Three Wishes

When the ladies got together for a bit of girl talk Pannonica put for the th question of three wishes to Pearl Bailey who responded to her inquiry with this answer:

    1. “I only need one. I wish that humans would learn to live together with love, and then they wouldn’t need the other two wishes.”

    *Excerpt from Three Wishes: An Intimate Look at Jazz Greats ~ Compiled and Photographed by Pannonica de Koenigswarter

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    Daily Dose Of Jazz…

    Clotilde Rullaud was born March 1, 1978 in Reims, France and was immersed in the performing arts of music, theatre and dance from early childhood. At five, she began studying flute and singing at the conservatoire, before going on to complete her studies in jazz and improvised music at IACP in Paris, France and EDIM in Cachan, France. She explored opera singing with the tenor singer, Peterson Cowan.

    Her musical identity developed through her travels through the Balkans, Ireland, Lebanon, the United States. Clotilde’s study of vocal techniques, inspired by Meredith Monk, fado, tango, Romani music, Turkish music, Persian music, Inuit throat singing and Bulgarian voices were also great influences.

    She has recorded three albums as a vocalist and flutist, her 2007 debut with Hugo Lippi, Live au 7 Lézards  She has also directed and produced a short film, and written and directed a multidisciplinary performance. With a repertoire spanning jazz, free improvisation and folk music, her career as a musician has led her to perform in France, Germany, Australia, Burkina Faso, China, South Korea, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Switzerland, Taiwan, the United Kingdom and the United States.

    Since 2007, Rullaud has taught at Martina A. Catella’s school, Les Glotte-Trotters in Paris, and conducted workshops for the festival Les Suds in Arles and for the Ateliers d’ethnomusicologie (ADEM) in Geneva, Switzerland. Moving to New York City in 2017 she collaborated with American pianist Chris McCarthy, producing Pieces of a Song, a repertoire of dark and beautiful pieces based on the writings of Diane di Prima, poetess of the Beat Generation.

    She has performed with Olivier Hutman, Dano Haider, Antoine Paganotti, Tristan Macé, Albin Lebossé, Emmanuel Bex, Yann Cléry, Laurent Salzard, Gautier Garrigue, and Alexandre Saada, the latter collaboration produced A Woman’s Journey, a homage to American female protest songstresses.

    She has received numerous awards for her work in both jazz and film. Vocalist, flutist and composer Clotilde Rulllaud, who is also an artistic director, filmmaker, producer and facilitator, continues to pursue the limits of her creativity.

    CALIFORNIA JAZZ FOUNDATION

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    Svend Asmussen was born on February 28, 1916 in Copenhagen, Denmark into a musical family. He started taking violin lessons at the age of seven and by 16 he first heard recordings by jazz violinist Joe Venuti and began to emulate his style. He started working professionally as a violinist, vibraphonist, and singer at 17, leaving his formal training behind for good.

    Early in his career he worked in Denmark and on cruise ships, with artists such as Josephine Baker and Fats Waller. Asmussen later was greatly influenced by Stuff Smith, whom he met in Denmark. During World War II he played with Valdemar Eiberg and Kjeld Bonfils, during which time jazz had moved to the underground and served as a form of political protest.

    The late 1950s saw Svend forming the successful trio Swe-Danes with singer Alice Babs and guitarist Ulrik Neumann. The group gained a dance hall reputation and toured the United States. He worked with Benny Goodman, Lionel Hampton, and Duke Ellington. Asmussen was invited by Ellington to play on his Jazz Violin Session recording in 1963 with Stéphane Grappelli and Ray Nance.

    In 1966, Asmussen performed alongside Grappelli, Stuff Smith, and Jean-Luc Ponty in a jazz Violin Summit in Switzerland, appeared at the ‘67 Monterey Jazz Festival,and guested on Snakes in a Hole, an album by the jazz-rock band, Made in Sweden.

    Actively playing violin at the age of 94, he became a centenarian in 2016, and his collection of jazz music, photographs, posters and other material is held in the jazz collections at the University Library of Southern Denmark. Violinist Svend Asmussen transitioned peacefully in his sleep on February 7, 2017.

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    Requisites

    The Chase ~ Gene Ammons & Dexter Gordon | By Eddie Carter

    Throughout the chronicles of jazz, there have been many great tenor sax duos who have recorded some legendary battle albums that are among some of the greatest records ever made. Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt, Arnett Cobb and Buddy Tate, Al Cohn and Zoot Sims, Dexter Gordon and Wardell Gray, Coleman Hawkins and Don Byas, Illinois Jacquet and Lester Young to name a few. This morning’s choice from the library is an exciting live date by Gene Ammons (A1, B1, B2) and Dexter Gordon (A1, A2, B1). The Chase (Prestige PRST 10010) was recorded live at the North Park Hotel before an enthusiastic audience on the afternoon and evening of July 26, 1970, during Gordon’s cross-country tour. The quintet is anchored by Jodie Christian (A1, B1), John Young (A2, B2) on piano, Rufus Reid (A1, B1), Cleveland Eaton (A2, B2) on bass, Wilbur Campbell (A1, B1), Steve McCall (A2, B2) on drums, and Vi Redd (B1) on vocals. My copy used in this report is the original 1971 Stereo album.

    Side One opens with the title tune, The Chase is Dexter Gordon’s uptempo tribute to the great tenor duels beginning with a high-spirited, energetic theme. Dexter has the lead solo and produces an exceptionally high level of creativity including his famous big top circus quotes. Gene delivers an aggressive workout on the next reading, then Jodie swings strongly on a brief statement. Wilbur gets the final word in a vigorous conversation with both horns into the lively finale. Polka Dots and Moonbeams by Jimmy Van Heusen and Johnny Burke is a quartet tune with Young, Eaton, McCall, and Dexter as the solitary horn. The quartet starts with a slow-paced, sensuous melody by Gordon, who picks up the pace slightly on the subtly stated first solo. Young follows with a luxuriously, lovely statement, then Dexter delivers a few more rhythmically relaxing verses into the elegant ending and appreciative approval of the audience.

    Lonesome Lover Blues is a mid tempo reworking of Blowing The Blues Away by Billy Eckstine and George Valentine. Both Gene and Dexter decided to do a new vocal version utilizing the talents of Vi Redd who was in the audience during their set. Vi gives the crowd and listener an imaginative improvised vocal with Christian, Reid, and Campbell returning to the stage. Gordon and Ammons exchange a few choruses before Dexter takes an extended interpretation. Gene gets busy on the next performance and Jodie lays down a soulful groove preceding both horns returning for the finale. The Happy Blues by Art Farmer debuted on Hi Fidelity Jam Session (1956), and Gene is the lone horn backed by Young, Eaton, and McCall. John opens with a swinging solo segueing into Gene’s invigorating opening chorus and first statement. Cleveland takes a short reading before the quartet’s vivacious finale and the crowd’s ovation.

    The Chase was produced by Joe Segal, founder of The Jazz Showcase and one of the best places to hear jazz in Chicago. The man behind the dials is Leon Kelert who has worked on blues and jazz albums for Blackbird, Delmark Records, and G.H.B. Records. The sound quality on the album is quite good with the instruments providing an impressive treble, midrange, and bass soundstage that transports the listener to the audience as each performance is happening. Dexter Gordon is at his peak, and Gene Ammons is in exquisite form throughout. The stellar musicianship of their bandmates makes The Chase a splendid choice to add to your jazz library and well worth the listening time, once you do!

    ~ Hi Fidelity Jam Session (Prestige PRLP 7039/PRST 7654) – Source: Discogs.com ~ Polka Dots and Moonbeams – Source: JazzStandards.com © 2022 by Edward Thomas Carter

    *The remastered cd added two bonus tracks not on the original album ~ Wee Dot & Ballad Medley

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    Abe Most was born on February 27, 1920 in New York City, New York. He began his career in 1939 as a member of Les Brown’s Big Band. After serving three years in the Army during World War II beginning in 1942, he became a member of Tommy Dorsey’s Big Band.

    Most made a few albums with smaller labels between 1946 and 1984, including Superior, Trend, Annunciata and Camard. His last two albums were Abe Most Live! and I Love You Much Too Much.

    He was a studio musician for seven decades, recording on albums by Ted Gärdestad, Dick Haymes, Randy Newman, Dory Previn, Laurindo Almeida, Dominic Frontiere, Henry Mancini, Peggy Lee, Carmen McRae, Ray Conniff, and George Shearing, as well as Joni Mitchell, Cher, Earth, Wind & Fire, and B. B. King among others. He can also be heard playing on the soundtrack of the film How to Marry a Millionaire.

    Clarinetist Abe Most, the older brother of flautist Sam Most, recorded three albums as a leader and thirty-one as a sideman, transitioned on October 10, 2002.

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