
The Quarantined Jazz Voyager
As we begin to explore more outings, the Jazz Voyager is still practicing social distancing and mask wearing at gatherings. That said, this week as we continue to see and gather information as to which venues have survived the pandemic, I am pulling from the library the 1981 recording of The Jamfs Are Coming by tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin.
Recorded at a pair of sessions at a small nightclub in Wihelmshaven, Germany, The Blue Note in Pumpwerk provided the settings for these live performances. His explosive original blues, The Jamfs Are Coming, JAMF being an acronym for a well-known but unprintable expression, is a powerful opener recorded in October 1977.
Following an unaccompanied coda, Griffin rapidly shifts gears into a brief up-tempo rendition of Wee Dot, which unfortunately was faded out. The one-minute chorus of the December 1975 Wee is a complete performance that evidently closed a 1975 set. The LP wraps with an inspired December 1977 take of All the Things You Are, in which Griffin dodges the head initially then squeezes in a lick or two from Happy Birthday and a series of other humorous quotes throughout this frenzied 20-minute workout.
The artwork was by Don Diesveld, photography by AnkoWieringa and Hanz Harzheim and was produced by Wim Wigt Productions.
Track List | 38:15- The Jamfs Are Coming (Johnny Griffin) ~ 17:15
- Wee (Denzil Best) ~ 1:00
- All The Things You Are (Oscar Hammerstein II, Jerome Kern) ~ 20:00
- Johnny Griffin ~ Tenor Saxophone
- Rein de Graaff ~ Piano
- Koos Serierse, Henk Haverhoek ~ Bass
- Art Taylor ~ Drums
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Alan Richard James Skidmore was born the son of saxophonist Jimmy Skidmore on April 21, 1942 in London, England. He began his professional career in his teens, and early on toured with comedian Tony Hancock. In the 1960s, he appeared on BBC Radio, then worked with Alexis Korner, John Mayall, and Ronnie Scott.
Starting a band with Harry Miller, Tony Oxley, John Taylor, and Kenny Wheeler, they won awards at the Montreaux Jazz Festival. In the early Seventies, Alan started a saxophone-only band with John Surman and Mike Osborne.
He has worked with Mose Allison, Kate Bush, Elton Dean, Georgie Fame, Mike Gibbs, George Gruntz, Elvin Jones, Van Morrison, Stan Tracey, Charlie Watts, and Mike Westbrook.
Tenor saxophonist Alan Skidmore, who has recorded seventeen albums as a leader, continues to pursue the boundaries of his musc.
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Burton Franklin Bales was born on April 20, 1916 in Stevensville, Montana and began playing piano at age twelve. After moving to the West Coast in the 1930s, he played in hotels and nightclubs. He performed regularly in San Francisco, California in the 1940s, with Lu Watters’s Yerba Buena Jazz Band.
Drafted in 1943 into the Army Burt only had one opportunity to record with that group on a brief session with Bunk Johnson. Discharged for myopia, he led his own band from 1943 to 1946 before taking an extended residency at San Francisco’s 1018 Club.
He played with Turk Murphy at the end of the Forties, then with Bob Scobey and Marty Marsala. Between 1954 and 1966 he played mostly solo, with one of his regular gigs being at Pier 23.
Stride pianist Burt Bales, who recorded extensively for Good Time Jazz, Arhoolie, ABC-Paramount, and Euphonic record labels, transitioned on October 26, 1989 in San Francisco.
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Three Wishes
More girl talk commenced where Nica was able to ask Dinah Washington what her three wishes would be if she was given them. Her reply was:
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“Honey, if I told you, you’d faint! Well, all right. I wish I had three little girls ~ triplets.”
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“Health and happiness for my two boys that I have. The last one is private.”
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Daily Dose Of Jazz…
Richard Cully was born on April 19, 1949 in Manhattan, New York. He began his musical journey at the age of 16 studying with James Rago, Professor of Percussion at the University of Louisville. While still in high school, he formed a very popular quartet, The Charades, then went on to attend Berklee College of Music in Boston, Massachusetts. There he studied with Alan Dawson and continued his studies with former “Tonight Show” drummer Ed Shaughnessy.
Early in his career Dick performed a variety of musical styles, pop, rock, disco, jazz and country. However, in 1982, he formed the Dick Cully Big Band, a high energy, exciting unit performing a wide variety of arrangements for all age groups. In 1984, he became an artist/endorser for the world famous Slingerland Drum Company.
Cully has worked with Toni Tennille, Sandy Duncan, Florence Henderson, Frank Gorshin, Ray Anthony, Buddy Morrow, Skitch Henderson, Patti Page, Nanette Fabray, Les Elgart, Connie Haines, Bobby Rydell, comedians Foster Brooks and George Kirby. In 1989, the Dick Cully Big Band was chosen as “One of the best bands in the nation” by Down Beat magazine and featured on Black Entertainment Network’s “Jazz Discovery” television program.
Recognized as an educator and clinician, he is the author of Instructional Drum Videos The Workout, Secrets of the World’s Greatest Drummer and More Secrets of the World’s Greatest Drummer, which are in-depth analysis of the late Buddy Rich. Drummer Dick Cully continues to perform and lead his band.
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