Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Frank “Big Boy” Goudie  was born on September 13, 1899 in Youngsville, Louisiana, 150 miles west of New Orleans, Louisiana in the area of the state known as Cajun country, where he lived until the age of eight. His family then moved to New Orleans, where he began playing cornet, and became proficient enough to find work with local bands such as Papa Celestin’s Original Tuxedo Band and the Magnolia Band, two of the top New Orleans bands at that time. He began studying clarinet and tenor saxophone, which would eventually become his primary instruments.

Arriving in New Orleans around 1907 meant Frank had a front-row seat to the blossoming of early jazz with King Oliver, Kid Ory, Johnny Dodds, Freddie Keppard, Jimmie Noone and a host of others, were in their prime and working at many venues throughout the city.

With the 1918 closure of Storyville and the early 1920s, New Orleans experienced a diaspora of musicians, one of whom was Goudie. In 1921 he joined a band accompanying a traveling minstrel show, and for the next four years he performed in Louisiana, Texas, New Mexico and California. He joined another traveling group, Frank Matthews and the Louisiana High Browns, ending up in Tampico, Mexico in 1925.

That same year he sailed to France, making Paris his home base for the next 14 years. Work was plentiful for expat Black musicians in Paris prior to World War II. He would go on to work with bands led by Benny Peyton, Louis Mitchell, Sam Wooding, Noble Sissle, Freddy Johnson, Bill Coleman, and Willie Lewis during the Thirties. He worked at “Bricktop’s,” owned and operated by Ada “Bricktop” Smith, who was a supporter of American jazz musicians. Frank played often and recorded with Django Reinhardt.

While living in Europe, Goudie carried a wicker suitcase full of upholstery tools with which to augment his income – a trade he learned as a young man in New Orleans. He left Paris in late 1939, moving to South America, where he worked in Brazil and Argentina with guitarist Oscar Aleman, and fronted his own groups.

In 1946, Frank moved back to Paris, playing there with Arthur Briggs, Harry Cooper, and Bill Coleman. In 1951, he moved to Berlin, led his own band and recorded there in 1952 and 1953 and in Yugoslavia in 1955.

Returning to the States in 1957 to run his uncle’s business in San Francisco, California, his presence became known to the close-knit Bay Area jazz community. It didn’t take long before  he again was in demand and playing with trumpeter Marty Marsala, pianists Earl Hines, Bill Erickson and Burt Bales, trombonist Bob Mielke and other local groups.

Trumpeter, alto and tenor saxophonist and clarinetist Frank Goudie, who as a young man, his great height earned him the nickname “Tree,” and he became known as “Big Boy” during his years in Paris, transitioned from cancer at age 64, in San Francisco on January 9, 1964.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Bill Jennings was born September 12, 1919 in Indianapolis, Indiana and started out with his twin brother, Albert, in a trio called The Three Spades. He would later work with Louis Jordan and his Tympany Five, Wild Bill Davis Trio, Jack McDuff, Willis “Gator” Jackson, Bill Doggett, Louis Armstrong, Chris Powell And His Five Blue Flames, Hot Lips Page and others.

Recording as both a leader and a sideman, Bill has influenced numerous musicians in the genres of jazz, soul, R&B, and blues guitar. B.B. King often mentioned Jennings as one of his biggest influences. He  recorded with such artists as Leo Parker, King Curtis, Ella Fitzgerald, Jerry Daniels of the Inkspots, Kenny Burrell, Betty Roche and Stuff Smith.

His unique ability to play in many styles included swing, bop, jump blues, R&B, and pop. Jennings played on Fever by Little Willie John, which made the Billboard R&B chart in the U.S. and peaked at number 24 on the Billboard Hot 100.

A left-handed player, Bill played guitar upside down, with the high strings at the top, which gave him a different approach to phrasing and bending the strings. Later in his career, he lost a finger on his fretting hand and began playing bass guitar.

Guitarist and composer Bill Jennings, who was described as “The Architect Of Soul Jazz”, transitioned at Veterans Hospital in Indianapolis on November 29, 1978 at the age of 59.

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Requisites

Introducing Johnny Griffin ~ Johnny Griffin | By Eddie Carter

Submitted for your approval this morning is the 1956 debut by tenor saxophonist, Johnny Griffin. Introducing Johnny Griffin aka Chicago Calling (Blue Note BLP 1533/BST 81533) is the first of three releases he made as a leader for Alfred Lion’s label. The other two are A Blowing Session (1957) and The Congregation (1958). Johnny was nicknamed The Little Giant for his small size, but he possessed a robust sound and dazzling technique that kept him recording and in demand as a leader and sideman for over sixty years. For his first album, Griff’s working with three of the best musicians in the business, Wynton Kelly on piano, Curly Russell on bass, and Max Roach on drums. My copy used in this report is the 2002 Classic Records Mono audiophile deep groove reissue sharing the original catalog number.

Side One opens briskly with Mil Dew, the first of three tunes by Johnny Griffin. Max begins the fireworks with a brief introduction. Johnny grips you right away from a fast-moving opening chorus and a wild ride on the first solo. Wynton stokes the fire with fierce heat next, then Max aggressively exchanges notes with Griff ahead of Curly’s vigorous comment during the closing chorus. Chicago Calling, also by the leader, is listed as the album’s title tune and the quintet begins the melody in a relaxed groove. Johnny eases into the opening statement leisurely, then takes the tempo up for the remainder of his reading. Wynton meets the challenge with a nimble solo that’s absolutely stunning; next Griff returns with a delightfully carefree interpretation leading to the climax.

These Foolish Things by Harry Link, Eric Maschwitz (using the pseudonym Holt Marvell), and Jack Strachey made its debut in the British musical comedy, Spread It Abroad (1936). Wynton introduces the song tenderly, segueing into a heart-warming opening chorus and lead solo by Griff. Kelly delivers a delicate interpretation that’s beautifully constructed to match Russell and Roach’s sultry support preceding Johnny’s beautiful finale. The Boy Next Door by Ralph Blaine and Hugh Martin begins with a light-hearted theme by the quartet. Griff opens the solos expressing great joy on the first interpretation. Wynton steps up next with a very satisfying performance. Griff swings soulfully for a few more verses before the foursome reassembles for the ending.

Side Two starts with the group inviting us to get comfortable and enjoy a breezy blues by Griffin that’s Nice and Easy. The saxophonist takes the listener to a notably relaxed atmosphere on the melody and opening statement. Wynton offers a carefree interpretation that’s just right, followed by Curly who gives a delightfully mellow performance into the ensemble’s finale. It’s All Right With Me by Cole Porter takes off at a blistering pace from the quartet’s opening chorus into Griffin’s ferociously speedy first flight that ascends to a peak of intensity. Kelly continues soaring into the stratosphere with equally explosive verses, then Griff comes back with a few final fiery choruses leading to the melody’s reprise and abrupt conclusion.

Lover Man by Jimmy Davis, Roger Ramirez, and James Sherman opens with a sensitive introduction by Kelly that blossoms into Johnny’s hauntingly beautiful melody. Griff swings gently on the opening solo, then Wynton enhances the song’s intimacy with a lovely reading. Johnny adds a few tenderly expressed thoughts into the close.

Introducing Johnny Griffin was remastered by Bernie Grundman who knocks it out of the park with a breathtaking soundstage from Rudy Van Gelder’s original tapes. The highs sparkle, the midrange is clean and crisp, and the bass is deep. The album is pressed on 200 grams of Quiex SV-P Super Vinyl and is quiet until the music starts. If you’re a fan of tenor sax or are new to the music of Johnny Griffin, I highly recommend Introducing Johnny Griffin for a spot in your library. It’s a great album for anyone who loves jazz that gets better with repeated listening!

~ A Blowing Session (Blue Note BLP 1559), The Congregation (Blue Note BLP 1580) – Source: Discogs.com ~ These Foolish Things, Lover Man – Source: JazzStandards.com ~ The Boy Next Door – Source: Wikipedia.org © 2022 by Edward Thomas Carter

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Lorraine Winifred Geller was born Lorraine Walsh on September 11, 1928 in Portland, Oregon. She started out with the all-female big band Sweethearts of Rhythm, based in New York. She met saxophonist Herb Geller, married him in 1951, and together they moved to Los Angeles, California where they played with many musicians on the West Coast jazz scene, such as Shorty Rogers, Zoot Sims, Stan Getz, and Red Mitchell. She also did sessions with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.

In 1957, she accompanied Kay Starr and the following year, concentrating on raising her daughter, she pared down her performances.  She did, however, play at the first Monterey Jazz Festival. On October 13, 1958 pianist Lorraine Geller transitioned in Los Angeles, attributed to heart failure or pulmonary infection.

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Herman Davis Burrell was born September 10, 1940 in Middletown, Ohio and grew fond of jazz at a young age after meeting Herb Jeffries. He studied piano and music at the University of Hawaii from 1958 to 1960, then starting in 1961 he attended the Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. 1965 saw him walking across the stage to receive  degrees in composition/arranging and performance. While in Boston, he played with Tony Williams and Sam Rivers.

After graduation Dave moved to New York City, where he worked and recorded with Grachan Moncur III, Marion Brown, and Pharoah Sanders. He also started the Untraditional Jazz Improvisational Team with saxophonist Byard Lancaster, bassist Sirone, and drummer Bobby Kapp. Three years later he co-founded The 360 Degree Music Experience with Moncur and Beaver Harris, recording two albums with the group. The following year, Burrell began an association with Archie Shepp, with whom he would play the 1969 Pan-African Festival in Algiers, Algeria. They would go on to record nearly twenty albums.

Burrell’s debut as a leader was an album titled High Won-High Two that was released in 1968.  This was followed by Echo and La Vie de Bohème recorded in Paris in 1969, and Round Midnight for Nippon Columbia.

In 1978, with Swedish poet and lyricist Monika Larsson he composed a jazz opera entitled Windward Passages, with an album of the same name, based on the opera, released in 1979. Their touring and recording collaborations resulted in four more albums. He would later appear on seven David Murray albus recorded between 1988 and 1993.

Burrell tours and performs as a soloist and as a leader of a duo, trio, and larger ensembles. His recordings have received high praise  from Down Beat, Village Voice, Jazz Times and others. Into the new millennium he has continued to perform, record and release several albums including a live recording in Italy. In 2022, pianist Dave Burrell donated his archive to the Center for American Music in the University of Pittsburgh Library System. He continues to be active in jazz.

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