Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Charles Frederic Ramsey, Jr. was born on January 29, 1915 in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Taking his BA at Princeton University in 1936, then went to work at Harcourt Brace in the late Thirties. The early Forties had him at the United States Department of Agriculture and Voice of America.

With Charles Edward Smith, Ramsey wrote Jazzmen in 1939, an early landmark of jazz scholarship particularly noted for its treatment of the life of King Oliver. After receiving Guggenheim fellowships, he visited the American South in the middle of the 1950s to make field recordings and do interviews with rural musicians, some of which were used in releases by Folkways Records and in a 1957 documentary, Music of the South.

He curated an anthology of early jazz recordings for Folkways, titled simply Jazz. Ramsey worked with the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers University from 1970. He researched Buddy Bolden’s life with a grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities and continued with a Ford Foundation grant. He presented early jazz interviews on National Public Radio in 1987. The writer of jazz and record producer Charles Ramsey passed away on March 18, 1995 in Paterson, New Jersey.

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Three Wishes

When asked what his three wishes would be, Paul Wheaton said:

  1. “Good health.”
  2. “To get close to myself.”
  3. “To play whatever I feel.”

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

GRIOTS GALLERY

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Charlie Holmes was born on January 27, 1910 near Boston, Massachusetts. He began playing alto saxophone at age 16 and emulated the style of his childhood friend, Johnny Hodges. He began playing professionally a week later and after moving to New York City he worked for a variety of groups, including Luis Russell in 1928.

Between 1929 and 1930 he recorded with Red Allen and is best known for composing Sugar Hill Function. He would work with Russell again a few times and in 1932 joined the Mills Blue Rhythm Band. He was a member of John Kirby’s Sextet, Cootie Williams’ Orchestra, and Louis Armstrong’s band for much of the next two decades. He left music in 1951 and did not return for twenty years, only to work in Clyde Bernhardt’s Harlem Blues & Jazz Band and later played for the Swedish band Kustbandet.

Never taking on the role of a leader in any recording or group, swing era saxophonist Charlie Holmes, who also played clarinet and oboe for the Boston Civic Symphony Orchestra, passed away on September 19, 1985 in Stoughton, Massachusetts.

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Requisites

Another Git Together is a studio album by the Jazztet, led by trumpeter and flugelhorn player Art Farmer and tenor saxophonist Benny Golson. It features performances recorded in 1962 and originally released on the Mercury label. It was the band’s last recording for 20 years. Kay Norton was the producer and Tommy Nola was the recording engineer for the studio session recorded on May 28 (tracks: B2, B3) and June 21, (tracks: A1-A3, B1) 1962 at Nola’s Penthouse Sound Studios, New York City.

Tracks | 34:28

  1. Space Station (Grachan Moncur III) ~ 5:10
  2. Domino (Don Raye, Jacques Plante, Louis Ferrari) ~ 6:58
  3. Another Git Together (Jon Hendricks, Pony Poindexter) ~ 6:12
  4. Along Came Betty (Benny Golson) ~ 5:24
  5. This Nearly Was Mine (Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II) ~ 6:20
  6. Reggie (Golson) ~ 4:24
Personnel
  • Art Farmer – trumpet, flugelhorn
  • Benny Golson – tenor saxophone
  • Grachan Moncur III – trombone
  • Harold Mabern – piano
  • Herbie Lewis – bass
  • Roy McCurdy – drums
Review by Eddie Carter

Led by two titans of jazz, Another Git Together is their second album for Mercury Records and sixth as a group. The album takes flight with a trip to the Space Station by Grachan Moncur III, an uptempo burner with a scintillating melody by the sextet. The pace slows to mid~tempo for Domino, a French composition which was written in 1950 by Don Raye, Jacques Plante, and Louis Ferrari. The title track, Another Git Together is a soulful midtempo blues by Jon Hendricks and Pony Poindexter which comes to life and ends with a dialogue between the trio which slowly fades into oblivion to end the first side. Along Came Betty opens the second side and is one of Benny Golson’s timeless jazz standards. The Jazztet delivers the melody at a leisurely easy pace (that’s slightly faster than the original recording), stepping aside for the lead solo by Mabern who rolls with relaxing verses that are well matched to the gorgeous groundwork of Lewis and McCurdy. This Nearly Was Mine was written in 1949 by Oscar Hammerstein II and Richard Rodgers, making its debut in their Broadway musical, South Pacific which premiered that year and later reappears in the 1958 film version as well. Farmer is back on flugelhorn and leads the ensemble through the melody of this pretty waltz at a livelier pace than normally heard. The last track is Reggie, a cheerful original by Benny that’s named for his second son and a perfect vehicle for improvisation as the sextet illustrates in unison on the opening chorus.

Source: Jazztracks by Eddie Carter | Excerpt: 1/2019 | atlantaaudioclub.org

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Daily Dose Of Jazz…

Walter Page Cavanaugh was born in Cherokee, Kansas on January 26, 1922 who began on piano at age nine and played with Ernie Williamson’s band in 1938–39 before moving to Los Angeles, California and joining the Bobby Sherwood band at age 20.

While serving in the military during World War II, he met guitarist Al Viola and bassist Lloyd Pratt, with whom he formed a trio. After the war’s end they performed together in the style of the Nat King Cole Trio, scoring a number of hits in the late 1940s, including The Three Bears, Walkin’ My Baby Back Home, and All of Me.

The trio appeared in the films A Song Is Born, Big City, Lullaby of Broadway with Doris Day and Romance on the High Seas, Day’s first film, in 1948. He recorded dozens of tracks with Doris Day, Frank Sinatra, Dinah Shore, June Christy, Mel Torme and other legendary singers.

In the early 1950s, Cavanaugh had a program, Page Pages You, on the short-lived Progressive Broadcasting System. Additionally, the trio played on Frank Sinatra’s radio program, Songs by Sinatra, and on The Jack Paar Show.

Cavanaugh played in Los Angeles, California nightclubs through the 1990s, both in a trio setting, with Viola for many years and as a septet, Page 7. He recorded with Bobby Woods & Les Deux Love Orchestra. He recorded for MGM, Capitol, RCA, Star Line, Tiara, and Dobre Records over the course of his career, releasing his final trio album, Return to Elegance, in 2006. Pianist Page Cavanaugh passed away on December 19, 2008 of kidney failure.

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