Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Earl Klugh was born September 16, 1953 in Detroit, Michigan. At the age of six he started training on the piano but switched to the guitar at ten. By 13, he was captivated by the guitar of Chet Atkins when he made an appearance on the Perry Como Show.
His first recording was at age 15 on Yusef Lateef’s Suite 16. He played on George Benson’s White Rabbit album and two years later, in 1973, joined his touring band. He has performed as a guest on several of Atkins’ albums, who has reciprocated as well, joining Klugh on his Magic In Your Eyes album.
He and Bob James received a Grammy for Best Pop Instrumental Performance in 1981 for their album One on One. Klugh has recorded over 30 albums, including twenty-three top ten charting records, with five hitting No. 1 on Billboard’s Jazz Album chart.
Each spring, Klugh hosts an event called Weekend of Jazz, featuring jazz musicians at the Broadmoor Hotel & Resort in Colorado Springs, Colorado. The weekend attracts a host of famous musicians and vocalists.
Guitarist and composer Earl Klugh, who was influenced by Bob James, Ray Parker Jr, Wes Montgomery and Laurindo Almeida, has received 13 Grammy nominations, continues to compose, perform and record.
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Requisites
In Action ~ J.R. Monterose and The Joe Abodeely Trio | By Eddie Carter
My next record from the library up for discussion is a little-known but highly sought-after 1964 studio album by tenor saxophonist J.R. Monterose and The Joe Abodeely Trio. In Action (Studio 4 SS 100) was recorded during a ten-month engagement at Iowa’s only jazz club at the time, The Tender Trap, which Abodeely owned. This album, with its historical significance in Monterose’s discography, is a unique release. There were only two hundred fifty original LPs made; fans could only purchase them at the cloakroom of the Cedar Rapids Jazz Club, and an original Mint pressing would cost a collector four figures or more. He was born Frank Anthony Peter Vincent Monterose, Jr. and the initials J.R. come from Jr.
Monterose began playing the clarinet at age thirteen, then took up the tenor sax two years later after hearing tenor man Tex Beneke, who was a member of the Glenn Miller Orchestra. The trio consists of Dale Oehler on the piano, Gary Allen on bass, and Joe Abodeely on drums. My copy is the 1983 U.S. Mono reissue (V.S.O.P. Records V.S.O.P. #1), a small record label known for its high-quality reissues of jazz LPs from the fifties and sixties. Waltz For Claire is a very pretty tune by J.R., starting with a cheerful theme. He continues with a blissful opening statement by the saxophonist, who communicates his feelings about the young lady with a charming performance. Dale takes the listener on a relaxing joyride in the closing solo ahead of the theme’s restatement and close.
I Should Care by Alex Stordahl, Paul Weston and Sammy Cahn premiered in the 1945 film Thrill of a Romance. The quartet begins with Monterose’s sensual sound of his tenor sax, delivering a delicate melody and then handling each note of the opening statement with tender, loving care. Oehler follows with a passionate performance packed with plenty of feeling before J.R. repeats the theme. That You Are, Monterose’s next tune, is a creative reimagining of All The Things You Are, a popular jazz standard. Monterose builds on the changes of the original with an upbeat, bright, bouncy theme. J.R. puts his thoughts into expressive verses first. Dave provides the exclamation point in an energetic solo, leading to the ending theme and fadeout.
The tempo moves upward to kick off the second side with Red Devil by Monterose, beginning at a brisk beat for the quartet’s theme. The saxophonist leads off with a flawless opening solo, and then Oehler dazzles on the finale with an imaginative flair. Lover Man by Jimmy Davis, Roger Ramirez, and James Sherman begins with a pensive melody by the foursome, segueing to J.R.s intimately warm interpretation. Dave responds with a delicately elegant and beautiful presentation. Monterose closes with a few final comments of exquisite softness anchored by Gary and Joe’s subtle supplement ahead of the tender close.
The final track is Monterose’s Herky Hawks, an uptempo tune that deceptively starts with a two-instrument conversation between the saxophonist and pianist at a slow tempo. This musical dialogue sets the stage for the rest of the piece. The discussion gradually builds in intensity, leading to a swift-moving speedy theme. This tune is a scorcher from the start, and the saxophonist turns the heat way up in the first of two solos. Dave attacks the next reading with aggressive fierceness, and then J.R. ends the album with a blistering final performance preceding the climax.
The recording engineers on this reissue are Dimitri Sotirakis and Myron Schiebel. Although there’s no information on either engineer, their work speaks volumes. They’ve done an excellent job with the sound quality of this album, bringing out the richness and depth of the music. The excellent sonics throughout the treble, midrange and bass complement the inspired performances by J.R. Monterose and The Joe Abodeely Trio, making In Action an underrated release deserving a spot in your jazz library!
~ Lover Man – Source: JazzStandards.com
~ I Should Care – Source: Wikipedia.org
© 2024 by Edward Thomas Carter
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Deborah Winters was born on September 15, 1966 in San Francisco, California and her childhood was immersed in music and dance with first influences from her drummer father, and a ballet dancer mother with the Oakland Metropolitan Ballet Company. Developing a passion for music, dance and theatre at a very early age, big band sounds rang through the house.
Moving around the country with her family as an adolescent, Deborah studied voice and guitar. She became influenced by singer/songwriters James Taylor, Joni Mitchell and Rickie Lee Jones. Her desire to sing and play the guitar led her to playing clubs and into the studio to record a few of her own compositions before graduating.
Her musical palate expanded to include jazz standards and contemporary musical forms. Performing around San Francisco she would go on to work with Tony Williams, Bobby McFerrin and his Voicestra group, Frank Martin, and Jose Neto. She released her debut recording, live “in session” on her Pure Passion Productions label. Her sophomore release Inspired, exhibits her introspective side. Her third release centers on big bands, traversing the expanse of jazz history.
Vocalist Deborah Winters continues to search for new ways to express her music in her evolution as a singer, guitarist and songwriter.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Jay Cameron was born in New York City on September 14, 1928. He began as an alto saxophonist but later recorded with bass clarinet, B-flat clarinet, and baritone saxophone. His career began in the early 1940s in Hollywood, California with Isaac M. Carpenter’s band, with whom he played until 1947.
Moving to Europe near the end of the decade he played with Rex Stewart, Bill Coleman, Roy Haynes and Henri Renaud in France and Italy. By the early 1950s Cameron was gigging around Belgium, Germany, and Scandinavia. Returning to Paris, France in 1955 he played steadily with a band that included Bobby Jaspar, Barney Wilen and Jean-Louis Chautemps.
Back in the United States in the mid-Fifties Jay played in the bands of Woody Herman, Chet Baker, Dizzy Gillespie, Maynard Ferguson, Freddie Hubbard, Candido Camero, Bill Barron, André Hodeir, Hal McKusick, and Les and Larry Elgart. In 1960 he played with Slide Hampton, also led the International Sax Band and the Third Herdsmen, and late in the decade, he toured with Paul Winter.
Bass and B-flat clarinetist and baritone saxophonist Jay Cameron died in San Diego, California on March 20, 2001.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Gerald Graham Valentine was born on September 13, 1914 and received formal training in music when he was young, learning piano, composition, and music theory. He learned to play the trombone on his own.
In the early 1940s Jerry composed and arranged for Earl Hines and worked in Chicago with Dallas Bartley, King Kolax and he booked shows for the Club DeLisa. He then joined Billy Eckstine’s band from 1944 to 1947 and worked later in the decade with Wynonie Harris and Buddy DeFranco.
From 1950 to 1952 Valentine was an artist and repertory man for National Records. He played with Gene Ammons in 1954, and in 1958-1959 wrote arrangements for Pepper Adams, Art Farmer, and Coleman Hawkins in the group Prestige Blues Swingers.
Trombonist, composer and arranger Jerry Valentine died in October 1983.
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