The Quarantined Jazz Voyager

Moods, also referred to as Moods Featuring Paul Quinichette is the 1954 debut album by saxophonist Paul Quinichette. It features compositions and arrangements by Quincy Jones and was released in 1955 on the EmArcy label. The tracks were recorded on two session dates, on November 4th (tracks 5–8) and 22nd (tracks 1–4) 1954 with two different line-ups at Fine Sound Studios in New York City.

The second session featured an Afro-Cuban combo with Herbie Mann on flute and also on tenor saxophone and Latin percussion instead of a drum set. The difference between the two sessions was preserved in splitting the album with the later recorded Latin jazz session on the LP’s A-side, the more straight ahead approach on the other.

Tracks | 40:40 All compositions by Quincy Jones except as indicated

  1. Tropical Intrigue ~ 3:04
  2. Grasshopper ~ 4:02
  3. Dilemma Diablo ~ 4:03
  4. I Can’t Believe That You’re In Love With Me (Jimmy McHugh, Clarence Gaskill) ~ 6:44
  5. Plush Life ~ 7:48
  6. You’re Crying ~ 3:13
  7. Shorty Georgie (Harry Edison, Count Basie) ~ 6:33
  8. Pablo’s Roonie ~ 4:53
Musicians Quincy Jones – arranger for all tracks Tracks 1–4 (Side A of original LP)
  • Paul Quinichette – tenor saxophone
  • Herbie Mann – flute, tenor saxophone
  • Jimmy Jones – piano
  • Al Hall – bass
  • Tommy Lopez – congas
  • Manny Oquendo – bongos
  • Willie Rodriguez – timbales
Tracks 5–8 (Side B of original LP)
  • Paul Quinichette – tenor saxophone
  • Sam Most – flute
  • Sir Charles Thompson – piano
  • Jerome Darr, Barry Galbraith – guitar
  • Paul Chambers – bass
  • Harold Wing – drums

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Jeanie Lambe was born on December 23, 1940 in Glasgow, Scotland. Her mother was a singer and her father played the accordion in the musical act Douglas, Nicol & Lamb. Her first public performances were with her parents and when she was seventeen, she became a member of the Clyde Valley Stompers.

She was the vocalist with the Alex Sutherland Sextet at Elgin’s Two Red Shoes Ballroom, where she kicked off the Two Red Shoes dances at age 19. Moving to London, England in 1960 Jeanie worked with a variety of jazz bands in the area, including those led by Alex Welsh, Kenny Ball and Charlie Galbraith. In 1964 she married tenor saxophonist Danny Moss and became more well known through her extensive performances at international jazz festivals.

Lambe has performed with modern and mainstream jazz musicians including Cliff Hardie and the UK All Stars Orchestra, Bobby Rosengarden, Monty Alexander, Ben Webster, Budd Johnson, Oscar Peterson, Wild Bill Davison, Kenny Davern, Joe Pass and Buddy Tate.

Suffering ill health, vocalist Jeanie Lambe, who recorded seven albums as a leader, passed away on May 29, 2020 in Perth, Australia at the age of 79.

CALIFORNIA JAZZ FOUNDATION

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

John Baptiste “Bat” Mosley was born on December 22, 1893 in Algiers, Louisiana, and was the brother of drummer Edgar Mosley. His father played guitar but began the youngster playing drums at age nine when he gave him a snare drum. He and his father would make money playing around town together.

Bat, however, did not work professionally until about 1923, and started with Tom Albert, then Joe Harris’ Royal Jazz Band, and later with Kid Howard. Throughout his career he also performed regularly with brass bands, including Kid Rena’s, Henry Allen’s, and the Eureka.

Drummer Bat Mosley passed away on July 28, 1965 in Algiers.

CALIFORNIA JAZZ FOUNDATION

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Three Wishes

When asked of his three wishes, Art Blakey responded to the Baroness with these answers:

  1. “I want to play my arse off.”
  2. “To be as happy as my old man.”
  3. “To be as hip as Jim Green.”

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

SUITE TABU 200

 

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Jerome Darr was born on December 21, 1910 in Baltimore, Maryland. His first major professional affiliation was in a jug band, the Washboard Serenaders. The guitarist was a member of this group from 1933 through 1936, a tenure that included a well-received European tour.

He had an incredibly versatile and prolific career. He showed up on sessions from blues to bebop and even strummed a few arpeggios behind Frankie Lymon & the Teenagers.

Though Jerome was not hiding in a closet during the ’40s, the guitarist simply focused on work as a studio musician during an era when the efforts of such players went largely uncredited. He was a player in the classic jazz context of Buddy Johnson’s band in the early ’50s, or was working with the much more modernistic Charlie Parker during roughly the same period.

He played on some 20 recording sessions between 1935 and 1973, though to his credit or noncredit, his playing included  many other styles besides jazz. In his final years, Darr was mostly swinging in the busy band of trumpeter Jonah Jones, in a sense coming full circle with the type of playing he had started out with.

Guitarist Jerome Darr passed away on October 29, 1986 in Brooklyn, New York.

CALIFORNIA JAZZ FOUNDATION

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