer Omen. Building upon that foundation, Younger began working with saxophonist Ravi Coltrane on a series of concerts honoring the music of his late mother, harpist Alice Coltrane.

Over time, Younger has built her career as an educator, concert curator, performer, and bandleader of the Brandee Younger Quartet. Her debut recording as a leader came with Prelude, released in 2011 with Dezron Douglas, E.J. Strickland and vocalist Niia. Since that auspicious moment she has performed with The Harlem Chamber Players, the Hartford Symphony Orchestra, Waterbury Symphony, Soulful Symphony, Ensemble Du Monde, Camerata New York and the Red Bull Artsehcro.

Younger is on the teaching artist faculty (harp) at New York University and The New School College of Performing Arts. She has taught at Adelphi University, Nassau Community College, The Hartt School Community Division at the University of Hartford and has lectured on both sides of the pond.  As a leader she has released 6 albums and two compilations since her debut album Prelude in 2011. As a sidewoman/contributor since 2006 she has 38 albums to her credit with folks like E. J. Strickland, Ravi Coltrane, Jeremy Pelt, Common, Robert Glasper, Jane Monheit, Christian McBroide, Lauryn Hill, Drake, and more.

Harpist Brandee Younger infuses classical, jazz, soul, and funk influences to the harp tradition pioneered by her predecessors and idols Dorothy Ashby and Alice Coltrane. She continues to explore and expand her musical vocabulary.

GRIOTS GALLERY

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