Review: The Pugilist ~ Bernie Dresel

I wasn’t sure where this album was going when I looked at the cover art. It took me to the boxing rings before they became Vegas events, reminiscent of the radio era of my parents with Joe Louis, Rocky Marciano, Sugar Ray Robinson and Jack Dempsey. This is what big band should sound like. Bernie has brought the heat to this aptly titled recording. He is truly a pugilist as each song makes you feel the punch and excitement of the music. Listening I envisioned people pouring into the arena dressed to kill with all the swagger and sway that a championship fight brings. He definitely does not disappoint with his arrangements of classic tunes and new compositions. Closing out with a vocal is a unique approach and definitely wasn’t expected, but nicely done. It’s a refreshing approach to big band!

carl anthony | notorious jazz | january 10, 2022

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Georg Riedel was born January 8, 1934 in Karlovy Vary, Czechoslovakia, and in 1938, when he was four years old, the family fled to Sweden following the German annexation of the Sudetenland. He attended school in Stockholm, Sweden and at the Adolf Fredrik’s Music School.

The best known recording featuring Riedel is probably Jan Johansson’s Jazz på svenska (Jazz in Swedish), a minimalist-jazz compilation of folk songs recorded between 1962–1963. He recorded with other leading Swedish musicians including trumpeter Jan Allan and Arne Domnérus.

As a composer, George worked almost exclusively writing music for Astrid Lindgren movies, including the main theme from the Emil i Lönneberga (Emil of Maple Hills) movies. He also composed the music for several films by Arne Mattsson in the 1960s as well as for film adaptations of novels by Stig Dagerman.

Double bassist and composer George Riedel, played on Jazz at the Pawnshop in 1977, at 87 continues his involvement with jazz.

Bestow upon an inquiring mind a dose of a Karlovy Vary double bassist to motivate the perusal of the genius of jazz musicians worldwide whose gifts contribute to the canon…

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Dave Schildkraut was born on January 7, 1925 in New York, New York and started playing professionally in 1941, first with Louis Prima. He followed this five year residency with Buddy Rich and Anita O’Day through the end of the decade and into the Fifties.

He moved on to hone his craft further by working with Stan Kenton, Pete Rugolo, Oscar Pettiford, Miles Davis, George Handy, Tony Aless, Ralph Burns, Tito Puente, Johnny Richards, and Kenton again in 1959. During the 1960s, Dave freelanced around New York City, appearing regularly with Eddie Bert at the West End Cafe. Later in his life he went into semi-retirement.

His playing was fluid and brilliant in pure bebop style but Schildkraut only recorded one album as a leader, in 1979. However, the album wasn’t released until 2000 by Endgame Records as Last Date. As a sideman he recorded sixteen albums.

Alto saxophonist Dave Schildkraut, whose style mimicked Charlie Parker but later showed influences of John Coltrane, Warne Marsh and Lee Konitz, transitioned on January 1, 1998 in Darien, Connecticut.

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Chuck Flores was born Charles Walter Flores on January 5, 1935 in Orange, California, and grew up in Santa Ana, California. Best known for his work with saxophonist Bud Shank in the 1950s, he also had a two-year stint with Woody Herman from 1954 to 1955.

Throughout his career Chuck performed and recorded with, among others, Carmen McRae, Art Pepper, Maynard Ferguson, Al Cohn, and Shelly Manne. His drum teacher Manne and others considered him an underrated drummer.

In his later years, Flores became a highly sought after and renowned educator who was a longtime faculty member at Musicians Institute in Los Angeles, California.

A few of his students were Danny Seraphine, Chad Wackerman, John Wackerman, Brooks Wackerman, Ray Mehlbaum, Pete Parada, Jamie Wollam, Jose Ruiz and Zack Stewart.

Drummer Chuck Flores, who was one of the relatively small number of musicians associated with West Coast jazz who were actually from the West Coast, transitioned on November 24, 2016.

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David Lee, Jr. born January 4, 1941 in New Orleans, Louisiana played professionally from his early teens. While serving in the U. S. Army, he was a member in several bands. In 1969, he co-founded the New Orleans Jazz Workshop.

In 1969 Dizzy Gillespie brought Lee into his band and soon after he was working with Roy Ayers in 1971 and Sonny Rollins for three years beginning in 1972. The Rollins recordings were hard swinging but included the plethora of tempos of the Seventies.

Forming a quartet but never recording as a leader, he continued to work as a sideman. On August 4, 2021, drummer and composer David Lee, who recorded Yoshiaki Masuo, Charlie Rouse, Lonnie Liston Smith and Richard Wyands among others, transitioned at 80 years of age.

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