Jazz for aficionados


Jazz for aficionados

I'm going to review records in my collection, and you'll be able to decide if they're worthy of your collection. These records are what I consider "must haves" for any jazz aficionado, and would be found in their collections. I wont review any record that's not on CD, nor will I review any record if the CD is markedly inferior. Fortunately, I only found 1 case where the CD was markedly inferior to the record.

Our first album is "Moanin" by Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers. We have Lee Morgan , trumpet; Benney Golson, tenor sax; Bobby Timmons, piano; Jymie merrit, bass; Art Blakey, drums.

The title tune "Moanin" is by Bobby Timmons, it conveys the emotion of the title like no other tune I've ever heard, even better than any words could ever convey. This music pictures a person whose down to his last nickel, and all he can do is "moan".

"Along Came Betty" is a tune by Benny Golson, it reminds me of a Betty I once knew. She was gorgeous with a jazzy personality, and she moved smooth and easy, just like this tune. Somebody find me a time machine! Maybe you knew a Betty.

While the rest of the music is just fine, those are my favorite tunes. Why don't you share your, "must have" jazz albums with us.

Enjoy the music.
orpheus10
Very nice Tony Bennett, O-10.  That recording is a favorite and from what is probably his peak period,  Bennett can do no wrong in my book; always sings from the heart.  Thanks for that.

I kept waiting for the words in the Andrade “Mayden Voyage” 🤔.  One of my favorite tunes and Herbie has been quoted as saying that it is his favorite of all his compositions.  Words were set to the tune by his sister some time after Herbie wrote the tune.  Here are favorite versions; with the lyrics this time 😉:

https://youtu.be/hLGQKtcXlLI

https://youtu.be/CKx-T7E6kng
Here’s an overlooked female Jazz vocalist.  Incorporates r&b and soul into her style.  She also composes most of her material.  Talented lady:

https://youtu.be/JhgQc0wT644

Thanks for the correction; the posts you submitted with words were fantastic.

The very first time I heard Herby Hancock's "Maiden Voyage" was when it came on the FM Stereo while I was cruising the Boulevard in my 66 "Deuce and a Quarter", that still had the "new car smell".

Of course that was in 66.

Probably the next tune to pop up was this one;


              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LR1bWhdoIXM
What happened here?

Over the weekend I posted an experience where more than half the audience walked out of a Miles concert in the '70s after he went electronic.

In that I also posted a link to a great Ben Webster album in response to a prior comment.

Today I looked back at page 367 to see where I left off but it is no longer there.  In addition there is no note about a message being removed.  So does anyone know how or why this happens?

nsp,
Jacintha's voice is so soft and sensual, the kind you could listen to all night long.

Pryso, I don't know what happened to your post, but I will never forget how I felt when I saw him come on stage in a fringed buckskin vest, and began to play music which was totally foreign to me; that was in the Summer of 69.
O10
I think Jacintha's version of "The Look of Love" compares favorably to Dusty Springfield's original 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tf1d65OHYXo

frogman

The Tony Bennett posting was mine, credit where credit is due😀.

Enjoyed the Jon Lucien Maiden Voyage. Thought you might like this version
With the Brecker bros.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC_GjtY-YVs
Indeed it was, nsp; sorry about that.  Hard to keep track of everyone’s posts sometimes.  
You’re right, I like the Mark Murphy “Maiden Voyage” a lot.  Always have and ever since I bought the record back in college.  Thanks for that!  I was responding to O-10’s post, and I didn’t think he would like it as much as the other two that I posted.  Maybe I was wrong and would like his thoughts on this.  O-10? 
A relatively minor detail, but that Mark Murphy record is from a period when Michael Brecker’s tone, which went through changes during his career in part because of equipment choices, was my favorite; the subject of much debate among saxophone geeks 😀. 
This is a favorite track from the record:

https://youtu.be/XdF0AcklZNs


Sorry folks, "Maiden Voyage" is definitely best without words, just like I heard it for the first time in 66.

I picture me, and I'm sailing across the sunny sea for the first time (maiden voyage) in my small craft. The music depicts the rise and fall of the waves as the wind picks up, and I feel the exhilaration of being on the ocean for the first time; I might even sail all the way to Tahiti.

"The Look of Love"; Dusty Springfield is the beginning, all there is in between and the end.

Words don't belong on some songs; "Round Midnight" is one of them. This song portrays the mood of the city "Round Midnight", leave that drippy love out of it.

No matter which city, skyscrapers are intoxicating when you look at them "Round Midnight"; since I was a child, seeing the skyscrapers of New York was always exciting, they held so many dreams and fantasies.

Now, each "Round Midnight" has a different mood; Miles begins a little spooky, but Coltrane welcomes you into this city for all the allure that cities hold at night; beautiful ladies seeking company for example.


                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GIgLt7LAZF0


This is my favorite, it's altogether different from the last one; it's so beautiful, there's nothing mysterious about it; alluring maybe, it holds the promise of a new and beautiful experience on this starlit night around the bewitching hour.


            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K1Xozvcf0FA


               


Thelonious Monk was 27 when he wrote "Round Midnight". Does anybody think he was thinking about the "drippy" lyrics that are now attached to the song? Girl type lyrics at that.

If you're an aficionado, you got to think like a hip jazz musician. Jazz is about mood and feeling, but you also have to think like the artist who wrote it.

When you think like a 27 year old hip jazz musician in New York, you will get a different picture than those "drippy" lyrics; what you get is a mood, and the feeling of the city "Round Midnight".

nsp, I ordered "The Best of Jacintha" yesterday, it has "The Look of Love" on it.
Hi guys! Love to read you, as always. But can't participate that often, I have a lot on my mind at this moment. One is a need for a better guitar that haunts me for quite a while and I am in crusade for buying new one. Checked most of the respective music stores in my country but among some strong brands, only one captured my attention so wanna go further in the search. Currently abroad in Slovenia, sittin' on the dock of the bay (meanin' in a small coffe shop, heavy rain outside), somebody here has a good taste in music 'cause currently is playing

https://youtu.be/vJJONpQiQZ4

Same song but check the instrument
https://youtu.be/lY7sXKGZl2w

I just wonder how far will I go...

Deus vult.

Regards to all.

p.s. Donno where Alex is. Probably hiding somewhere ha ha...but he is probably following the thread and will pop out eventually, when least expected. :--)) ;--)

Jazz is a little like abstract art, the artist paints a picture and gives it a title, the title depicts what the painting is all about; you may, or you may not grasp what the artist had in mind. Each "connoisseur" who looks at the painting will grasp the idea, but each of them will see it slightly different; that's the nature of art.

Sometime the music and the lyrics are "right on"; such is the case of "Moanin". Bobby Timmons projected the depths of the emotion of being "down and out"; the lyrics to the tune do likewise.


    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cNjRQo-zpKA




'Maiden Voyage' is a 1965 jazz composition by Herbie Hancock.

Lyrics were later added by his sister Jean HANCOCK:

See the sky, let's explore it's hue.
Tide is high, time for your debut.
Like a ship, you must leave this bay.
On this trip, you'll learn love today.

The time has come to take a dare.
Maiden voyage, a first affair.
Set your sails to cast away.
Chart your course of love today.

Now we're clear, homeward bound are we.
Listen dear, as you sound your sea.
Soon you'll cry, lovely things you'll say.
Sail on high, you'll learn love today.


In my opinion, these lyrics are stretching the thing far beyond what Herby was thinking when he composed the music. The picture on the cover shows one man on a small sailing craft. The music captures the feeling of a "maiden voyage"; movement: waves, ocean breezes, the exhilaration and excitement of a "maiden voyage".

The lyrics are nice, but they don't work for me and the music.


      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwmRQ0PBtXU


One might feel the same exhilaration and excitement while listening to this music and taking a "maiden voyage" in an automobile.
O-10, you may find this of interest:
Monk first wrote “Round Midnight” with the “drippy, girl type” title “I Need You So”. He wrote it while romancing his first wife. He, himself, and with the help of a friend wrote lyrics and the song was his attempt to get a hit. He later changed the title to “Round Midnight”. The lyrics that we are familiar with were written later still. Some of the original lyrics:

#####

Since you went away, I missed you.

Every hour, I wish to kiss you.

You are in my dreams always. I need you so.

You are my own.

Still, I am all alone, longing, waiting.

I love you so, darling.

This is why I’ll go on believing you’ll be standing by my side sooner than I realize.

I need you so.

####

https://www.npr.org/templates/transcript/transcript.php?storyId=121197087

Who knew?! Who knew that Sassy, Ella, Carmen, June, Betty and.....weren’t aficionad(a)os? 😱

https://youtu.be/MnUqorTHj74

https://youtu.be/wgssRuMfF5E



And then in the bridge, she wrote: You are my own. Still, I am all alone, longing, waiting. I love you so, darling. This is why I'll go on believing you'll be standing by my side sooner than I realize. I need you so.



Now we go from that to the lyrics in "Round Midnight"?



My fiction is better than your facts Frogman.
I like fiction, O-10.  I like facts, too.  Better?  I like Granny Smiths best 😋

Frogman, The Good, the Bad and the Ugly - The Danish National Symphony Orchestra (Live) is the first time I have ever seen a symphony orchestra; it's quite fascinating, all those people playing one song together; when they start playing "hard bop" I'm going to the symphony.


frogmanPink lady are my favorite. A little bit tart like a granny smith but sweet also.
I have to agree with you and disagree with O10.  concerning putting lyrics to Maiden Voyage and Round Midnight.
 I I enjoyed the scat singing on the maiden voyage cut O10 posted but to me the lyrics written fit the song very well. The lyrics suggest of a first love and the journey taken.
Not surprising that you and the OP are in disagreement😁

Re: Mark Murphy I love his vocal phrasing especially on Maiden Voyage where he uses his vocal phrasing to syncopate and really make the song Swing.
Randy Brecker's solo on "on the red clay "is terrific.
 seems like Randy Brecker got most of the solo  space on those two cuts from that LP. Was he considered better than Michael Brecker at the time that album came out?  this Mark Murphy cut of a well kn own standard from another LP is one of my favorites. And believe it or not I like Mark Murphy's ballad Renditions even more than his up-tempo work.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UsvTPeAYfuA



nsp, I don’t know that Randy was considered better than Michael, but he was the senior of the two. By the time Michael was making a name for himself, Randy was already well established. Maybe that was it. Both great players. I’ll have to try Pink Ladies; thanks for the tip.

O-10, I thought that DNSO clip seemed familiar:


**** orpheus10 OP
6,534 posts05-09-2018 10:14am
I’m not a classical expert, but I found something I liked

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KkM71JPHfjk


this is too tough, and it exemplifies how all the various musicians in a symphony contribute to the whole better than anything I’ve ever seen.

I can’t decide who is the most attractive, the wa wa girl or the conductor;


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4niv522mbtM


She can Wa Wa and whistle to.


Nothing has ever explained a symphony to me like these two clips. ****


Me too, O-10.  I first heard it in 1976 while in college.  George Coleman’s great tenor solo was the first tenor solo I had ever transcribed.  The tune brings back a lot of memories.  
I think that lyrics for Round midnight are very well suited. That, together with Angel Eyes would be my all time favourits, for certain mood.

Today found and ordered few albums that I had on ’pick’ for some time.

Oscar Petitford’s ’Manhattan jazz septete’ from 1957.
https://youtu.be/IwV1K7X1HXo
https://youtu.be/EIIhYAZ-aPs

Barry Galbraith’s ’Guitar and the wind’ from 1958.
https://youtu.be/vrPtqDJHTkw
https://youtu.be/G1YtBT8LTM4
https://youtu.be/QBtmI-6brys

Hal McKusick quartet (again Galbraith on guitar, four albums on this edition)

https://youtu.be/XlO9IBcSIy8
https://youtu.be/laATMDDBtac
https://youtu.be/d5GmfSFnyTk
https://youtu.be/UySlkybHzZA

Most jazz tunes are wordless music, it's only much later on that someone comes up with words for the tune. According to Frogman, Thelonious Monk originally wrote these lyrics for "Round Midnight"

         
Since you went away, I missed you.

Every hour, I wish to kiss you.

You are in my dreams always. I need you so.

You are my own.

Still, I am all alone, longing, waiting.

I love you so, darling.

This is why I’ll go on believing you’ll be standing by my side sooner than I realize.

I need you so.


I have been listening to jazz all of my life, and this is the very first time I heard that. He even gave us a long story about how the song was originally called "I Need You So". You'll have to ask Frogman how the words changed to what we are now familiar with.
When I hear music that normally has words, I still hear the words. When those of you who prefer words to "Round Midnight" and "Maiden Voyage" hear those tunes, do you still hear the words when the music is played without them?


I find that words trap you into the same scenario even when you're listening to the music without the words, you still hear them.


It begins to tell 'round midnight, midnight
I do pretty well till after sundown
Supper time I'm feelin' sad
But it really gets bad 'round midnight
Memories always start 'round midnight
Haven't got the heart to stand those memories
When my heart is still with you
And ol' midnight knows it too
When a quarrel we had needs mending
Does it mean that our love is ending?
Darlin', I need you; lately I find
You're out of my heart and I'm out of my mind
Let our…



I don't want to be trapped into those lyrics every time I hear "Round Midnight", even when there is just beautiful music without words. Not only that, but if I were in that situation, I would be looking for a replacement round midnight, that's why I think it's a girls thing.

When I was younger, the girls I met didn't like jazz and they called it music without words. And for the most part, I can live with that; the words are usually written for the music with words at the same time as the music, not years later.


Just yesterday is the first time I was made aware of the fact that there were words to "Maiden Voyage"; thank God I never heard them before; then I would be hearing those same words every time I heard "Maiden Voyage".

I find aficionados are highly individualistic, but there's room for us all.

Who knew?! Who knew that Sassy, Ella, Carmen, June, Betty and.....weren’t aficionad(a)os?


No, they're "Divas".



Alex, unfortunately, only the first of the Barry Galbraith clips is “available” according to YouTube.  Loved it!  Thanks for that.  Great swinging arrangement from Al Cohn, one of the unsung heroes of the arranging world.  Hint of a West Coast vibe, although all East Coast players.  
Hal McKusik is another unsung hero who I think I mentioned quite a while back.  I had the pleasure of meeting him years ago.  Great player and a real character who would fly his own plane from his home in Long Island to gigs in NYC.  He and Galbraith were good friends. 

https://youtu.be/tl7Uc2yOj6Q

Hal on clarinet:

https://youtu.be/SFlFwJmVDvg
O-10, what I pointed out about the lyrics to “Round Midnight” is not according to me; it is all well documented and easily researched. I included a link to the comments by author of a Monk biography; you may find it interesting. That is only one of many accounts of this. In answer to your question, there is no great mystery to how the lyrics where changed. Here is another pretty good account of the history of the tune and the lyrics.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/%27Round_Midnight_(song)

IMO, this discussion is much to do about nothing. Sometimes adding lyrics to a wordless tune works, sometimes it doesn’t. Some of us may like certain lyrics, some of us may not. Why “feel trapped” by any of it? As I said previously it is “apples and oranges”. A wordless tune can stand on its own and sometimes it is enhanced by good lyrics. Personally, I have never felt that added lyrics detract from the greatness of a tune, even when I don’t like the lyrics.


I think all this highlights a point that I made early in this thread. There is sometimes a tendency on the part of non-practitioners to overly romanticize the process of composing or playing music and art in general; often much more than the artists themselves do. Composing a tune is not always solely the result of great inspiration. It is often an arduous process and sometimes the artist simply gets lucky. I think that Round Midnight is a good example of this. By most accounts Monk wrote the tune, then titled “I Need You So”, when he was 19 years old; hardly someone with a tremendous amount of life experience that might give his tune some deep hidden meaning. He wrote it hoping he would have a “hit”. He changed the title to “Round Midnight” much later.

One of the great things about art, in this case music, is that while it is true that sometimes the artist is very specific about the meaning, the listener is more times than not free to attach his own personal significance to the music or lyrics. There is no point in arguing about it. There is no right or wrong. The fact that a tune started out wordless in no way invalidates lyrics that may be thoughtful, intelligent and may add greatly to the tune. Obviously, sometimes the lyrics may not be very good; probably the reason that Monk’s original lyrics were abandoned and replaced with better ones.

However, I am curious about something, O-10 and would appreciate some clarification. You say that “Maiden Voyage” is no good with lyrics; seemingly without exception. Yet, you posted a Mandrade clip of “Maiden Voyage” which supposedly had lyrics and you referred to it as “boss”. I’m confused.
Regards.

Sometimes when I 'entertain' (jazz music is not considered as entertaiment for the most) the guests who visit me I ve noticed that if I first play them the vocal version of some standard, they become much more aware of that same song which is later played as instrumental version only.

When movie 'Casablanca' was made, they filmed few alternative endings.
Should that fact change our opinions about the 'worth' of that film?
Personally, I dont think so, either you like it or not...

 https://youtu.be/JMOBxjIvLBE
Can lyrics added to an instrumental be successful?  A question given lots of coverage here recently.  So do you have a preference here -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ae0nwSv6cTU

Or this -

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yxIo6nrgVa4

I thought someone else covered it too (Bobby McFerrin?) but couldn't find any link.

frogman,

Great post especially this part:

"One of the great things about art, in this case music, is that while it is true that sometimes the artist is very specific about the meaning, the listener is more times than not free to attach his own personal significance to the music or lyrics. There is no point in arguing about it. There is no right or wrong."

alex,

Your observation about the vocal version and instrumental version of the same song and its affect on your guests is correct unless your guests are true jazz fans. I have seen the same reaction with my guests.

pryso,

Great hair styles on those girls in your second link. Ahh the 80's....

You say that “Maiden Voyage” is no good with lyrics; seemingly without exception. Yet, you posted a Mandrade clip of “Maiden Voyage” which supposedly had lyrics and you referred to it as “boss”. I’m confused.
Regards.


I kept waiting for the words in the Andrade “Mayden Voyage” 🤔. One of my favorite tunes and Herbie has been quoted as saying that it is his favorite of all his compositions. Words were set to the tune by his sister some time after Herbie wrote the tune. Here are favorite versions; with the lyrics this time 😉:

I misspoke Frogman, thank you for correcting me; it was just with her voice and the music.


            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9Yab_N9a4Oc


There is a female vocalist who's famous, that nobody has mentioned, but I've been playing one of her CD's that I bought in 1999 every since; that's 20 years.

It's very uncharacteristic of me to play any music on a regular basis for this long,  but she hits all the right notes on this album for me. The artist is Carly Simon, and the title of the CD is "Film Noir".


      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Film_Noir_(album)


Every cut on this CD is boss for me, and they all seem to remind me of the love of my life; the first one especially;


        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_0wta3xkqJo


Even now, when I hear this song, I think about her; maybe there was someone in your past that you'll never forget.

There are so many versions of "Night In Tunisia" that I like I can't count them all; here is one vocal that I especially like;


        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6xQxN5Sxndc
Today’s Listen:

Dexter Gordon -- GO
with / Sonny Clark, Billy Higgins, Butch Warren (Bass)

Notes By Ira Gitler

He writes, on ’Cheese Cake’ Dexter soars like a condor over the Andes.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hkyJQcmVtZQ

Here, he writes, "a beautiful Masculine sound this is neither Hawkins nor Young, but Gordon.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E9-tloP1gZk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3brLNLRBoPM

He should and could be reviewing wire for Stereophile.

Cheers

Btw, a lot of "quoting" going on.
Thanks, pjw and great point, Alex.

Pryso, I had started writing a post yesterday re “other tunes with added lyrics” which I didn’t post for no particular reason, but the first example was going to be Manhattan Transfer’s “Birdland”. First, let me say I have never been a huge Weather Report fan. I mostly like their stuff, but I am mixed about some of the other. One of the main reasons that I do like some of their things is the presence of Wayne Shorter who, for me, can practically do no wrong ; one of the great geniuses of the music. Their “Birdland”, catchy melody that it is and all has always struck me as kinda “lite”; “pop-ish”. I love Manhattan Transfer’s version. They took the pop vibe of the tune and went to town with it; pulled out all the stops with their signature urban chic vocal style. IMO, it works big time.

Rok, great clips; love Dexter.  Perhaps it was unintended, perhaps not; but, great “segue” with the Dexter Gordon mention and clips given the discussion about lyrics. Dexter was known for always learning the lyrics to a song before performing it. He would actually recite some of the lyrics as an intro to the tune when performing it:

https://youtu.be/RnZm8IJ9k20



Excellent Clips from The OP and The Frogman.   I hesitate to ask, but was that Mcferrin on the round midnight clip?   I'm still trying to figure out what kind of horn that was.      That was Wonderful.
The first clip said I was not old enough to watch it.

I am in the process of writing the lyrics to Mingus' Hog Calling Blues.
Stay tuned.

Thanks to all for some great music.

Cheers


***** I am in the process of writing the lyrics to Mingus' Hog Calling Blues.*****


On second thought, maybe not.

Cheers


Rok, I wouldn't advise it, too many "Dippy" lyrics have already been written to good music. You know, the only way I'll believe that Monk was going to attach some "Dippy" lyrics to "Round Midnight" is if he tells me himself; we know how likely that is.