The liner notes of the 1958 Newport recording says: "Duke, who had been complimented so effectively all evening, paid his own compliment to Gerry Mulligan by writing a duet for Mulligan and Harry Carney, the two premier baritone saxophonists of jazz. Gerry, who made several appearances at this year's festival, including one with Marian McPartland paying tribute to Ellington earlier in the evening, came back on stage in his red jacket at this point in the programme and he and Harry took their places at the front of the stage to play Prima bara dubla, which is probably limp Spanish for a couple of first-class baritone sax men. It became a highlight of the concert and an honour both to Gerry and to Duke."
Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Ad-Lib#3: Prima Bara Dubla
The liner notes of the 1958 Newport recording says: "Duke, who had been complimented so effectively all evening, paid his own compliment to Gerry Mulligan by writing a duet for Mulligan and Harry Carney, the two premier baritone saxophonists of jazz. Gerry, who made several appearances at this year's festival, including one with Marian McPartland paying tribute to Ellington earlier in the evening, came back on stage in his red jacket at this point in the programme and he and Harry took their places at the front of the stage to play Prima bara dubla, which is probably limp Spanish for a couple of first-class baritone sax men. It became a highlight of the concert and an honour both to Gerry and to Duke."
Sunday, November 6, 2011
Radio Hawkins#12
Monday, November 16, 2009
Thursday, November 12, 2009
Mulligan Meets Bird

"Bird used to invite me to play. Do you know one of the things Bird did to me at the time of that first concert? [A Parker-Gillespie concert in Philadelphia in 1945, also featuring the Elliot Lawrence orchestra.] Well he came over with Diz. They came over to the studio, 'cause Saturday afternoons we did the network show. And of all things, I wasn't playing in the band at that time. But a week before the concert was to take place, I said to the band in rehearsal one day, “Why don't one of you guys do me a favor, break a leg or something so I can play the show instead.” And they all laughed ho-ho-ho, you know, what a kid. It was a kind of semi-political job. There were a lot of cats in the band there that were merely there because it was the best job in town, and they were the best friends of such and such an officer at the union. It's all that kind of cliquish thing, which really was dreadful for the music and made for dreadful personality of the band as a whole. It was just a little peculiar. So I was a kid, and a lot of the guys—they liked me and all, and they liked my music. But they always treated me a little shitty, because Elliot was a friend of mine. Say what is this? Like being a friend of the leader. To them it's like sucking up to the leader. Oh, shit. Elliot and I were close to the same age, and we liked each other. So we hung around together. I said to the guys, “Why doesn't someone break a leg.” So, Saturday morning, the day of the concert, Elliot called me up, frantic. Said, “Gerry, please, bring your tenor with you today. Frank Lewis [one of the tenor players] tripped on his child's roller skate on the stairs and broke his wrist.” Well, I get into the studio with my horn, and the guys are lookin' at me like this.
We play the afternoon network show, and Diz and Bird came by and visited, and I met Bird then, and we talked, and he said, “After the show bring your tenor over,” to—what was it?—the Downbeat behind the Earle. Said, “Bring your horn back there and play.” Said, “I wouldn't presume to play with you. Don't be ridiculous.” He said, “Just bring your horn.” Ordered me like, being very imperious.
So we played the concert, and after that we went over to the Downbeat, and I went in and put my horn in the cloak room. And Bird played, and Don Byas was there, at the Downbeat. Say, you can imagine I'm going to get my horn out and play on the bandstand with Charlie Parker and Don Byas? Forget it! Plus a couple of pretty good Philadelphia guys, could tear it up pretty well. And I sounded terrific at home in the living room, but this was a little beyond me.
And I listened for a couple of sets, and then I told Bird—because he was in his element, every inch the king and table-hopping, and everybody making a fuss over him—I went over to where he was and said, “Bird, I really enjoyed it and I'm awfully glad to have met you and all this, but I got to go now.” He said, “What? You’re going? Wait a minute.” I said, “No.” He said, “Well, you gotta play!” I said, “Bird, please! Don't put me through that. It would be too embarrassing. Forget it.” He goes over to the cloak room, gets my horn, goes up to the bandstand—all of this very ostentatious. Opens the goddamned thing, gets the horn out, puts it together and says, “Here. Now. O.K. Let's play.”
And he made me play with him. And he was terrific because he gave me the confidence in myself that I lacked. Unfortunately for my confidence up to that point, some of the guys that I knew in Philadelphia, the attitude towards me was, “Well, man, you don't play very well. But, uh, you can write. What do you want to worry about playin'?” They'd like me to come around and listen to them play. But, don't bring my horn. So Bird was really the first one that ever encouraged me to play.
He was always like that. In many ways Bird was much older than I was because the way he had grown up. He grew up around music and around musicians. And also the accomplishment that he had done in music and on his horn. The eight years or so that he was older than I, were a tremendous eight years. Tremendous difference. At that age it is anyway, plus the experience. It was a thing which, especially with Bird coming along, there's some dividing line between something that really is music as an ideal, rather than just ordinary music. And there was something that—it's maybe the hardest thing in the world for me to define, and I guess in a way I try to avoid having to define it—but there are certain people that made music that is on just another level altogether. Now, in this day and age, that's not the most popular concept to have because, what happens to your great concepts of democracy, equality, and all the rest of it. Well, there ain't any in art. What makes one man so much greater than anything around him? And the greatness is contained in some kind of conception that—it's just different. There was a different kind of presence to Bird's music. When Bird played, it achieved some kind of response, and everybody responded to it. So we know there's something special going on, here. Prez had that, too. Specially in the context of the Basic band. It just was another element. It wasn't contained in anybody else's music. You run into that damn seldom in popular music. And yet there are a number of times that I have experienced that but I don't think, ever, as strongly as with Charlie Parker.
There was one week that I worked with Charlie at the Apollo Theatre. I worked it with the group that was based around a string band, with some incredibly stupid string section. I think three violins, a viola, and cello. The very pedestrianness of the arrangements made the absolute perfect foil for Bird. 'Cause later on guys wrote more interesting arrangements, and the things were not nearly as effective. By the very simplicity of the arrangements, it was a better framework to hear Bird do what he could do. He'd play a bloody melody and would elevate it into something that was art. This was the string section plus we had, I think, three brass and three saxophones to play the acts, and Bird asked me to write a couple of charts. I wrote “Rocker” for him. And the theme song that we never did ultimately record. He used to love to do it with the strings. I did a thing called “Roundhouse” that was based on the chords of “Out of Nowhere.” At the end of the first chorus it was in one key, I forget whether it was in E-flat and went to G, or G and went to E-flat. But at the end of the first chorus I'd have a four-bar break and then the key change. So Bird has got the modulation. But he'd come roaring out of that first chorus, roarin', man, and he'd start doing that curlycue thing he would do [scats two chord changes]. O.K., say the band comes in at bar one. Well, he would finish the modulation on the fifth bar. And he would take that goddamned thing, man, it just made my hair stand on end. The number of ways he could use this idea in his head. To get to the fifth bar. “Out of Nowhere”—that's a lovely change. If it's in G, G for two bars, then E-flat 7th for two bars. It's a lovely, lovely thing. But, to hear him do that as a blowing device, and to hear him use it in so many different ways. 'Cause he loved to suspend—a thing like that—to suspend turnarounds and get up over the bar lines. Bird has two really famous ones like that. One is “Night in Tunisia.” But still the most impressive thing, I think, single performance anybody ever did has got to be “Ko Ko.” That last phrase that he played is just incredible. 'Cause that's the curlycue business. It's circular, and it always keeps goin'. He keeps moving it a little later and later, and when it lights, it's always such a pleasant, satisfying surprise.
But anyway, that experience with Bird at the Apollo for a week doing four or five shows a day, and hearing Bird, I learned more about what I wanted from the sound of the saxophone at that point. Because he would be blowing, and you could hear the sound bounce off the back wall of the theater. The sound became a visual experience. You could see that—and big. His sound was perfect that week. Just the tone quality itself, because a lot of times he would not spend any time with reeds and mouthpieces, and borrow horns and all that. And sometimes it just sounded dreadful. And I was not one of these people who said just because it was Bird it sounded good, man. When he sounded awful, he sounded awful. And pick up a horn with a dry reed. You've got to take care of the mechanics of any instrument, including Charlie Parker having to do it. But that week he had it together. The mouthpiece and reed and everything was there. And that experience of hearing a sound produced on an instrument—the big, round quality. To hear him play these same pieces show after show, and play things differently, each one a gem, for an entire week. He just was incredible."
*
Thursday, October 8, 2009
Gerry Mulligan & Art Farmer at Newport (1958)

I'll never forget my first encounter with Gerry Mulligan. When my friend, Ali-Reza Poodat, brought 16 year-old Ehsan a VHS tape from Europe, recorded from a German or Dutch TV channel, consists of a jazz documentary called “Jazz on a summer’s day” - a great jazz document with lots of lively cinematic innovations -- and 30 minutes of an Ella Fitzgerald concert in London with Tommy Flanagan, where she sang in all styles of music from Dixieland to classical, from bop to rock with incredible proficiency and charm.
And here they are, ready to blow in Newport for one of the most memorable jazz performances in the history of festival. Gerry Mulligan, five years after hitch-hiking to L. A. and establishing his pianoless quartet with Chet Baker; Art Farmer 2 years after dissolution of his quartet with Gigi Gryce (in N. Y. C.).

The air is filled with magic, smoke and chatter. On the stand a quartet rackets through “Catch as can”. While Art Farmer is playing, the skinny red-haired Gerry nodding his head slightly and smiles with gratification. The people who put the label "cool" on this kind of music are completely unaware of the artistic anxiety that one can hear in pieces like “catch as can”.
Gerry was playing the most exciting music I had heard till that time with an incredible attack and mesmerizing control on fast phrases. His dialogue with fellow trumpeter was like a succinct conversation between two Jean Pierre Melville protagonist; terse and moving.
As long as I remember in Bert Stern's film, camera never shows bassist Bill Crow and drum accompany of Dave Bailey, but both of them are perfect musicians for the set, and even now I think they are better match for Mulligan's pianoless quartet than his previous one with Chet.
Along with “Take the "A" train” or Billie Holiday's interpretation of “autumn in New York”, “Catch as can” is one of my all time favorite tunes. It's a perfect vehicle for Gerry's sound, speed and his unique baritone accent on fast tempo pieces(It was after this successful round-up that for the first time they went to Columbia studios to record “What is there to say?,” one of Mulligan's best recordings of the late 1950s. most of the materials come from Newport gig).
Technically there are moments of drop-out and distortion from a non-professional live recording, but the excitement and flawlessness of performance make you to forget everything else. And if you want to hear Mulligan on keyboard, he switches to piano for "Spring Is Sprung."

News From Blueport
Gerry Mulligan/Art Farmer
Recorded: Newport Jazz Festival, Newport, Rhode Island, USA. July 5, 1958
Label: Jazz Hour (73577)
Musicians: Art Farmer (tp)/ Gerry Mulligan (Barsax)/ Bill Crow (b)/ Dave Bailey (d)
Tracks:
1. As Catch Can (Gerry Mulligan)
2. Baubles, Bangles and Beads (Forrest, Wright)
3. News from Blueport (Bill Crow)
4. Walkin' Shoes (Gerry Mulligan)
5. Just In Time (Comden, Green, Styne)
6. Moonlight in Vermont (Blackburn, Suessdorf)
7. Spring Is Sprung (Gerry Mulligan)
8. Blueport (Art Farmer)
9. Utter Chaos (Gerry Mulligan)
Totall Time: 62:49
Issues & reissues:
LP - none
CD - CBS 88605; Jazz On A Summer's Day (original soundtrack) (Snapper/Charly 191) [just one track]; Newport Jazz Festival: Mulligan in the Main, Vol. 2 (Phontastic 8814)
Session Details:
Noted by Tercinet as a broadcast, dropping "As Catch Can" and adding "Blueport,"; Astrup notes "Blueport," "Moonlight in Vermont," and repeats of "Bernie's Tune" and "Baubles, Bangles, and Beads" as unissued.
Saturday, August 1, 2009
That George Russell who saved my uncle!
شگفت انگیز است که چگونه زندگی و مرگ ما و آدم هایی که هرگز ندیده ایم و هزاران کیلومتر و سال ها و قرن ها فاصله بینمان وجود دارد، چنین به هم وابسته است. این نکته با مرگ یکی از آخرین آهنگسازان بزرگ جاز، جورج راسل ، برای یک دوست عزیز چنان زنده شد که از من خواست در دوری از ابزار ارتباطی امروزی، احساسات او را دربارۀ مرگ جورج را از سواحل دریای خزر منتقل کنم.
در زمان های دور، اوایل سال های 1960 میلادی، این دوست به جایی رسیده بود که دیگر لزومی به ادامۀ زندگی نمی دید – و من تنها او را از این جهت ملامت می کنم که در آن زمان الینگتون، بیسی وهاوک زنده بودند و چطور وقتی آنها هنوز هستند شما می خواهید نباشید! – و این بازی چنان برایش بی معنا بود که خاتمۀ آن آسان تر از تکرارش به نظر می رسید. به خوبی می دانیم در کشوری چنین بیگانه با هر الگوی یگانه ای از غرابت و زیبایی این تصمیم عجیب نیست و این سنگی است که به درستی از زمان "هدایت" گذاشته شده است.
باری آن چه این دوست را نجات می دهد شنیدن اجرای جری مولیگان از قطعه ای است که جورج راسل نوشته به نام "همه چیز دربارۀ رُزی"؛ قطعه ای نزدیک به ده دقیقه برای ارکستر بزرگ و اجراء شده به سال 1961 و منشر شده توسط Verve که از سه موومان تشکیل شده و به گفتۀ خود این دوست یکی از بهترین بلوزهای اجرا شده توسط یک ارکستر بزرگ را در موومان میانی آن می توان شنید. راسل که 88 زندگی کرد چهل سال از زندگی آدمی دیگر را در جایی هزاران کیلومتر دورتر از خودش بیمه کرد. هر کدام از ما چند لحظۀ این چنینی و چند موزیسین می شناسیم که بتوانند با ما چنین کنند؟
آلبومی که این قطعه در آن ظاهر شده نیم قرن است که تجدید چاپ نشده اما خوشبختانه "همه چیز دربارۀ رُزی" در مجموعه ای انتخابی از کارهای مولیگان برای Verve گنجانده شده و در این جا می توانید آن را پیدا کرده، به روی کامپیوتر خودتان کشیده و بشنوید.(قطعۀ شمارۀ هفت آلبوم)
این هم فهرست نوازندگان ارکستر جری مولیگان در قطعۀ "رزی":
“All About Rosie”
Trumpets: NICK TRAVIS; DON FERRARA; DOC SEVERINSEN
Trombones: BOB BROOKMEYER; WILLIE DENNIS; ALAN RALPH
Alto Sax: GENE QUILL; BOB DONAVAN
Tenor Sax: JIM REIDER; ZOOT SIMS
Baritone Sax: GENE ALLEN; GERRY MULLIGAN
Bass: BILL CROW
Drums: MEL LEWIS
Recorded in NEW YORK CITY, JULY 10th-11th, 1961
و در پایان خدا جورج راسل را رحمت کند.