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1+1+1 ~ Kenny Barron with Ron Carter and Michael Moore | By Eddie Carter

I’d had a really long week and was looking forward to hearing something soothing, so I turned to one of my favorite pianists, Kenny Barron. Submitted for your approval this morning is an impressive collaboration from 1986. 1+1+1 (BlackHawk Records BKH 50601) has the pianist in the company of two outstanding bassists, Ron Carter (tracks A2, A3, B2, B4), and Michael Moore (tracks A1, A4, B1). This enjoyable album is perfect to listen to whether you need something mellow to accompany your workday, to read along with, or to enjoy during a focused listening session after dinner. The copy I own is the 1986 U.S. Stereo release.

Side One opens with a tune from the twenties, The Man I Love by George and Ira Gershwin. A spirited introduction by Kenny gets the song underway, with Michael joining the melody. The pianist launches into a sizzling solo, pouring radiant energy into each note. Michael takes a short invigorating walk next, preceding the theme’s return and close. United Blues by Ron Carter introduces the bassist in a cheerful performance, beginning with piano and bass sharing the introduction and theme. Barron goes first with some vivacious notes, then Carter steps up for a superb example of choice notes ahead of the closing chorus.

The ensemble enters the thirties next with Prelude to a Kiss by Duke Ellington, Irving Gordon, and Irving Mills. Michael is back on bass as the duo’s introduction leads to a soft, tender melody. Kenny is the song’s only soloist and delivers an interpretation that’s lush and warm, with a touch of beauty, as Moore’s bass shadows him through every verse, into the reprise and the delicate climax. C Jam Blues by Duke Ellington, from 1942, picks up the pace again as Kenny and Michael introduce this old warhorse and present the lively theme. Barron takes the opening solo with a playful bounce, then Moore executes his ideas next. The duo then shares a brief conversation before the ending theme.

Side Two starts with Dave Brubeck’s In Your Own Sweet Way. It’s one of his loveliest compositions from the fifties, and the duo’s beautiful melody sets the tone. Kenny’s opening solo is a lovely demonstration of heartfelt and serene beauty. Michael follows, walking gracefully through the closing statement, leading to the duo’s theme restatement and an elegant ending. Giant Steps by John Coltrane brings Carter back for an upbeat melody with Barron, who continues capturing the sheer joy of this tune in the opening statement. The bassist responds with a cheerfully carefree interpretation that bounces along toward the duo’s culmination.

’Round Midnight by Thelonious Monk, Bernie Hanighen, and Cootie Williams, written in 1944, is Monk’s most famous composition and the jazz standard that has been recorded more than any other. Kenny has the spotlight to himself as he paints a beautiful portrait, soft as an affectionate embrace, from the opening notes to the closing chorus. It’s back to the thirties for the album’s finale, Beautiful Love by Victor Young, Wayne King, Egbert Van Alstyne, and Haven Gillespie. Ron joins Kenny for the upbeat melody. The mood is jubilant from the start of Barron’s opening statement. He then shares the second solo with Carter in a lively conversation that culminates in a splendid reprise and finale.

Don H. Nelson and Karen J. Nelson were the executive producers of this session, and Rudy Van Gelder managed the recording console. The sound quality across the highs, midrange, and bass is astonishing, with superb fidelity that transports the musicians to your listening room. Kenny Barron’s piano consistently captivates, providing a cohesive thread, while Ron Carter and Michael Moore add their own distinctive character to the music. If you’re a fan of jazz piano and in the mood for an album that’s perfect for unwinding after a long day or week, I offer 1+1+1 by Kenny Barron with Ron Carter and Michael Moore for your consideration on your next record shop visit. It’s a terrific album by a jazz master, showcasing remarkable skill and heartfelt expression on every track, and it should become a welcome addition to your library!

~ C Jam Blues, Giant Steps, In Your Own Sweet Way, Prelude To a Kiss, ‘Round Midnight, The Man I Love – Source: JazzStandards.com ~ Beautiful Love – Source: Wikipedia.org © 2026 by Edward Thomas Carter

CALIFORNIA JAZZ FOUNDATION

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Lalo Schifrin was born Boris Claudio Schifrin in Buenos Aires, Argentina on June 21, 1932. At the age of six he began a six-year course of study on piano with Enrique Barenboim and at 16 studied piano with Andreas Karalis and harmony with Argentine composer Juan Carlos Paz. By twenty he was attending the Paris Conservatoire during the day and playing at night in jazz clubs.

1955 saw Lalo playing with Astor Piazzolla and on stage at the International Jazz Festival in Paris. Back in Argentina he formed a jazz orchestra, met Dizzy in ’58 and wrote Gillespiana for his big band. He would go on to work with Xavier Cugat, move to New York, take the piano chair in Dizzy’s quintet and wrote a second extended composition titled, The New Continent.

The Sixties had MGM signing Schifrin to his first movie score, he moved to Hollywood, changed The Man from U.N.C.L.E. to a jazz melody and won an Emmy for the theme. He would go on to score television and movies like Mission Impossible, Mannix, Cool Hand Luke, Dirty Harry, The Exorcist, Bullitt and even ABC’s Eyewitness News.

Over the course of his career Lalo Schifrin has recorded over 50 albums and soundtracks, 90 television and film scores as a leader, composer and conductor; and has worked with Cannonball Adderley, Eddie Harris, Count Basie, Luiz Bonfa, Candido Camera, Louis Bellson, Al Hirt, Jimmy Smith, Sarah Vaughan, Cal Tjader, Paul Horn and many others.

In 1997, the composer founded Aleph Records; played an orchestra conductor in Red Dragon, has had his music sampled by hip-hop artists, has been nominated twenty-one times and won four Grammy Awards, one Cable Ace Award, received six Oscar nominations and has a star on the Hollywood Walk Of Fame.

Pianist, composer, arranger and conductor Lalo Schifrin continued to compose, conduct and perform until his death from complications of pneumonia at a hospital in Los Angeles, California at the age of 93 on June 26, 2025.

 

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Lammar Wright Sr. was born on June 20, 1907 in Texarkana, Texas but grew up in Kansas City, Missouri. He began his musical career playing and recording with Bennie Moten’s band in 1923. Relocating to New York City in 1927 Lammar played with The Missourians, staying with the group after Cab Calloway became its leader. Wright remained Calloway’s lead trumpeter until 1942.

Playing sporadically with Calloway through the rest of the decade, Wright would also played with Don Redman, Claude Hopkins, Cootie Williams, Lucky Millinder, Sy Oliver and Louis Armstrong.

In the 1950s and 1960s he taught music and worked as a studio musician, in addition to recording with Arnett Cobb, Count Basie, the Sauter-Finegan Orchestra and George Shearing.

Wright led his own groups from time to time, had a role in the 1968 film The Night They Raided Minksy’s. Trumpeter Lammar Wright passed away on April 13, 1973 in New York City.

 

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David Alden Lambert was born on June 19, 1917 in Boston, Massachusetts. His band debut was with Johnny Long’s Orchestra in the early 1940s and along with early partner Buddy Stewart; he successfully brought singing into modern jazz, concurrently with Ella Fitzgerald.

In the late 1950s Lambert teamed with wordsmith and vocalese pioneer Jon Hendricks. Annie Ross later joined the two vocalists and the trio lineup was a hit. After Ross left the group in 1962, Lambert and Hendricks went on without her by using various replacements, but the partnership ended in 1964.

Dave formed a quintet called “Lambert & Co.” which included the multiple voices of Mary Vonnie, Leslie Dorsey, David Lucas and Sarah Boatner. The group auditioned for RCA and was documented in a 15-minute documentary entitled Audition at RCA, and the Charlie Parker with Voices. It was one of the last images recorded of Lambert.

Lyricist and jazz singer Dave Lambert, an originator of vocalese best known for his work in Lambert, Hendricks and Ross, and who spent a lifetime experimenting with the human voice and expanding the possibilities of its use in jazz, was struck and killed by a truck on the Connecticut Turnpike while changing a flat tire, passed away on October 3, 1966.

 

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Sammy Cahn was born Samuel Cohen on June 18, 1913 in the lower East side of New York City and began his music career studying the violin. After only three lessons at thirteen years he joined a small Dixieland band called Pals of Harmony, touring the Catskill Mountains summer resorts and play private parties. By16 he was writing his first lyric “Like Niagara Falls, I’m Falling For You” and his songs were being sung on the vaudeville stage by Jack Osterman.

Much of Cahn’s early work was written in partnership with Saul Chaplin writing witty special material for Warner Brothers musical short subjects. They continued to work with then up-and-comers Milton Berle, Danny Kaye, Phil Silvers and Bob Hope. Cahn soon began a partnership with Lou Levy and writing for Jimmie Lunceford, Glen Gray, Tommy Dorsey and eventually teaming with Jimmy Van Heusen and writing for Frank Sinatra.

His impressive career spawned lyrics for Until The Real Thing Comes Along, Love and Marriage, Three Coins In The fountain, I Fall In Love Too Easily, All The Way, I’ll Never Stop Loving You, The Second Time Around and All My Tomorrows among many more.

Cahn was inducted into the Songwriters Hall Of Fame, nominated for 23 Academy Awards, five Golden Globes and an Emmy. He received four Oscars, and had the Sammy Awards created in his honor for movie songs and scores.

Sammy Cahn, best known for his romantic lyrics for film, Broadway and stand alone songs, many of which have become jazz standards, passed away on January 15, 1993 at age 79 in Los Angeles California.

 

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