Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Klaus Doldinger was born on May 12, 1936 in Berlin, Germany. By age eleven he entered a Dusseldorf conservatory originally studying piano and then clarinet, graduating in 1957. During his student years, he gained professional performing experience in 1953 with the German Dixieland band The Feetwarmers, recording with them in 1955. Later that same year he founded Oscar’s Trio, modeled on Oscar Peterson’s work.

During the 1960s Klaus worked as a tenor saxophonist, working with visiting American jazz musicians and recording in his own right. Doldinger is perhaps best known for his film scores to the acclaimed German U-boat film Das Boot and The Never Ending Story. He was an honored recipient of the Bavarian Film Awards in 1997.

Doldinger created a recurring jazz project Passport in 1971 that mirrors Weather Report and still enjoys huge success in Germany. He has worked with Johnny Griffin, Brian Auger, Ernst Stroer, Pete York and Michael Hornek among others. Saxophonist Klaus Doldinger died on the evening of October 16, 2025 at his home in Icking, Germany at the age of 89.

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After Lights Out ~ Tubby Hayes Quintet | By Eddie Carter

This morning’s spotlight shines on a 1956 release by the Tubby Hayes Quintet, After Lights Out (Tempo TAP 6). It was Tubby’s seventh release as a leader, showcasing his growing influence in jazz. Teddy was born on January 30, 1935, in St. Pancras, London, and grew up in the Raynes Park neighborhood in the southwest of the city. His father, a talented violinist at the BBC studios, started teaching him the instrument when he was very young. By the time he was ten, he was also playing the piano, and at eleven, he took up the tenor saxophone. One of his earliest musical inspirations was the trumpeter Dizzy Gillespie. He’s joined on this date by Dickie Hawdon on trumpet, Harry South on piano, Peter Elderfield on bass and Bill Eyden on drums. The copy I own is the 2011 Japanese limited-edition mono reissue, sharing the original catalog number.

Side One kicks off with Ode to Ernie by Harry South. The quintet brings this upbeat tune to life with their brisk melody. Hawdon leads the way with a spirited solo, then Hayes takes the next performance for a lively ride. Young adds the exclamation mark with a concise comment before the ensemble returns for the closing chorus, including a short remark by Eyden. No, I Woodyn’t by Tubby Hayes is built on the changes of “Woody ‘n You,” by Dizzy Gillespie, and the group begins with a Latin-flavored theme. Tubby sinks his teeth into the opening statement, then Hawdon follows with a happy tone that’s sure to get your toes tapping. Young takes the reins next and delivers a delightful performance. Both horns share a short conversation with Eyden before his first solo of the set ahead of the closing ensemble.

Up next is Foolin’ Myself, a beautiful and little-known ballad by Jack Lawrence and Peter Tinturin. The front line takes the lead for a warm, affectionate melody. Hawdon opens with a thoughtfully tender solo, then Hayes unfolds a sensuously sweet statement, while the rhythm section provides a lush foundation, leading into the gentle reprise and close. The first side ends with a lightly swinging rendition of Nicole by Howard McGhee. The quintet sets the song’s tone with the easy-flowing theme. Hayes comes out cooking in the opening solo, then Hawdon builds on what Hayes began with a few attractive ideas. Young takes charge next in the third statement, then steps aside for Hayes and Hawdon, who engage in a brief exchange. The full ensemble returns for the theme’s reprise, during which Eyden has a short workout.

The quintet opens the second side with Message to the Messengers by Harry South, a leisurely-paced melody that gets things started. Hayes is up first with a bluesy interpretation that gets things off to a good start. Hawdon takes over on muted trumpet and provides a tremendous compliment to the saxophonist. Young brings out the best in the third reading, and Elderfield makes a brief point during the theme’s restatement. Hall Hears The Blues by Harry South is the pianist’s tribute to Tony Hall’s Record Mirror weekly jazz column. The trio’s introduction and melody segues into Young’s opening statement. Hayes follows with a model of melodic creativity; next, Hawdon treats us to authentic down-home cooking in a soulful solo. The front line shares a carefree exchange before Elderfield has the last word, before the group takes the song out.

Tony Hall supervised the session and wrote the album’s liner notes. Bert Steffens was behind the dials of the recording console. The album’s sound quality is superb, with a stunning soundstage that transports listeners to the studio where the musicians are performing. Tubby Hayes amassed a large discography as a leader and worked with many elite musicians, including co-leading The Jazz Couriers with Ronnie Scott. If you’re in the mood for an excellent hard bop album by one of the best British saxophonists, I offer for your consideration After Lights Out by the Tubby Hayes Quintet, the next time you’re out record-shopping. It’s a terrific album to enjoy with family and friends after dinner, or to have on hand for a quiet moment alone after the lights are out!

© 2026 by Edward Thomas Carter

CALIFORNIA JAZZ FOUNDATION

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Joe Ford was born on May 7, 1947 in Buffalo, New York and was singing in his mother and aunt’s family choir by age 5. At seven he started taking piano lessons and by the time he was eleven he started playing saxophone. In high school and college Joe played in a variety of campus jazz and funk bands.

Ford studied saxophone under Makanda Ken McIntyre, Jackie McLean and Frank Foster, and percussion under Joe Chambers. After graduating from Ohio’s Central State University He returned home to teach in the Buffalo public schools from 1968 to 1972. It was while working at the Buffalo Public Library in 1974 that Joe played in the Birthright Ensemble, and then would go on to join McCoy Tyner in 1976, recording eight albums with him through 1993.

Since the early 1980s Ford worked extensively as a sideman with Sam Jones, Lester Bowie, Jimmy Owens, Idris Muhammad, Abdullah Ibrahim, Chico O’Farrill, Avery Sharpe, Jerry Gonzalez, Malachi Thompson, Steve Berrios, Nova Bossa Nova and Freddy Cole amongst others.

In the late 1990s he led two ensembles, the Black Art Sax Quartet and a big band called The Thing. As a leader, saxophonist Joe Ford released his one album in 1993, “Today’s Night” on Blue Moon Records featuring Charles Fambrough, Kenny Kirkland and Jeff “Tain” Watts.

Saxophonist Joe Ford continued to perform and tour until his death on May 25, 2025, at the age of 78..

 

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Hayes Pillars was born on April 30, 1906 in North Little Rock, Arkansas and began playing tenor saxophone as a teenager. Playing locally around Little Rock and Jackson, Tennessee initially, Hayes joined the territory band of Alphonse Trent in 1927. A year later he was back freelancing until he united with his boyhood friend James Jeter and organized the Jeter-Pillars Orchestra in Cleveland, Ohio.

Pillars secured a six-week engagement in 1934 at the Club Plantation in St. Louis, becoming so popular that they stayed for eleven years. The band was so influential that some of its players who held tenure were Walter Page, Sid Catlett, Jo Jones, Kenny Clarke, Jimmy Forrest, Charlie Christian, Jimmy Blanton and an 18 year old Harry “Sweets” Edison, who all went on to make names for themselves.

The orchestra would play New York and Chicago prior to Pillars leaving the orchestra. He then became a mainstay on the St. Louis scene for nearly three decades from the 1950s till his retirement in the Eighties. He was honored for his contributions to jazz by the Institute for Jazz Studies at Rutgers University and the Smithsonian Institute in 1981.

Tenor saxophonist and bandleader Hayes Pillars passed away on August 11, 1992 in Richmond Heights, Missouri.

 

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Tommy Smith was born April 27, 1967 in Edinburgh, Scotland and grew up in Wester Hailes. Encouraged to lean the tenor saxophone from age 12, by sixteen he had a scholarship to Berklee College of Music. While at Berklee he formed his first group ”Forward Motion” with Laszlo Gardony, Ian Froman and Tene Gewelt and joined Gary Burton’s group.

During his tenure with Burton at age eighteen he toured and recorded “Whiz Kids”, worked in jazz groups and big bands, and has recorded and toured with world-renowned jazz musicians including Joe Lovano, David Liebman, Benny Golson, Joe Locke, Chick Corea, Tommy Flanagan, John Scofield, Joanne Brackeen, Jack DeJohnette and Kenny Wheeler to name a few.

He has recorded twenty-three albums as a leader Hep, GFM, Linn, Blue Note and his own record label Spartacus and since the late-1980s and the musical director and driving force behind the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra and his own Youth Jazz Orchestra.

He has composed for and performed with classical orchestras and ensembles including the Orchestra of St. John’s Square, the Scottish Ensemble, the Edinburgh Youth Orchestra, BBC Symphony Orchestra and the Scottish National Jazz Orchestra. His work in jazz education has him presenting master classes all over the world, teaching at Broughton High School, Napier University and created the curriculum for the National Jazz institute and is Artistic Director of a new conservatoire-level course in jazz at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama. He continues to perform, record and tour.

 

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