Red Allen Chapter 8 - The Jazz Archive Site
Transcription
Red Allen Chapter 8 - The Jazz Archive Site
THE HENRY“RED“ALLEN & J.C. HIGGINGBOTHAM COLLECTION ================================================= a bio-disco-documentation part – 3: 1954-1967/73 ================================================== compiled by Franz Hoffmann JAZZ AT THE METROPOLE THE HENRY“RED“ ALLEN – COLLECTION ======================================================================== a non commercial bio-disco-documentation part – 3: 1954-1967 ===================== with almost all the original sources: reviews, previews, record-reviews through the years by controverse critics, advertisements and photographs compiled out of periodicals, newspapers, jazzbooks, LP-/CD-cover-notes -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- HENRY“RED“ ALLEN --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Jan., 7th, 1906 – Apr., 17th , 1967 a trumpeter between styles and generations with an impression about the surrounding conditions and collegial performers ; also about the most fascinating world of the black show-business and its social background reported by the weekly black news-press papers – and about the rather different jazz magazines and jazz critics in course of time and jazz styles wikipedia: Red Allen's trumpet style has been said by some critics to be the first to fully incorporate the innovations of Louis Armstrong and to develop an emphasis on phrasing. Allen's recordings received much favourable attention. His versatility is shown by his winning of Down Beat awards in both the traditional jazz and the modern jazz categories. and his closest man, J.C. HIGGINBOTHAM -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------May, 11th , 1906 – May, 26th , 1973 by Franz Hoffmann Kortumstr.27, D-44787 Bochum; Tel.:(0049)234-51621961 ----------------------------------------------------------------- May 2002 /with additions on pdf-DVD-ROM 2011/13 II BACK TO THE ORIGINAL SOURCES: Born 1942 in Germany, grown up in an international publicity and with a father who had lived from 1924-39 in Middle America and the USA and with his enthusiastically memories of jazz life with all his facettes - working bands, gospels and black & white night club bands – my interests aroused going back to the original sources, musically (in contrast to my friends I never have been a fan of the “Dixie-revival” but of the old and new styles ) and literary. I was fascinated by the early dicographies by Dr.H.Lange, Delauney then: Rust and Godrich & Dixon and such deep researched books of W.C. Allen´s HENDERSONIA, Tom Lord´s Clarence WILLIAMS and Chilton´s WHO´S WHO, Al McCarthy´s BIG BAND JAZZ e.t.c. They brought me to step into the fascinating world of the weekly negro-press papers, which showed also the social backgrounds of jazz life and in contrast to the relatively fixed history of jazz performers and bands that there was a big personnel fluctuation between the bands, shows & venues, unknown for us in Europe and often neglected by magazines and jazzcritics. I hope this work is able to bring over some of this flair of those vivid-jazz-life reported by the negro-presspapers and of the jazz magazines with their different opinions through the years. The biographical part lists - all known engagement dates, if known: details of additional shows, previews, reviews, advertisements, benefits; I am rather incomplete for stuff out of newspapers of San Francisco, St.Louis, New Orleans, Boston, Philadelphia, - all known photos ; record-advertisements - as far as available all known critical record-reviews through the years and if of interest – the cover notes This disco-part lists - all known recordings for commercial record and transcription companies (including unissued titles and alternate takes) with the original 78" releases. Not mentioned are other 78" & Ep issues and for lack of place often not single reissues on Lp samplers whereas I tried to listen all known Lp, CD & video issues. But I fear I am not up to date in the complete US CD/video-field. I let out CD-issues of samplers or when they do not bring the complete sessions - all known recordings for non-commercial record and transcription companies as AFRS, Music Branch of Special Services Division (V-Disc) including unissued titles and alternate takes. Especially in the 40's and early 50´s several club- and concert-jamsessions have been transcribed for broadcasts one or several weeks and occasionally even years later (a special list is available). - all known taped broadcasts (air-checks and air-shots) of TV and radio shows all known taped soundtracks from films and telecasts (video-tapes with special marks). For research of more anywhere existing film & TV stuff ,a special list is available. - all known taped concerts and other life appearances (often only of poor quality but of historical interest). I would like to encourage everybody who is able to make any corrections or addition or remarc, especially details about engagements in New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco and Boston. For better legible-quality I had scanned a lot of stuff out of old papers into the PC. Unfortunately the text-recognitionprogramme made so many mistakes, that it was impossible for me to correct all. Forgive me when I have overlooked several faults. unissued RED ALLEN broadcasts, TVs and live-concerts on non-commercial series RA-CD-1-41 & JCH-CD-1-12 & RA-DVD-1 & RA-DVD-2 (look own pdf-data) other non-commercial books available in small xeroxeditions, now available on pdf-DVD: HENRY”RED”ALLEN COLLECTION – A RED ALLEN BIO DISCO COMPILATION of engagement dates and all stuff (photos, advertisements, previews, reviews, record reviews, notes out of the press papers (N.Y.Amsterdam News, N.Y.Age, Pittsburgh Courier, Baltimore Afro Am., Chicago Defender, N.Y.Times) and nearly all periodicals and jazz magazines. A survey about the world of jazz with his different facettes of music and styles as also the different & controverse opinions by critics in the publications through the years. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. part.1a: chapters 1 - 3 (1906-1934), Index in part 1b 196pp, 10 Euro part.1b: chapters 4 - 5 (1934-1940), w.Index for 1a & 1b 192pp, 10 Euro “ part.2: chapters 6 - 7 (1940-1954), with Index 156pp, 0 Euro part.3: chapters 8 - 10 (1954-1967) with Index 200pp, 10 Euro “ -----------------------------------------------150pp, 10 Euro RED ALLEN – J.C.Higginbotham DISCO, 1927 – 1971 incl.a lot of unissued bcs/TVs/films/concert-tapes; photos, advertisements; non-commercial series RA-CD ? JCH-CD ---------------------------------------------6.. "Jazz Advertised in the US-negro press 1910-67 & New York Times 1922-50" a documentation of about 21.300 advertisements and 3.000 photos (often of poor quality out of old microfilmed papers) on 2.700 pp in seven volumes plus index-book 30,00 Euro each one, 10,00 Euro for the Index . 7. “Jazz Reviewed” – Working Book Addition to JAZZ AD. with press clips (*incl. Louis Armstrong 1935-37/40-42) Vol.1: New England 1910-49 + specials of L.Russell*/ Baron Lee- L.Millinder-E.Hayes; 396 A4pp incl.Index ; 30 Euro III HENRY RED ALLEN DOCUMENTATION - Contents: BIO-DISCO part-1a: New Orleans / Luis Russell / different orchestras / Fletcher Henderson 253 pages II IV-V VI VII VIII 1 10 14.1-14.8 15 19 26 32 36 39a-39f 40 43 55 60 66-70 109 114 114 133 138 145 148 184 BIO-DISCO part-1b: Mills Blue Rhythm Band 1934-36 / Day By Day Louis Armstrong 1937-40 301 pages Chapter-4: 1934-1937 THE MILLS BLUE RHYTHM BAND & pick-up-bands 185 Ewin Hinchcliffe in Swing Music 5/35: RedAlllen – his records 202 Chapter-5: 1937-1940 LOUIS ARMSTRONG & LUIS RUSSELL & Bluesrecords 239 L.Armstrong: “Artists and Models”-247; “Every Day's A Holiday”-253; “Dr.Rhythm”-254/255/269; “Going Places”-271/272; ”Swingin' The Dream”-300-302; different Fleischmann Yeast NBC-bcs Jam-sessions, benefits: “Swing to Opera”-265; “Randall Islands”-273; Carnegie Hall-Oct.38:-289; Jelly Roll Morton sessions - 264,306-311 ; Red Allen articles 286/287/311 ADDENDA: The Time Life article 1981 by Dick Sudhalter & John Chilton, incl. record reviews & photos, 336-360 INDEX for part-1a & -1b 361-366 ADDENDA: J.C.Higginbotham´s 1943 - “Warm Up” book for trombone –1 & -2 (solos to p-acc.) 27 pages J.C.Higginbotham –solos 1928-41 transcribed by Ulrich Bela in 2001 64 pages BIO-DISCO part-2 : 1940 –1953 173 pages J.C. HIGGINBOTHAM - by John Chilton IV HENRY”RED”ALLEN - by John Chilton V Chapter-6: 1940-1947 OWN ORCHESTRA & avantgarde sessions 1 Articles by Rex Stewart `68, Red Allen`40, L.Feather, George Hoefer`42; CD.`44; Pat Harper `46; Bill Kinnell `44-“HIGGY; Johnny Simmen `76; Red Allen `46; DB-Jan.47; J.C.Higginbotham`47; Chapter-7: 1947-1954 REVIVAL BANDS 103 Articles by Herb Friedwald – G.Lewis on AMCD; G.Hoefer `52; Gus Kuhlman- Rustic Lodge Ron Stayley `53-Higgy went Home; Thurman & Mary Grove `54; Douglas Hague `55; INDEX for part-2 147 BIO-DISCO part-3 : 1954-1967/73 236 pages Chapter-8: 1954-1961 THE METROPOLE ALL STARS part-1 1 “Metropole” by John Chilton: -2/-41; by Mc Carthy: -64-65; map of 52nd St.: -5 NPT-57: 29-35; Dec.57 Sound of Jazz: 36-39; Aug.58: A Great Day In Harlem: 54-55 1958 on ART FORD JAZZ PARTIES-WNTA-TV 46-59 Red Allen by G.Hoefer-1959: -60; Higginbotham by DB-59: -61; by G.Hoefer 1964: - 62 1959 with KID ORY on record session & Europa-Tour 71-85 Red Allen by W.Balliett –73; Kid Ory by J.Cooke -79; by G.Boatfield –80; by T.Standish - 82 Chapter-9: 1961-1965 OWN QUARTET - at the Metropole part-2, Embers, London House, e.t.c. 93 Martin Williams article - 97 &104; Chicago & All That Jazz -98; 1963 Louisville WHAS-TV -109.1 Don Ellis article - 111; 1964 with LOCAL BANDS on Tours through England 113-134 Chapter-10: 1965-67 The Avangarde Quartets, Monterey-65 on p142; Newport-66 on pp152-154; 138 “Higgy Comes Home” 1966-WAGA-TV & article by Dan Havens; 159-164 1966/67 with LOCAL BANDS on Tours through England 146-151/166-168 Final Days: funerals of Buster Bailey & Red Allen; Red Allen benefit; obituraries; 169-178 J.C.Higginbotham – last TV-69, article by B.Haughton 1970; obituary 1973; & addenda 179-181 INDEX for part-3 182-186 Survey about JAZZ ADVERTISED 1910-1967 187-190 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Survey about non-commercial audio-CD- series RA-CD-1-41 & JCH-CD-1-11 incl. many unissued sides 24 pages Introduction & other available books References and book reviews Credits, Instrumental abbreviations Label Abbreviations Survey about clubs / venues in Harlem and Brooklyn INTRODUCTION: Martin Williams - “Henry Red” Witney Balliett - “THE BUES IS A SLOW STORY” Mississippi Rag Nov.93 – J. Lee Anderson – Henry Red Allen Other general articles about Red Allen by Chilton, Goffin, M.Boujut Chapter-1a: The Early Days 1906-27 in Algiers, New Orleans, gigs on the Mississippi -1b: The Early Days 1927-29, first trip to New York then on the Riverboats Albert McCarthy: Red Allen-Autobiography - The Early Days Other articles by Pearlie Mae to P.Carr; Allen to John Lucas; & WYES-TV-1966 Algiers walking tour -by K.Herridge / Best of West - by K.Reckdahl / Jazzwalk´s lamppost Chapter-2: 29-33 with the LUIS RUSSELL ORCHESTRA & first mixed bands Longer articles by Pops Foster, Frank Driggs, Al Mc Carthy, Johnny Simmen, Swing Music-36; Henk Niesen; Harald Grut, David Ives, J.R.T.Davies & L.Wright Andrew Sylvester, Harry Walton, Barry McRae; Keith Nichols – J.C.Higginbotham; Eddie Lambert; Jean Pierre Daubresse, & Michel Andrico about L.Russell (p106-107); Al Nicholas about Jelly Roll Chapter-3: Sept.31-May 1933 intermission with different orchestras incl.Charlie Johnson Don Redman: Albert Mc Carthy Rhythmakers: E.Lambert, Ch.Fox (p121); H.Panassié (p130-132); Peter Kunst Articles by Spike Hughes, Ray Horricks, Nank Niesen, Max Harrison, H.Panassié Peter Tanner, Stanley dance, BarrenMcRae, John Hammond June`33-Oct.`34 with FLETCHER HENDERSON´s ORCH. & studio bands Articles by: GEMS OF JAZZ (p156-157);W.C.A.:HENDERSONIA (p183-184) IV CREDITS Allen, Dan"W.C." (Can) Allen, Dick (USA) Allen, P.Henry III (USA) Allen, Pearlie Mae (USA) Allen, Josephine (USA) Armstrong House, Queens (USA) Barker, Danny (USA) Bärnheim, Björn (Swe) Bastide, Michel, MD (F) Benandrini, G. (Queen-I) Beranger, Philippe (F) Borthen, Per (Norway) Boughton, Joe (USA) Brooks, Michael (CBS-USA) Buckley, Ian (UK) Burke, Ed (Fanfare-USA) Cantor, Mark (USA) Carr, Peter (UK) Chertok, David (USA) Chilton, John (UK) Clayton, Buck (USA) Clement, John (USA) Cole, 'Dr."Cozy" (USA) Collier, James L. (USA) Coller, Derek (UK) Coverdale, Bill (UK) Daubresse, Jean Pierre (F) Driggs, Frank (USA) Elleson, George H. (UK) Erzinger, Frank (Ch) Esposito, Bill (USA) Fell, John (USA) Fellers, Christer (S) Flakser, Harold (RRA-USA) Flückinger, Otto (Ch) Friedwald, Herb (USA) (Jazz-USA) Friedwald, Will Goodsell, Syd (UK) Griffiths, David (UK) Gross, Kenneth N. (USA) Hägglöf, Gösta (Amb.Rec.Swe) Hällstrom, Carl (Swe) Haesler, Bill(Saggie-Austr.) Herling, Horst (G) Herridge,Kevin (USA) Higginbotham, Margaret (USA) Hilbert, Bob (Pumpkin-USA) Hippenmeyer, Jean R. (Ch) Holmes, Charlie (USA) Hustad, Thomas P. (USA) Inman, Robert (USA) Jenkins, L.C. (M.S.G.-UK) Kellam, Colin A. (UK) Kuhlman, Gus (WCTC-bc, USA) Knudsen, K.E. (CC-Rec.Dan) Kumm, Robert (USA) Lasker, Steven (USA) Lefevre, Claude (F) Lucie, Lawrence (USA) Mackenzie, Harry (UK) MacKinney, Jack (USA) Marschall, Frank (G) Metzger, David"Red"(USA) Mikell, Gene (USA) Mohaupt, Wolfgang (G) Nathan, David, N.J.F. (UK) Nowakowski, Dr.Konrad(A) Peerless Brian (UK) Persson, Bent (S) Pointon, Michael (UK) Polomsky, Lothar (G) Porter, Bob (Savoy/Phoenix) Richards, Trevor (G/UK Risch, Robert (USA) Rose, Boris (USA) Salemann, Dieter (G) Schiedt, Duncan ( USA) Schlitten, Don (Xanadu-USA) Schmidt, Rolf (G) Schonfield, Victor (UK) Schröder, Harry (G) Segami, Yasuo (Japan) Selchow, Manfred (G) Shera, Michael (UK) Simmen, Johnny (Ch) Singer, Hal (F) Singleton, Marge (USA) Smith, Hal (UK) Smith, Keith (Flutegr.-UK) Stumpf, Axel (G) Tanner, Frank (UK) Taylor, James 0. (USA) Terjanian, Leon (F) Teubig, Klaus (G) Trolle, Frank (USA) Tulane University-(USA) Valburn, Jerry (JA/Meritt-USA) Vernhettes, Dan (F) Vinding, Terkild MD (USA) Voce, Steve (UK) Vollmer, Al MD (USA) Von Rijn, Guido (NL) Warner, Will (USA) Weir, Bob (UK) Wessells, Robert (USA) Wethington, Crawford (USA) Willems, Jos (Belg) Williams, Johnny (USA) Williams, Martin (USA) Williams, Mary Lou (USA) Zeiger, Les (USA) zur Heide, Karl Gert (G) Zwicky, Theo (IRC-Ch) REFERENCES discos & books: Brian Rust: Jazz Records 1897-1942; 1969/1978 Codrich & Dixon: Blues & Gospel Records, 1969 Grunnet Jepsen: Jazz Records 1942-1962 Walter C.Allen: Hendersonia, 1973 Tom Bethell: Ceorge Lewis Egino Biagioni: Herb Flemming, 1977 J. Chilton: Ride, Red, Ride, 1999 J. Chilton: Who´s Who Of Jazz, 1972;- S.Bechet, `87; Ride, Red, Ride, 2000; Time Life article; Eddie Condon: Scrapbook of Jazz Driggs & Lewine: Black Beauty,White Heat; 1982 Robert Goffin: Histoire Du Jazz p266-268 William Gottlieb: Golden Age Of Jazz, 1979 Keepnews + Grauer: Pictorial History of Jazz `69; Tom Lord: Clarence Williams, 1976 Albert McCarthy: Big Band Jazz, 1974 David Meeker: Jazz In The Moovies, 1977 Jack Millar: Billie Holiday, 1979 Rose + Souchon: New Orleans Jazz 1967 M.Selchow: Edmond Hall; 1988; Vic Dickenson;`98 Johnny Simmen: Le Point du Jazz no.13, 1977 Tom Stoddard: Autobiography-Pos Foster; 1971 Dr.Klaus Stratemann: Negro Bands On Film, 1981 dito: Duke Ellington-day by day,film by film, 1992 Ken Vail: The Life Of Billie Holiday, 1996 “ “ : Jazz Milestones, 1993 Bozy White: Eddie Condon Town Hall Concerts Laurie Wright: Mr.Jelly Lord; 1980 press papers 1910-1967 BAA=Baltimore Afro American(weekly) CD= Chicago Defender (weekly) LAT=Los Angeles Times (daily) NYA=New York Age Defender (weekly) NYAN=New York Amsterdam News (weekly) NYT=New York Times (daily) PC =Pittsburgh Courier (weekly) VV = New York Village VOICE (weekly) record-magazins: Micrography (Dick Backer-NL) Collector´s Items (John Holley) Meritt Society (Jerry Valburn) jazz magazines: Down Beat; Ballroom & Band(UK); Bulletin DHCDF(F); Coda (Can); Cadence; Discophile (UK); Footnote(UK) Hot Revue (Ch); IAJRC; Jazz & Blues(UK); Jazz(USA) Jazz(Ch.) Jazz(G1949;) Jazz Beat(UK); Jazz Forum(UK); Jazz Information; Jazz Hot (Delauney); J. Journal Intern (UK); Jazz Monthly(UK); Jazz Music(UK); Jazz Notes; Jazzology(UK) J.Podium(G); Jazz Quarterly; Jazz Records (Art Hodes); Jazz Tango(F); Jazz News(UK) Jazz Times(UK); Jersey Jazz; Melody Maker (UK); Mississippi Rag; orkestra journalien; Pick-up; Playback; Record Changer; Record Research; Rhythm (UK); Storyville (Laurie Wright, J.R.T.Davies, Howard Rye); Swing Music (UK); Tempo (USA); Tune Times (UK) VI Label Abbrevations ABS-LP Aff. AFRS AM-Lp/CD Ambas.CLA Antip AofH A.o.J. ASV-CDAJA ARCD ASV Atl BDCD Ban BB BBC B.of J. B&W BMCD BN Br Cam Cap CBS CC/ColClas Charl.CDAFS CDS Rec. Class. Clif.CARCD Coll´s Coll´s Must Co/Col Com-LP/CMD Cor CurcioG.del J. De/Dec Dej.Rec. DOCD Epic Esq EvB Fam FlapPAST-CD Frem. Fon Gen G.o.J. GRP-CD Hal. Har HEP Hist HistRec HMV H&R HRS Jass JazzAnth JA/JazzArch JazzArch.CD J.Averty JazzCr.JCCD JazzDoc JazzPan JazzRec JazzSoc Jazztime Jazzt JazzologyJCD CBS-Records Affinity-CD (IJK.) Armed Forces Radio Service American Music (USA) Ambassador-CD(Swe) Antipodisc Australia Ace Of Hearts Archives Of Jazz(Du) ASV-Living ERA Arbors (USA) ASV-CD (UK) Atlantic Bandstand CD (USA) Banner (78") RCA-Bluebird BBC-Enterprises (UK) Best of Jazz CD (F) Black and White Blue Moon CD Blue Note Brunswick Camden-RCA Capitol Columbia Broadc.Systems Collectors Classics Charly Rec. (UK) CDS-Records-CD (UK) Classics-CD (F) Clifford Collector´s Collector´s Must Columbia 78"/Lp Commodore MCA-Coral Curcio Giganti del Jazz(I) Decca 78"/LP Dejavu Records-CD(It) Document Rec.CD(Austria) Epic Records Lp/CD(USA) Esquire Everybody Lp/CD (Swe) Family (Italy) FLAPPER-CD Fremeaux Rec. CD(F) Fontana General Giants of Jazz CD(I) GRP-CD-Records Halcyon CD (UK) Harmony HEP-Records Lp/CD(UK) Historia Historical Records His Masters Voice Hot & Rare CD (F) Hot Record Society Jass Lp/Cas./CD (USA) Jazz Anthology Jazz Archives(USA) Jazz Archives(F) Jazz Averty Video Jazz Crusade (USA) Jazz Document (Sweden) Jazz Panorama Jazz Records CD (USA) Jazz Society Jazztime Records CD(USA) Jazztone Jazzology CD (USA) Nationality Of Labels: A Austria Arg Argentinia Aus Australia Ch Swiss JSP-CD Jub. King AKWA K.J. Landsc. Largo LeJ Lon LVA Mainstr MCA MCD Me MJCD MemMJCD Mid.CD Mil.CD MGM MosaicLp/CD MusMem-CD NAT NoJ-No. Obj.JD Od OFC OK Parl Per Phoenix-LP Phon Phi PhonCD Prest Pump-Lp Queen Rar Raret RCA RST-JPCD RTR-Lp/CD Riv Roul RST-JPCD Sony-WNR Story-CD StoryvSTCD SZCD Swag Swingf Swingv Tax TL TICBCD TOM TPZ CD Var VidSoundie Vid.VVD VidJazz Vg Vi/Vic Vo VOA VJM VJC-CD/vid. VSP WR WRC XTRA Du Netherlands Eu European Continent F G I JSP-CD-Rec.(UK) AFRS-Jubilee Records King AKWA Rec. (G) King Jazz KJCD-FS (I) Landscape Rec.LSCD( Largo Rec.CD (G) LeJazz CD (F) London LVA-Records Mainstream Decca Group Moon MCD (UK) Br.Melotone 78" Media 7 Masters o.J.(F) Memoir Records CD Midget Rec.CD Milan Rec. CD (F) Metro Goldwyn Mayer Mosaic Rec. (USA) Music Memoria National Notes on Jazz (USA) Object Rec.CD Odeon Only for Collectors Okeh (78") Parlophone Perfect Phoenix (USA) Phonstatic Philips Phonstatic Rec.CD(Swe) Prestige Pumpkin (USA) Queen-Lps (It) Rarities Raretone RCA Victor RST-J.Perspectives(A) Retrieval RTR (UK) Riverside Roulette RST-Records (Austria) Sony-Video-Wienerworld Story of Blues (Austria) Storyville Rec.(Dan) Suisa Records (I) Swaggie (Australia) Swingfan Swingville Tax Records Lp/CD(Swe) Time Life Records Timeless CD (Du) The Old Master Topaz Records (GB) Varsity Video-Soundie Video Storyville(Dan) VidJazz Video Vogue Victor 78"/LP Vocalion 78" Voice Of America Vintage Jazz Music Vintage Jazz Classics(USA) VSP-Verve World Records (CD) World Record Club (UK) XTRA = RCA France Germany Italy J Japan S Sweden UK Great Britain V NEW ORLEANS MUSIC The Henry 'Red' Allen & J.C. Higginbotham Collection - a bio-discodocumentation. by Franz Hoffmann , It's refreshing to find in this age, when many a book about jazz that has clearly been thrown together with a view to making money out of a likely 'market', to find a work by those who treat detailed research as a labour of love. Such a person is Franz Hoffmann who has already gained acclaim from such authorities as John Chilton for his series of books entitled, “Jazz Advertised”, a remarkable series of press advertisements reproduced from black newspapers between 1910 and 1967. One of Hoffmann's passions is the life and work of Red Allen and some time ago he compiled and published a definitive discography of Red Allen and J.C. Higginbotham in one paperback volume. Now he has reprinted his discography which is a “must” for anyone who does not possess the first edition. Apart from much detail of each session Red ever recorded commercially, including photos and press ads from each period. there is a section dealing with tapes of unissued broadcasts and recording sessions plus one for film and TV appearances. This, in itself, is a major reference source but now the industrious Hoffmann has come up with a three-part (at present) work entitled: The Henry 'Red' Allen & J.C. Higginbotham Collection - a bio-disco-documentation. The first volume (Part 1a: 1906-1934) runs to 184 pages in A5 September 2001 format and is an enthralling compilation of material elating to both ,musicians' long careers, taken from the Harlem press and including many reviews from all sources over the years, much of it reprinted from obscure magazines, accompanied by numerous rare photos. Part 2 (1940-1954) follows a similar format and covers over 150 pages. Part lb (1934-1940) I haven't caught sight of yet but it should be available by now and I'm sure will be equally meticulous, together with two final sections covering 1954-1959 and. 1959-1967. These compilations will provide an ideal companion to John Chilton's “Ride Red Ride” and delight lovers of Red and Higgy's work. The original Discography is available direct from Franz Hoffmann at 15DM and the 'Bio-Discos' cost, respectively: Part la: 20D M, Part 2: 15 DM. Other volumes will be quoted pro rata. Hoffmann's remarkable series “Jazz Advertised in the US Negro Press 1910-67 and New York Times 1922-50”, a compilation of some 21.300 press ads and photos taken from microfilm, in seven A4 volumes, costs 60 DM per volume and is great value. There are also three similar volumes entitled “Jazz ,Reviewed” covering New England 191049: 60 DM, Chicago 1910-49 and New England 1950-67 due soon. Hoffmann refers to his publications as “noncommercial small xerox editions” but they are wellproduced research tools nevertheless and open up a new perspective on many facets of jazz that have never been fully covered. For this invaluable work Franz Hoffmann deserves our gratitude. Mike Pointon Privately published: Franz Hoffmann can be contacted …. Jazz Journal International August 2002 p14 THE HENRY 'RED' ALLEN & J.C.HIGGINBOTHAM COLLECTION. Part 1b (1934-1940) & Part 3 (1954-1967). Compiled and published by Franz Hoffmann, … , Germany, PB. A5. 196 & 194 pp. Franz made his considerable reputation with his seven large volumes of Jazz Advertised In The US Negro Press; essential source material for anyone involved in jazz and black showbusiness research. Alongside this painsticking project, Franz has published several editions of Red and J.C.'s bio-discography. That work has now been revised and extended for a superb four volume set of which the above two books have come my way. As well as conventional and comprehensive discographical information on Red and JC, separately and together, he includes a wealth of articles, reviews, advertisements and photographs from periodicals, jazz books and record albums. These combine to provide a fascinating critical commentary and an in-dept narrative on the working lives and musical achievements of his subjects. He draws his material from such a wide variety of printed sources that I can guarantee that even those with large jazz literature collections will be surprised at the extent of previously undiscovered gems. The books are clearly printed, nicely designed and indexed. Each book costs a bargain 10 Euros and can be obtained, together with volumes 1a and 2, from Franz at the above address. Bob Weir Instrumental abbreviations a/arr acc as b bb bs bars bj c cel cl arranger accompanied by alto saxophone string bass tuba bass saxophone baritone saxophone banjo cornet celeste clarinet cond comp d dir el-g fl fh g ld mc narr conductor composer drums director electro-guitar flute french horn guitar band leader master of ceremonies narrator org p ss t tb ts v valve-t vib vln wb organ piano soprano saxophone trumpet trombone tenor saxophone vocal valve trumpet vibraphone violine washboard for many performances there are solo-routines with following abbreviations: -ann = announcement ,b = bars ; brk = break ; brd = bridge ; ens = ensemble work ; intro = introduction; -Allen in ens = the musician is clearly audible; growl = growl-t / mute = muted trumpet or muted trombone; -(obligato work) indicates that the musician is improvising behind a vocalist; e.g: -vRA (ens-Higginbotham) 20bmeans 20 bars vocal by Red Allen with obligato work first by the ensemble then by Higginbotham -1- ST.JAMES INFIRMARY & KISS THE BABY Chapter-8: Red Allen & All Stars at the METROPOLE part-1: April '54–March '61; at several US & Canadian Jazz festivals as Newport 1957-66, TV-sessions as CBS-1957 & WNTA-1958; socially & musically he became a prominent figure at countless benefit- & welfare fund sessions; 1959 first visit to Europe on Tour with KID ORY ca.1955/56, The Metropole - HENRY RED ALLEN'S NATURAL GIANTS (THE METROPOLE ALL STARS) : Claude Hopkins-Eddie”Mole”Bourne-Red Allen-Buster Bailey-Herb Flemming (courtesy-E.Biagioni & Herb Flemming) April 54-July 65, NYC., Metropole – Red Allen All Stars: with following members 1954-65: Red Allen(t,v) tb: Herb Flemming ('53-Jan.57, & again '58, '60); J.C.Higginbotham (Jan.57-59); Tyree Glenn (occasional); Vic Dickenson(58); Benny Morton (60); Buster Bailey(54-64); Boomie Richards(ts-50s); Tony Parenti & Sol Yaged (occasional when opposite at the Metropole in the '50s); Sam Taylor (late '50s); piano: Claude Hopkins (54-64); Ken Kersey (55) Marty Napoleon (late'50s); The Lion Smith(occasional); Sammy Price (late 50s-67); Al Williams(late '50s); Bob Hamner(late 50s-60s); Lannie Scott; rhythm: Danny Barker(occasional); Lloyd Trottman(until Nov.54 & 59), Bennie Moten (Nov.54-6os); Milt Hinton(50s&60s); Arvell Shaw, Eugene Ramey(50s), Frank Skeete(6os); Cozy Cole(54-Sept.55,Feb.57-mid.57,occasionally until 58), Stick Evans (Sept. 55-56), Eddie Bourne (56-Jan.57, & again 58), Rufus Jones, Osie Johnson, Sol Hall(late 50s-1960); Jerry Potter(60s), Ronnie Cole (63); ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Cozy Cole in letter to the author (1978):..As you may not not mistaken I first met "Red" on the Putney Dandridge know, I am living in Columbus now going to school at dates, which goes back to 1930 or '31 - which is a beautiful Capital University which is a great musical Conservatory - time to remember. (Cozy has known my Allen-disco 1907I'm studying Arranging, Piano, Tympani & Marimba. This 66 and a tape with all Allen- and Dandridge sessions in the is my junior year, one more to go. ... Henry Red Allen was 30's. It seems he means here earlier unrecorded sessions!). also a friend of mine and a very dear one I might add. He ... After that period (1954-59) I organized my group which was a great musician and also a charming individual. Thank where TOPSY PART II became popular; I continued to you very much for the broadcasts and pictures 1954-57, it work with Red occasional until 1964. I didn't play with Red brought back many ,fond-memories. We worked together on Bluessingers acc. 1937-40, but I did do a show with him with Red's band at the Metropole for years starting it 1954 on Art Ford's Jazz Parties on WNTA 1958, (unknown and continuing thru 1964. He & I had the band together session probably in May-58). from 1954 thru 1959, that was a great band I thought, The session we did with Red in 1957 was the greatest. I Claude Hopkins, Buster Bailey, Lloyd Trotman, Herb thought we had superb musicians, J.C.Higginbotham, Flemming, me and of course "Red". On that job I got to Buster Bailey, Coleman Hawkins, Marty Napoleon, Lloyd know "Red" better than any during his career. I first met Trotman, Everett Barksdale. You wouldn't want a better him in the early '3o's. He was not only a great musician, he group such as this one ! was also a great man, and a marvellous person to know. If... -2John Chilton: “Ride, Red, Ride” pp142-147(shortened): the use of substitute musicians; they were not paying the Ben Harriman, manager of the Metropole, a large bar top rate and were willing to grant 'leave' so that musicians situated on Seventh Avenue (close to Times Square) had could play important gigs or go on overseas tours. The watched with interest the growing audiences at various wage scale differed considerably but the average would be New York venues that featured quasi Dixieland and main- about $100 a week with double for the leader - not a great stream small groups. The Metropole, which had existed as a deal but the regularity and frequency of the bookings com'Gay '90s' bar on the northeast corner of 48th St. and 7th pensated. Because drinks were expensive in the Metropole, Ave., moved a couple of doors along and began functioning most of the musicians spent their intervals across the street as a live music bar. Harriman got advice from Joe Glaser's in the Copper Rail, where drinks were cheaper and the Associated Booking Corporation on the availability and regulars were granted a weekly 'tab' by the owner, Fred fees for various jazz musicians. Trumpeter Jimmy McPart- Infield. The atmosphere there was friendly and the soul land was one of the first approached, and he quickly roun- food (cooked by Della) was said to be the best in town. … ded up a small group which began playing at the Metropole Business boomed at the Metropole, and dozens of musicians in April 1954. Red Allen was offered the chance to lead a were employed during the course of a week, to play in afterband that alternated with McPartland's group, and he ac- noon and evening shifts; the doors were left open so that cepted, with alacrity, the five-nights-a-week schedule. the music would draw in casual customers and passing touMcPartland, about to leave for a trip to Europe, soon rists. The star of the evening presentations was undoubtedly handed over the reins of his group to Bud Freeman, who in Henry'Red'Allen, whose group, originally billed as the Giants, turn was replaced by Wingy Manone. Red's group held became known as the Metropole All Stars. A dozen or more steady and it was soon obvious to the management that years of tavern work throughout the USA had honed Red's Allen's presentation, his appealing vocals and his outgoing showmanship and developed his adroit gift of coaxing an stage personality were exactly what the customers wanted. audience into accepting and enjoying a blend of honest-toAs writer Sinclair Traill summed it up (in J.J.I.6-64), 'He goodness jazz. participation songs and flag-wavers. makes it his business to see that his audience are having a Ben Harriman, a short figure who always walked with his good time, but never lets them lose sight of the fact that it is hands behind his back, supervised the Metropole, sometimes jazz they are listening to'. … assisted by his son, Lonnie. Harriman left the musical Something special was needed to fill clubs during an era organization to the leaders of the various groups, and it was that marked a mushrooming of growth in the ownership of up to the bandleaders to make sure that standards remained television sets - in the USA sales rose from 3 million to 20 high, and up to each musician to fix his own substitutes million sets during the period 1950 to 1954. all the musicians and the leaders were paid direct by the The success of the Metropole's new policy was instant, Metropole. Later, trumpeter Pee Wee Erwin became the and soon the management decided to increase its live music official contractor for the Metropole, responsible for booking schedule to include afternoon sessions. A large pool of musicians and collecting the Musicians' Union tax. The two freelance jazz musicians began working there, and regular long-serving bartenders were Sol and Morty Dacks, who trios and quartets took shape to fill the demand. Among later went off to run their own club. Another bartender was those who worked there regularly were: Tony Parenti, Big Otto, whose huge presence ensured that the customers Chief Russell Moore, Pee Wee Erwin, Tony Scott, Zutty never caused trouble. jack, the floor manager, saw to it that Singleton, Louis Metcalf, Marty Napoleon, Cliff Jackson, the sets ran on time, and upstairs in the office the secretary Oliver Jackson, Charlie Shavers, Joe Thomas and Dick Geraldine did the administration and kept the accounts. … Wellstood. Wellstood only worked occasionally with Red The music created (on Beth.-21&JT-1215) is a memento Allen, but he enjoyed the experience immensely; he was of the Metropole's 'house-style' There were no rules that once asked how backing Red compared to working with the last chorus of any up-tempo number had to be loudly cornettist Bobby Hackett, and replied (sleeve-note by Marty played, complete with a bewildering surfeit of notes, but Grosz, ARCD 1988:) 'Bobby is like a watchmaker who these tactics soon became the standard procedure for positions every screw, every ratchet, every jewel, perfectly; Red's band; it was like a musical equivalent of Gresham's but' (and here came a pregnant pause) 'to tell the truth, I'd Law where good money is chased out by bad. Soon the rather play with Red Allen.' Metropole's audiences and its management seemed to feel Red tried whenever possible to use the same line-up short-changed if the decibels (and the front-line's blood during his early days at the Metropole … Red enjoyed an pressure) did not rise dramatically during the final stages especially happy social relationship with Buster Bailey, a of any fast numbers. Even so, it was the position of the delightful man, who was blessed with an outstanding tech- Metropole's stage that caused the musicians more woe nique on clarinet. Buster was never a jazz giant, but he was than any other aspect of the venue, situated as it was, up always musically correct, and had the gift of following a behind the bar. The steep elevation posed its own problems pianist's wrong chords so skilfully that the audience remained but in the narrowness of the bandstand area the musicians totally unaware that a musical disaster had been averted. He had to play spread out in a line, making it difficult to modestly summarized this accomplishment by saying (in achieve an internal balance. For Red Allen it was a hark Coda 9/67):'I can't whip 'em so I joins 'em."' Red was always back to his early days in New Orleans where it was comloyal to his musician friends, and regarded recordings he mon for bands to play in a single line when working in made with them in the same way he might have treasured a dance halls. At the Metropole, eye contact between the snapshot of them. (In Jazz Monthly 6/64) he said, 'I never musicians was a problem, though it could be achieved by think in terms of great players. Some guys can play an reflections from the large mirror opposite the bandstand; awful lot and others play less but are friends of mine, which unfortunately a time-lag often occurred as the sound echoed evens things up.' It was a theme he returned to again and off the walls and the mirror. but the old professionals again, particularly if he was asked to compile a merit devised their own methods of combating the difficulties. league of great jazz musicians. One such question brought The Metropole soon established itself as a rendezvous for the reply, 'A certain trumpeter may not be the greatest, but white-collar workers who wanted to take a few drinks there's something there I like. Another trumpeter is good, but before going home, and for out-of-town conventioners I just don't like his personality.' Red summed up his attitude who wanted an hour of two in the lively, convivial atmoswhen he told (in conversation with John Chilton) 'My favourite phere. Hard-core jazz fans were in the minority but the records feature my favourite people'. number of converts grew, initially drawn in by the ampliThe Metropole's management took a tolerant attitude to fied sounds that bombarded part of Seventh Avenue. (cont. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Stanley Dance about the Metropole years in a letter to the author: Red Allen and I were good friends and something we had in what some regarded as a deterioration in his playing was common was that we were both catholics. I think I told in partly due to his experience there. The musicians of this Jazz Journal the story of meeting him late at night at Small's generation were forced into a kind of desperate Dixieland during Lent. When I asked what he wanted to drink he showmanship as a result of the prevailing vogue for modern ordered a coke, saying "I'm making the forty days on Coca or progressive jazz, but Red could still play when the opporCola!" I saw him often when he was at the Metropole, and tunities were right. - 3DB-6/16/54p4: CAUGHT IN THE ACT – JIMMY McPARTLAND, RED ALLEN; METROPOLE, NEW YORK There's happy jazz renaissance taking informal tavern (no cover, no minimum, they were trading one for a beer. place on Seventh avenue, near Times no reservation for bar stools) are occa- And as a final indication of how successSquare. On most of these late spring sionally trying. The musicians are ful a draw the Metropole has found jazz nights, the sidewalk outside the large, strung out along a long, narrow stand to be, there's even a young woman long Metropole bar is crowded with directly over the bar. A false step, and hovering around these nights with the the curious, attracted by such casual a valuable supply of liquid assets can picture-taking concession. No cigaret preludes and fugues as When the Saints become fruitless liabilities. girl yet, but all things come to those who Go Marching In, St.James Infirmary, When both bands combine their forces hunger. –Nat Hentoff and Fidgety Feet. Inside, the bar is for an end-of-the-set jam session, the filled with alequaffers of all varieties, dais becomes rather overextended, and many of them new to jazz and all there are times when the only quick seemingly pleased to further their communication possible between budding knowledge of the art. Wettling at one end and Big Chief at It all started in March when the Metro- the other would be by semaphore. The pole imported Jimmy McPartland's men work from 8:30 p.m. until 4 a.m., band, which now contains Bud Free- and there's no letting down before this man, Big Chief Russell Moore, George audience. Both band project at full Wettling, Milt Hinton, and Charlie fervor all through the unquiet night. Queener. Observing that the clientele's The music is never very subtle, but it's taste for this exotic music was appa- driving, honest jazz. All the band memrently more than one band could fully bers are long-term professionals, and satiate, the management then added a many have contributed greatly to jazz troupe of unfettered serenaders led by over the years. These nights, they Red Allen and Cozy Cole with Buster sound almost as young as ever – tired Bailey, Herb Fleming, Claude Hopkins, sometimes, but stimulated by the and Lloyd Trotman. enthusiasm of the audience, most of The working conditions in this highly whom wouldn't know a discography if ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Martin Williams: HENRY RED in “JAZZ MASTERS OF NEW ORLEANS”pp251-274: By the late Fifties, after stays in Minneapolis and Chicago, of the club. The performer, even on the most crowded and Red Allen had become a fixture at a New York “show” bar noisy of nights, hears his every note (even his every breath) bouncing back and forth across the narrow distance from called the Metropole. The Metropole is another New York phenomenon. It juts one side wall to another. And if he looks up he will find onto Seventh Avenue just off Times Square. Its wide front himself staring into his own face, constantly reflected from is almost all glass floor and windows which reveal the long a few feet away. At the Metropole a hornman is apt to find narrow interior to a passer by in the street. It is a brassy, bold his bass player or his drummer or his pianist (who strikes a presence, and one of its aims is to attract and pack in just as tinny and frequently out-of-tune spinet) several yards away many strolling tourists as it can. Before the Metropole took from him, and all but inaudible over the din. up jazz, it featured stout, aging females with whisky With the dixieland revival, the Metropole put in dixieland. contraltos. dressed in costumes with lots of feathers and Then it put in Red Allen. Things continued to catch up, and sequins and boas, belting out She´s Only a Bird in a Gilded the Metropole put in other swing period players like Charlie Cage, Mother Machree, or Melancholy Baby with every Shavers, Roy Eldridge, and Coleman Hawkins. For a while ounce of strength they had left. the management opened up a separate room upstairs for moFor the performer, the Metropole takes a lot of strength. dernists and hired Dizzy Gillespie, Horace Silver, and others. The stage is a high, narrow platform, above and behind the By the Sixties, the downstairs Metropole had rock-and-roll bar and running almost the entire length of the place. twist bands in the afternoon, and in the evening might feaDirectly across the narrow width of the room is a huge ture Woody Herman´s big band strung out along the bandmirror, which again runs almost from the front to the back stand, or Gillespie, or (more often than not) Red Allen. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------late April or early May 54; 9 p.m.- 4 a.m., N.Y.C., Basin Street, Local 8o2; FRANKIE NEWTON MEMORIAL CONCERT: L.Feather's N.Y.Diary, Melody Maker 5/15/54 - "THEY PLAYED FOR FRANKIE'S WIDOW".. Monday - One of the most music-heavy Pete Brown had the rest of the late 1921, strode vigorously-across the keys evenings I've spent in years. Basin Frankie Newton's short-lived group with that unique left hand., and Eubie Street held a memorial concert for the with him and played a set in which his Blake introduced by his old partner financial aid of Frankie Newton's widow, own alto work shone as brightly as it Noble Sissle, provided the most and in the course of the night (9 p.m.to 4 used to back in 1940, when he worked nostalgic note of the night. a.m.) there must have been a hundred with Frankie's band at Kelly's Stable Tony Scott (the second most ubiquitous clarinettist in town) played everything on 52nd St. name jazzmen on the bandstand. Most New York night clubs don't fil up Flip Phillips-clarinettist in Newton's from two-beat to bop with Ruby Braff, until around midnight. When I arrived a 1940 combo-played with pianist Urbie Green, Marty Napoleon, Buck little after nine, Jimmy McPartland's Mickey Crane and the first drummer Clayton, et all. Marian McPartland's band had already played a set and the they could find, Jo Jones, a couple of fugue-like "How High The Moon" was big room (about 4oo capacity) was numbers to rousing applause. It was a musical peak of the evening. Buster already completely filled. mostly a Dixieland evening, though, Bailey (the clarinettist with the most Every disc jockey in the jazz field had with men like Hot Lips Page and Bob- grandchildren in town-six of 'em) played with a young man's fire and fluency. helped to plug this affair into the big by Hackett getting the biggest band. success it turned out to be. Jack Crystal, Red Allen, Miff Mole, Pee Wee Rus- All these and many more appeared for of the Commodore Music Shop, helped sell, Dick Carey, and drummer Arthur free, through special permission granted to make order out of chaos by deciding Herbert played one set together; Tyree by Local 802. ... in what order the musicians would Glenn, Sol Yaged (the most ubiquitous Mrs. Newton was later reported to appear. The first set I heard was played clarinettist in town), Kenny Kersey have benefited to the extent of almost $1.500. And everyone else there by Joe Sullivan, looking his best and and Carl Kiffe took over for a while. sounding his Wallerest, with Cozy Cole Willie The Lion Smith, apparently deco- benefited, too, to the extent of an rated with the same cigar he smoked in extraordinary night of music. at the drums. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------between 1952-54, NYC., Central Plaza bc; ....-TVs - JAM SESSIONS - with Red Allen, Jimmy McPartland, Wild Bill Davison, Rex Stewart, Wingie Manone, Roy Eldridge; Big Chief Russell Moore, Conrad Janis, Herb Flemming; Buster Bailey, Cecil Scott; Willie "The Lion"Smith; Pops Foster; Baby Dodds, Sonny Greer; Victoria Spivey; (source Douglas Hague J.Journal 8/55) part w. Allen: ………………. asssistance for detailed research wanted - 46/29/54 NYC., studio - "THE FOX IN HI-FI" - GEORGE WILLIAMS & HIS ORCH. : Chris Griffin, Ernie Royal, Taft Jordan, Red Allen (t) Urbie Green, Eddie Bert, Bart Varsalona, Chuck Evans (tb) Joe Park (bb) Lenny Hambro, Ed Scalzi (cl,as) Sam Taylor, Bobby Trock Trocario (ts) Ernie Caceras (bars) Stewart McKay (bs) Buddy Sarvise (p) George Barnes (g) Eddie Safranski (b) Cozy Cole (d) Cathy Ryan, Mary Knolles (v) (label copy of Corral see Addenda) /Brunsw.-/ (G.Williams) –Taft Jordan muted solo Cor.61242/BL54020/RA-CD-16/ -saxes&Sarvice-Jordan muted-brass & saxes-Barnes-brass- ..ts.. – Caceras-Sarvice- ..cl … Barnes&brass(G.Williams) Cor.61401/ --/ --/RA-CD-12/ 86482 2:25 BLOCK BUSTER -Cole & brass intro brass-Barnes-..ts.. –brass- ..cl.. -Allen muted-saxes-..tb..-Cole &brass-trumpets--/ --/ 86483 2:37 YOU CAN´T STOP LOVE -vMK (L.Coleman-F.Ebb-P.Klein) a mambo-number -rhythm&brass-vMK(weak ens)-brass-Caceras-brass-.. as .. - ..brass&flute-vMK weak Allen brk-vMK (weak ens)Cor.61242/ --/ --/ 86484 3:09 SATURDAY NIGHT FUNCTION -vCR (A.Shaftel-C.Vansickler-T.Tyler) -brass-saxes-brass-saxes-trumpets-vCR (Sarvise & rhythm-handclapping) -saxes-…ts over brass-vCR(reeds-handclappings)-brass86481 3:07 SOFT TOUCH Burt Koral covernotes on THE FOX IN HI-FI , Br.BL 54020: Experience is the best teacher .. Just about everybody has heard that declaration at one time or another, and though there is a tendency to dismiss it as a cliche, its truth is corroborated by everyday living. For the potential band-leader there is no substitution for the grist mill of experience. George Williams has been on the scene for quite a few years, and wears the vestments of his wide experience well. Born in the cradle of jazz, New Orleans, he spent his formative years in California. The main center of his musical training was at Chico State College in the northern portion of California. His initial impulse was to teach music. Proceeding on this bent he spent four years preparing,himself for this vocation. In the process, he became intimately acquainted with all the instruments of an orchestra and prodigiously studied the many aspects of composition and orchestration (1934-1937). In 1939, in Los Angeles, George made his first major band affiliation: the swingin' Bob Astor band (as pianist and arranger). One good thing most usually leads to another, and through the efforts of Astor, George. came, to write for the top drawer Jimmy Lunceford aggregation. In early 1940, George left Lunceford to write the entire library for Lionel Hampton's first big band, and followed that with, a stint as pianist with Sonny Dunham's orchestra. In 1947, he put his pen to work for Glenn Miller, and remained on his arranging stuff until the band broke up and Glenn went into the service. George soon followed suite, and the years between 1943 and 1946 found him doing his bit in the Maritime Service. After discharge, Gene Krupa obtained his services, and he wrote for the band for nearly four years. This is a period on which George looks with special fondness. "It was during my association with Gene that I started to write longer, more serious things for dance band instrumentation. The one that sticks in my memory is my arrangement on themes from 'Scheherazade' for the Krupa band. Ray Anthony's name appears next on the Williams resume. When Gene broke up the band Ray beckoned, and George became his chief arranger, a job he held for two years between 1951 and 1953. It could very easily be said that George's arrangements for Anthony were a definite factor in the rising public acceptance of that band. It follows that working at length for others, successfully, breeds a growing desire for independence. Though still taking many free-lance arranging projects in 1953, George's thoughts were veering toward plans for the organization of his own band. After noticing.an extreme-ly positive interest on the part of young people in the music of small groups who played with the heavy rhythm and somewhat exaggerated emotional blues quality now associated with R&B, the 'Fox' formulated a plan: to adapt this sort of music to a big band. Brunswick liked the idea, but for the sake of latitude, the company also encouraged playing and recording music not so definitely in the R&B vein ... however, the basic Williams formula would be given marked emphasis. In general, the idea behind this LP: to familiarize the public with the band's style that emphasizes the 'big beat' ... George kept a good deal of the music pretty basic; favoring the brass, heavy ensembles and rhythm, and using the blues as the main material source. But in the more specific sense, the music and treatment, thereof, in this collection, breaks down into four separate categories. The first category which includes: Whamboogie, Block Buster, and The Rompin' Stomper aims for the powerhouse, flagwaver effect ... (somewhat reminiscent of the hard hitting bands of the swing era). These selections are typified by the contrary motion of the sections (e.g. high swinging brass and saxes playing, against each other) and pulsating steady rhythm. There is a liberal sprinkling of solos to create balance and give added sparkle. Punch is the keynote here. In the second category, (Soft Touch, Rockin' The Blues and The Knocked Out Choo-Choo), there is more form, to the arrangements, more dynamics and necessarily, a higher level of finesse in the playing, The riff construction plays a definite role in these arrangements which are all based on the blues ... Generally, this grouping is a little more subdued than the first, places more emphasis on ensemble and section work (less on solos) and the creation of a certain kind of pulse. (after-beat ... closely related to the R&B rhythmic feeling). Creole and Too Much Moon are illustrative of the band's approach to ballads. George tried to bring into being the feeling of ad-lib looseness and freedom though everything was writ-ten out, to have the elements (orchestra, soloists) meld and make for an integrated impression of the essential color of the music. "I utilized different types of chords, sub chords and passing tones in order to create melodious color interest, I really tried for a distinctive sound on these two selections. The last category is a potpourri: Saturday Night Function , Jackhammer Drill and are novelty vocals with the basic style of the band utilized; Tiger Rag Mambo is a punching arrangement of the old tune in mambo tempo highlighted by the strength and facility of the brass and rhythm sections; and The Song From Desiree is a waltz arrangement where George's use of his orchestra is decidedly tasteful and appropriate. In essence, absolute attempts in the pop area Though this LP gives us a varied program, it basically fullfills today's demand for the 'big beat'. It brings the elements of R&B to us in a new guise ... the big band . . . In George Williams' transfer of this music to a medium where it is a relative stranger, it becomes just a bit more musical for these ears, and I hope for yours. - 5Hoffmann: This is a very powerful big band orchestration with excellent fluid swinging arrangements. A well muted solo by Taft Jordan on “Soft Touch“. The rolling background drums by Cozy Cole and a fresh sounding George Barnes on “Block Buster“ with a typical fine Red Allen solo that remembers to the Fletcher Henderson years. It's a pity that there is no trumpet solo on the impressive stomping and swinging “Saturday Night Function“ with a metallic voice of Cathy Ryan. “You Can't Stop Love“ brings an unexpexted vocal mambo number with a short Red Allen break in this unusual Latin-American orchestration. THIS is the last big band date of Red – and a good one. Only the 8/7/54 orchestration – a combination of the Dorsey Brothers and the Metropole All Stars - will bring back this full swinging sound of the old big band era. Clubs at 52nd Street and Broadway & 7th Avenue DB 7/14/54 :Red Norvo recently played a gig at the Metropole opposite the Jimmy Mc Partland and Red Allen-Cozy Cole combos; Rec.Changer 7/54p14: Metropole – Red Allen All Stars: known lineup , late July 54, N.Y.C.: Metropole - Red Allen and Wingy Mannone sharing the stand at the Metropole. When they do "SAINTS" together, Armageddon sounds almost here. (DB 7/28p ); DB 8/25: Cozy Cole is co-leader with Red Allen of one of the Metropole bands. mid.54, NYC., Metropole – Red Allen All Stars: known line-up, J.J.9/54p2; AJQ 23p21; Jazz Music Aug. 54, Vol 5/6 : Air Mail from N.Y.: ... The Metropole Cafe, located in the heart of Time Square, is featuring two good bands each evening. The newly-formed Jimmy Mc Partland's All-Stars along with Red Allen's combo. Personnel shows Buster Bailey and Herb Flemming with Red in the front line, while Claude Hopkins, Lloyd Trotman and Cozy Cole hold the piano, bass and drum chairs. With Mc Partland are "Big Chief" Russell Moore, Bud Freeman........... AT THE METROPOLE NYAN-8/7/54p17: Red Allen, Buster Cozy Cole is absolutely out of this on bass, make for some of the most Bailey, Cozy Cole, Claude Hopkins, world. Solid Man! You sent me last stimulating jazz that's been played in this sector of the country in many a moon. Herb Flemming and Lloyd Trotman is Friday night. *** about the greatest jazz group you will NO PEER – Buster Bailey, probably Ben Harriman's young son, Lon, showed ever hear, unless of course, you have the world's greatest clarinetist, is always us around the old Metropole and all I can “cool papa,”Louis(Satchmo)Armstrong supremely musical, yet hot with his jazz say is that you ought to dig Red Allen on the scene with his All Stars.. Red licks. I have never seen him give a bad and his boys before they close their Allen's hot trumpet along with that performance, not even when we used to engagement there next month. Don't say sensational ivory tickling of Claude stay up all night. Herb Fleming, an out- that I didn't tip you off to some mellow Hopkins, backed by the solid drums of standing trombonist, and Lloyd Trotman stuff which you will enjoy. *** - 6a - Addenda - 6b - Addenda -68/7/54 NYC., Sat.8:00-9:00 pm, CBS-TV Stage Show- TOMMY & JIMMY DORSEY & THEIR ORCH.& guest stars: *HENRY RED ALLEN & HIS METROPOLE ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v) Herb Flemming (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) Lloyd Trotman (b) Cozy Cole (d) & members of the DORSEY BROTHERS´ ORCH. incl. Tommy Dorsey(tb) Jimmy Dorsey(cl) Bud Freeman(ts) part-1: 0:09 ann.by J.& T.Dorsey RA-CD-11b/ 2:40 Who -v Chuck Forsythe & ch --/ 4:34 Medley from South Pacific: Bali Hai-This Nearly Was Mine-Some Enchanted Evening --/ 1:16 In The Still Of The Night -v? --/ 3:33 Medley: All Of Me-Green Eyes-Tangerine -v Helen O'Connell --/ 0:28 ann. Red Allen & Cozy Cole & band from Metropole --/RA-CD-16/ vRA&ch --/ 6:28 *WHEN THE SAINTS part-2: closing film: Big Chief Moore, Bud Freeman, Chuck Forsythe, etc. not on tape part-3? In Biagioni´s book about Herb Flemming other sides of this one hour show or of a 2nd show are mentioned: *STARDUST feat.H.Flemming not on tape / Sleep - Dorsey Brothers not on tape not on tape *BASIN STREET BLUES feat.H.Flemming not on tape / Lover - Dorsey Brothers DB-8/25/54: Cozy Cole has joined Jerry Jerome's orchestra for the two-hour Bob Kennedy show on WPIX-TV. Cozy is also the co-leader with Red Allen on one of the Metropole bands and teaches all day at the Krupa-Cole studios. DB-9/8/54: N.Y. – The Metropole, the flourishing 7th Ave. bar near Times Square, has become a jazz department store. Five nights a week, Wed. to Sun., the Red Allen-Cozy Cole band plays on the long stand over the bar. Opposite them is a unit headed by Big Chief Russell Moore and containing Tony Parenti, who recently replaced Bud Freeman CD-9/18/54p14: Harlem To Broadway – by Guyon Madison - NEW YORK - Broadway will never rank with Rampart an elevated platform behind it from which are heard the performance of such distinguished exponents of the hot lick as Charles Shavers and Red Allen, trumpet; Big Chief Russell Moore and Herb Fleming, trombone; Cozy Cole and Kenny St.John, drums; Buster Bailey and Sol Yaged, clarinet; Milt Hinton and Lloyd Trotman, bass; and Charlie Queener and Claude Hopkins, piano. or Basin Sts. in the annals of jazz but the corner of Seventh Avenue and 49th at. now boosts a popular priced. Street level storefront emporium of jazz in the New Orleans and Chicago tradition that draws thousands of listeners weekly. Place, called Metropole, has tiny tables, a long bar and Jazz Hot. Oct.1954 “RED” ALLEN AT THE METROPOLE (short article about his life from 1924 with the Excelsior band in N.O., 1926 Fate Marable, … until 1940 Café Society without of deeper interest, including a wellknown 1946 portrait-photo) 10/2/54 Sat.afternoon, NYC., Rockland Palace – Teen-Age Dance with RED ALLEN & BAND, Machito, Buddy Tate; OCTOBER 2ND SEEN BIG DAY FOR TEEN-AGERS OUR TEEN-AGE BALL TO BE BITTERED END Elmo Garcia Benny Moten NYAN-9/18/54p4: Hey, you teenage hep-cats and hep kittens-dig this! No less than four, frolic-filled hours of dancing to the scintillating music for four star bands is on tap for you the Saturday afternoon of Oct.2nd at Rockland Palace. And take the word of the Amsterdam News, which will be plumb crazy. Officially the Teen-Age Fall Ball, the shinding is under personal direction of the old maestro, Lucky Millinder. For it, he has corralled some of the biggest names in the band business, with a neat balance thrown in between the new sounds and dixieland stuff for good measure. Cozy Cole Red Allen Herb Flemming Claude Hopkins Get a load of this talent. There's no less than the slightly fabulous Tito Puente and Elmo Garcia, gentlemen with a way with the mambo beat; Buddy Tate, the frantic tenor saxo-phone player who makes everything sound like it was written just for him, and the swinging, rocking Dixieland All Stars. There will also be a plentitude of top singing groups and radio personalities Sat.Oct.2, from 2p.m.-6p.m., a good time to be at Rockland Palace. The Amsterdam News, knowing how you like top notch entertainment is looking forward to seeing you there. Watch the Amsterdam News for details about tickets and where to get them. Machito Buddy Tate -7NYAN-9/25/54p1&3: TEEN-AGE BALL SET FOR OCT.2 TO BE CHAPERONED and his 16-piece Mambo orchestra, the Four hours of dancing to four big-name bands will kick-off the “Teen-Age Fall A feature of the “Fall-Ball” will be Dixieland All-Stars featuring Henry Lamont”Benny”Moten, Ball” Sat., Oct.2, at Rockland Palace, reserved boxes at Rockland Palace ”Red”Allen, 155th St. and 8th Ave. for parents who will act as Buster Bailey, Herb Flemming, Claude An ideal way for teen-agers to spend chaperones to the group. Youth clubs Hopkins and CozyCole. their leisure hours, the “Fall-Ball” is of 8 or more will also have the use of Buddy Tate and his rhythm and blues band will be the third attraction. Elmo being sponsered by the Amsterdam the boxes. News with the cooperation of youth Recreation directors from Manhattan, Garcia,”The Mambo King,” and his leaders of the five boroughs. Brookly, Queens, East Harlem, the band will be complete the four aggreIn an effort to curb juvenile delinquen-cy, New York City Youth Board and the gations. (See pictures on Front Page). the Amsterdam News has come to the Harlem YMCA will be on hand to Mr.Millinder has also announced that a number of New York's leading disc forefront in providing wholsome assist the director, Lucky Millinder. entertainment for youths who otherwise The Oct.2nd dance will start at 2 p.m. jockeys, TV stars and singing groups would be engaged in activities without and end at 6 p.m. Four top name bands will be present to greet the teen-agers. Tickets, priced at $1 prooper supervision of trained adults. appearing at the affair will be Machito ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The lineup of great performers include: NYAN-9/25/54p9: ... We're going to NYAN-9/25/54p25: TEEN-AGERS READY FOR DANCE OCT.2 – Machito and his orchestra, Buddy learn to mambo next Saturday afterThe city's teen-agers are readying their Tate's jump band, Elmo Garcia and his noon, Oct.2, when our Amsterdam best bibs and tuckers for the initial Mambo outfit and the Dixieland All- News' teen-age friends promise to teach presentation of the Amsterdam News Stars featuring Red Allen, Buster us to toss a hip at Rockland Palace when Boosters Teen-Age Dance at Rock-land Bailey, CozyCole, Herb Fleming, our first Teen-Age Boosters' Dance Claude Hopkins and Benny Moten. brings Machito, Buddy Tate, Elmo Palace on Oct.2nd. The affair will be directed by band- Tickets for the big matinee affair may Garcia, Red Allen, Cozy Cole, Buster leader Lucky Millinder who has lined up be purchased at the N.Y.Amsterdam Bailey, Herb Flemming, Claude an imposing array of talent desig-ned to News office at 2340 8th Ave. in Hopkins and Benny Moten together for please the musical tastes of all Manhattan or at 1680 Fulton St. in a real "jump"session. Brooklyn. youngsters. 10/24/54 Su., 2:30-6:30 p.m., Cedar Grove , NJ. – Meadowbrook - Jimmy McPartland's band and the Red Allen-Cozy Cole group; DB-12/1/54: New York – Jazz sessions have been reinstated at Frank Dailey's Meadowbrook in cedar Grove, NJ, after an absence of almost 14 years. The Meadowbrook is presenting a regular series jazz concerts on Sundays from 2:30 to 6:30 p.m. The first Sunday date was held with Jimmy McPartland's band and the Red Allen-Cozy Cole group (probably October 24th) Jack Teagarden and Marian McPartland appeared on October 31. Oct.54-1957; DB10/20/54:-Jimmy McPartland is again heading one of the regular bands of the Metropole, Red Allen has the houseband. DB-11/17/54: Bennie Moten (bass) is in Red Allen's Band at Metropole (for Lloyd Trotman) 11/8/54 Mo. NYC., St.Marks Methodist Church. Funeral services for Hot Lips Page; 11/9/54 Tu. “Farewell”at Railroad station: The pall bearers were Roy Eldridge, Emmett Berry, Louis Metcalf, Ed Lewis, Red Allen and Jimmy McPartland. HOT LIPS PAGE DIES - Mourn Trumpet Ace At Funeral by Edward Murrain, NYAN-11/27/54p1 “I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day, music halls all over the world Among the mourners were Noble Sissle and heard behind me a great voice, as of Even as the notes of Snub Moseley's (who read a resolution of the Negro Aca trumpet.”(Revelation 1:10) trombone drifted through the high-cei- tors Guild), Buster Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. it was almost mandatory that the Rev. linged church, others heard the echo of Pete Robertson, Leigh Whipper, Tina Samuel H. Sweeney should draw his Page's trumpet, offering the jazz themes Walters, Ida Forsyne, Boots Marshall, lesson from the above verse, while of “The St. James Infirmary Blues,” Clark Monroe, Billy Fitzgerald, Loyd eulogizing the late trumpet star, Oran which earned him immortality as a Mitchell, Big Nick Thompson, Rubel ”Hot Lips”Page at St. Mark's Methodist member of the Artie Shaw sextet. Blakely, Don Redman,Charley Johnson, church Monday morning. heard his rapsy voice between Eddie Bonnemere and Myra Johnson. Before a modest gathering of relatives, Others the muffled notes to Hazel Scott's song BENEFIT AFFAIRS: Also Big George close friends and admirers of the popular of tribute. LAST 'GOODBYE': Callious, Jimmy Mordecai, John Brown, Dallas-born musician, who succumbed Clarence Williams, Claude Hopkins, to a heart attack at Harlem's hospital The stars of the music world , old and Buddy Tate, Tyree Glenn, Cozy Cole, new, were visibly shaken by the selecearly Friday morning. Rev. Sweeney Willie (The Lion) Smith, Wilbur De tion of ”Auld Lang Syne” to close the conducted a funeral service which left service; and many promised the berea- Paris, Babs Gonzales, Bobby Johnson, few dry eyes in the audience. Smith, Lucky Roberts, Jimmy LEFT MARK: “In every man's heart ved Mrs. Elizabeth Page, Oran, jr., and Stuff George Wiltshire, Connie there is a theme,“ the pastor declared. other kin that they would be at the rail- Rushing, Hazel, Ann Lewis, Caleb Peterson, road station Tuesday to say a last “It is in some men's heart to entertain; in Jimmy Evans, Norma Miller, Honi others to be entertained. Through Oran “goodbye” to “Lips” before his body Coles, Sam Walker, Page's lifetime, he shared this theme was shipped back to Dallas. It was Chauncey Westbrook.Scobie Brown and with thousands of fans and admirers; fitting that the pallbearers given the task Later Monday night, many of the same how many, only God knows.” of helping “Lips” on his final journey, staers of the music world assembled at There were many murmurs of assent should have been trumpet men. They the Stuyvesant Casino, to play a benefit from the assembly. Few were not aware were: Jimmy Mc Partland, Henry(Red) performance and launch a fund for of the mark “Hot Lips”Page made on Allen, Roy Eldridge, Emmett Berry, Page's widow and son. On Wednesday the music world from his birth in Dallas, Louis Metcalf, and Ed Lewis. Serving as night, Nov.17, a similar affair is shedu46 years ago. This included years as a laison between the funeral directors, J.L. led at Connie's Five Star Musical bandleader, top sideman and composer, Perkins and the public was a lifelong cabaret, Seventh Ave. and night- clubs sought after by theatres, friend of Page, Sam Price. -811/11/54 Thu. NYC., Stuyvesant Casino; ....-TV&....-bc 8:00 pm – 1st HOT LIPS PAGE MEMIORIAL CONCERT: prom. Bob Maltz; Jack Teagarden's band / Bobby Hackett / Conrad Janis band / band of at least eight trumpeters led by Jonah Jones & the pallbearers:Roy Eldridge, Red Allen, Emmett Berry, Louis Metcalf, Ed Lewis, Jimmy McPartland; followed by Herman Autrey, Henry Goodwin and a flock of others, tearing into: "Royal Garden Blues". Alongside them half a dozen clarinet players among them Pee Wee Russell, Garvin Bushell, Heywood Henry and Bob Wilber. Modern notes were provided by the work of Eddie Shu with Gene Krupa trio, and by the presence of Tony Scott and several other younger musicians. promoter Bob Maltz! Jack Crystal has announced a second benefit at the Central Plaza on 11/22/54; source: Leonard Feather in Melody Maker 11/20/54 6 TRUMPET MEN CARRY LIPS TO REST 11/22/54 Mo. NYC., Central Plaza: ....-bc - 2nd HOT LIPS PAGE BENEFIT CONCERT: with Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa, Jack Teagarden, Roy Eldridge; Pee Wee Erwin's Dixielanders; Wilbur deParis band; Metropole bands: Red Allen, Jimmy Mc Partland, Cozy Cole, Charlie Shavers; Conrad Janis' Tailgaters; Billy Taylor Trio; prom.Jack Crystal NYAN-11/27/54p20: "TOP JAZZ GREATS IN PAGE TRIBUTE" A jazz tribute and memorial concert to the late Oran "Hot in the Village, Wilbur de Paris aggregation from Ryan's appeaLips" Page took place at the Central Plaza, 111 2nd Ave. (7th red, together with bands from the Metropole headed by such St.), Monday. Practically every famous jazz musician in town Dixieland stalwarts as Henry "Red" Allen, Jimmy McPartappeared at the concert through the courtesy of Local 802, AF land, Cozy Cole, and Charley Shavers, Conrad Janis' Tailgaof M, as well as the various clubs where they play. The entire ters from Childs, and Billy Taylor Trio will also be featured. This tribute to a great trumpet player turned out to be one of door proceeds will go to Page's widow and son, with nothing the biggest of all testimonial jazz concerts yet held in New taken off for expenses. Gene Krupa, Benny Goodman, Jack Teagarden, Roy Eldridge, and other jazz notables were featured York. (nearly the same reported by PC-11/27/54p14 & NYANduring the concert. Pee Wee Erwin's Dixielanders from Nick's 11/27/54p22) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DB-12/29/54: Two unprecedently huge Hot Lips Page memorial, which was attended by 1,500 with again, hundred memorial sessions have raised almost $5000 in two weeks for turned away. There was some 150 musicians present. … the family of the late jazz trumpet great … the second Funeral services had been held for Oran Page on the (Nov.22) was produced at Central Plaza by Jack Crystal … morning of November 8 at St.Marks Methodist Church. … … Jack Crystall went ahead, with the aid of Red Allen, who The pall bearers were Roy Eldridge, Emmett Berry, Louis took a night off from the Metropole to aid Crystal … an Metcalf, Ed Lewis, Red Allen and Jimmy McPartland. estimated $3000 was raised for the Page family at the second NYAN-12/18/54p27:”Footlights”-Miss McNeil's comment to the late Bill Robinson: … I tell him (Bill) it was fun working with CozyCole, 'Hot Lips'Page, Ralph Cooper, Eddie Rector, Duke Ellington and Bill's old friend, Ed Sullivan; Red Allen, Art Tatum, Billie Daniels and Pearl Bailey. Several of them passed on, but many remain and are “tops” today. 12/20/54 Mo,, NYC - La Mar Cheri - Camp Fund Benefit with RED ALLEN's ALL STARS; NYAN-12/18/54p26: A galaxy of musicians have volunteered to appear at our get-together and camp fund benefit in the La Mar Cheri, 739 St.Nicholas Ave. on Monday night, Dec.20th - such great musicians as Henry "Red" Allen, Buster Bailey, Cozy Cole, Claude Hopkins, Herb Flemming and Benny Moten - the lucky ticket holder will have a chance to win a turkey for Christmas - don't miss it. (George Palmer) NYAN-12/25/54p11: “MUSICIANS NIGHT” AT THE GET-TOGETHER - Who's who of the entertainment world turned out Monday night at the La Mar Cheri to make our Camp Fund Affair the most dazzling in the old year. In the parade of headliners in front are the prize recipients. L. to r., Mae Arthur, Brad Griffith, M.C.; Zelma Yates and Edith Shaw. Back row, L.to r., Linda Reed Coleman, Buster Bailey, Henry Stitt, John Watts, Herb Flemming, Rock”Sax”Jackson, Henry”Red”Allen and Benny Moten. - 91/3/55 Mo. NYC., Goodson's Bar: Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest. THEY HAD WINNING TICKETS NYAN-1/8/55p11: This group leaves no doubt of their appreciation as prize rezipients at the Monday night gettogether camp fund affair held at Goodson's Bar. L. to r., Red Allen, Corrine Jackson, R.Goodson, Gloria Wright and Linda Reed Coleman. 1/17/55; Farmington, the Bagdad: Red Allen, Dave Mc Kae, Dick Cary(p) John Giuffrida, Johnny Vine (rhythm) 2/7,/55, Farmington, the Bagdad - Red Allen was present at Dick Cary´s jam Session (Red Allen-scrapbook) Feb.birthday party of Allen Jr. 2/10/55 Thu.(or one week later), NYC., funeral services for Buck Washington incl.Red Allen PC-2/12/55p14: BUCK OF FABLED BUCK AND BUBBLES TEAM IS BURIED IN NEW YORK N.Y.-Much of the noise of the roaring twenties was caused by the standing applause which greeted the fabled comedy-dance duo of Buck and Bubbles wherever the spotlight found them on the big-time of the vaudeville circuit. In those days, before TV, and not too much radio, Buck and Bubbles played every where. Their theatre bookings were as fantastic as their night club engagements and even bigots among the footlights they managed to do a picture now and then, and were sought for every Broadway legit show with a colored cast. Here last week that team was split forever as Ford Washington Buck bowed offstage for that final curtain. Buck, who died Monday after a short illness in Sydenham Hospital was mourned by a host of old-timers of the lighted circuit. Among those at his funeral services Thursday at the Circle Funeral Parlor were Noble Sissle, Henry (Red) Allen, Leigh Whipper, Bessie Dudley, Ann Lewis, Apus and Estrelita, Nat Nazzaro, Bud Harris, Paul Black, Stuff Smith, Hazel Scott, Mary Lou Williams and Sam Wooding among others. Pallbearers were Slim Thompson, Phace Roberts, Dewey Weinglass, Andrew Jackson, Zutty Singleton and Charlie Davis. Buck is survived by his widow. Feb.55, 3p.m. to 3 a.m. NYC., Metropole – five bands: – collective pers.: Red Allen, Charlie Shavers (t) Buster Bailey, Sol Yaged (cl) Art Magyar, Steven Lacy, Leonard Gaskin ( ) Charlie Queener, Ken Kersey (p) Cozy Cole (d) & others New Yorker 2/12 & 2/19/55 DownBeat 3/23/55p3: ...Jimmy McPartland had left the Metropole. The leaders there now are Red Allen-Cozy Cole, Charlie Shavers, Sol Yages, and Louis Metcalf. CD:3/26/55p17: RED ALLEN COMBO SOCKO WITH NEW FACES, VOCALS N.Y.- Red Allen, combo leader and one of the nation's top trumpet men is hitting the high notes and laying 'em in the aisles as usual. Dropped in on Red at Metropole and what a treat. His combo includes Cozy Cole, Charlie Shavers, Sol Yaged and Louis Metcalf, all stars on their particular instruments. Two things have stood out in the career of Red Allen as a band leader. He has been known to feature most original and tuneful arrangements. He is also credited with having a keen brain for selecting the men who could handle his arrangements best. 2/21/55 Mo.,.N.Y.C.: Bowman's Bar: Camp-fund session with Red Allen as guest NYAN-2/26/55p29 2/28/55 Mo., N.Y.C.; Billy Covan's Renny: Camp Fund Session with Red Allen as guest & player NYAN-3/5/55p18 3/7/1955, Farmington, the Bagdad - Red Allen had crowd really going tonite. (But then the union stepped in and that was the end of Dick Cary's Monday night sessions at the Bagdad. The Bagdad was a restaurant in Farmington. John Giuffrida and Johnny Vine were the regular rhythm section. (John Coller suggests that this was where the photograph of Red and Dick was taken.) (Taken from Cary's diaries) 3/14/55 Mo., N.Y.C., Ebony Lounge – Camp-Fund session with Red Allen as guest NYAN-3/19/55p25 very probably from.3/7/55 at the Bagdad: Dick Cary & Red Allen; photo Gene Marchand, Bristol, Conn.; court. Derek Coller, D.Cary Archive - 10 4/2-4/3/55 NYC., Carnegie Hall 0:00-3:40 am.- CHARLIE PARKER MEMORIAL CONCERT: prom. Mary Lou Williams & Hazel Scott; masters of ceremonies: Barry Ulanov, Stan Kenton, Nat Hentoff, Al Jazzbo Collins, Leonard Feather, Barry Gray, Dizzy Gillespie, Thelonious Monk; music by: Lester Younq, Horace Silver, Art Blakey; Kenny Dorham, Sonny Stitt; Bernard Pfeiffer; Josh White; Billy Taylor Trio; Hazel Scott, John Ore; Pearl Bailey; Herb Jeffries; Mary Lou Williams; Stan Getz, Bob Brookmeyer, Phil Sunkel, Johnny Williams, Teddy Kotik, Frank Isola; Jack Ackermann & Stan Getz Group; Sammy Davis Jr.; Billie Holiday; Dan Terry Orch., Al Cohn, Osie Johnson, Quincy Jones, George Handy, Eddie Bert, Sal Schlinger; Barry Gray; Dinah Washington, Hazel Scott; Lennie Tristano, Lee Konitz, Billy Bauer, Jeff Morton, Charlie Mingus; several acc.by Oscar Pettiford & Kenny Clarke; 3:20-3:40 am. JAM SESSION: Dizzy Gillespie, Red Allen, Charlie Shavers(t) Kai Winding, J.J. Johnson(tb) Buster Bailey, Tony Scott(c1) Gerry Mulligan(bars) Julius Watkins(horn) Thelonious Monk(p) Charlie Mingus(b) Teddy Charles(vib) & others ( parts of this concert were recorded by Norman Granz but according Mary Lou Williams he did not received permission for release). JAM SESSION FOR"BIRD" information wanted Martin Williams “Henry Red": Allen is generous to a fault in his viewpoint of others-“Better not ask me what trumpeters I like. It would be easier to name those I don´t like. I know them all and I go around with them for pleasure. Different styles and schools and that sort of thing don´t mean much to me. After Charlie Parker died I went to pay my respects at the benefit concert for his children that was held in Carnegie Hall.” It was Allen who broke through a long stage wait toward the end of the concert, while Thelonious Monk and Dizzy Gillespie were verbally and musically sifting through old numbers to pick one to finish off the evening. Allen picked the slow blues and started to play. “We made it. It turned out all right,” he says. Ch.Parker died Sat.3/12; PC:3/26/55p1&5: …announcing the above Concert, …An ironic touch is the tribute paid Parker from the stage of Carnegie Hall the night he died by Carmen McRae, rising young singer. Miss McRae dedicated one of her numbers to Parker, calling him “the greatest of them all.” She did not know that he was dead or neath death at that moment. "BENEFIT JAM SESSION TO AID PARKER´S TOTS"-SHOW WORLD GREATS TO PRESENT GIGANTIC CARNEGIE BAA-4/2/55p7: New York-The biggest musical A partial list-who will appear and perform include Pearl HALL, benefit show that Carnegie Hall's rafters have ever rung to will Bailey, Louis Bellson, Cliff Brown, Kenny Clark, Dizzy take place midnight Saturday, April 2, when friends of the late Gillespie, Benny Green, Billie Holliday, Herb Jeffries, Charlie (Yardbird) Parker assemble for a jam session. J.J.Johnson, Max Roach, Baby Lawrence, Oscar Pettiford, All proceeds for the event will be used to aid his two Charlie Shavers, Billy Taylor, Lucky Thompson, Dinah children. A committee of three formed by Hazel Scott (wife Washington, Roy Haynes. of the black N,Y. politician Powell), Dizzy Gillespie and Oscar Goodstein, co-owner of the Broadway jazz place, Mary Lou Williams set up the Charlie Parker Memorial Bird-land, which was named after Parker, said that he was Foundation, Inc., immediately after his funeral last week. calling off the benefit concert that was due to be held there Miss Scott, the chairman of the group, said that the funds Sunday, April 3, and cooperating with the Committee of from the concert will be .used for medical and educational Three to make their affair a complete success. Tickets for the affair are on sale at the Palm Cafe and Flap's purpose of his offspring only. SHE ADDED that she was deluged with request from Record shop in Harlem and at the boxoffice at Carnegie Hall. They range in price from $1.50 to $5. musicians and performers to perform on the program. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PC-9.4.55p14: Musical Greats in Two Cities Pay Homage To more than twelve hours, starred Dizzy Gillespie, Ben Webster, Charlie Parker: New York – With Philadelphia leading the Stan Getz, Billie Holiday, Coleman Hawkins, Joe Jones, May way musical greats here also got on the sound wagon to pay Lou Williams, Mary Ann McCall, Leonard Feather, Hazel tribute to the late Charlie (Yardbird) Parker whose untimely Scott, Ray Bryant and Chet Baker among others. At press-time Saturday night another great crew of top musideath highlighted his great contribution to the profession. The affair in the city of brotherly love for tire dean of the cians were standing before the spotlight at Carnegie Hall awaimodern jazz school took place at the Blue Note musical bar In ting curtain time to repeat the Philly performance. Among North Philly. A marathon jazz memorial, it was staged by Jack them were Kenny Clarke, Charlie Shavers, Henry (Red) Allen, Fields, owner of the bistro. The proceeds from the affair will Lucky Thompson and Max Roach. With boxes being sold for be turned over to the committee of three, Hazel Scott, Mary $100 it appeared that the fund would get started in a high Lou Williams and Dizzy Gillespie, who have established a fashion. However, no report of the attendance was available at trust fund for the "Bird's" children. The affair which lasted press-time. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THE PARKER MEMORIAL CONCERT ; by Leonard Feather in Melody Maker 5/7/1955 P.5: THE Charlie Parker Memorial Concert at Carnegie Hall, which wonderful comedy routine, as well as dancing and singing, of took place last week, will not easily be forgotten by the 2,8oo all things, 'Melancholy Baby', accompanied by Hazel. fans lucky enough to get into the packed hall. The affair, which Sammy Davis, rushing in between shows at the Copacabana, was sold out 24 hours in advance, netted around $8,000 for the scored so heavily with his vocal imitations that the audience memorial fund established recently for Charlie's two sons. wouldn't let him go-so he stayed on to sit in on drums for a "A MEMORABLE START" - The most memorable surprisingly good solo. Sammy was still wearing a black moments came at the start of the show. Hazel Scott, who had patch, as a consequence of the accident in which he lost his been one of the most effective workers on the com-mittee that left eye a few months ago. organized the fund and the concert appeared on-stage (looking There were many other vocal hits: Billie Holiday and Herb exceptionally beautiful), and asked for-and received-complete Jeffries sang; Dinah Washington and Hazel Scott coincidentally silence while she read an appropriate poem, by the Negro both did "A Foggy Day In London Town"; and Hazel offered writer Countee Cullen in memory of Bird. She then asked the some of the best piano we have ever heard her play. Josh entire audience to stand, and announced: "Charlie Parker will White beginning off because of a thumb injury turned the now play 'Now's The Time."' And so Charlie Parker himself stage over to the guitar and the voice of his talented son. started the concert, as his immortal record of that name was "CORNET AGAIN!" Instrumentally, the concert was no less relayed allay through the Carnegie Hall loudspeakers. successful. The long set by Stan Getz was notable for the cornet To sustain the mood achieved by this idea, Lester Young came solos of Phil Sunkel, who may well start a fashion for this on and played the first live performance of the evening, a slow instrument in modern jazz. Pettiford and Kenny Clarke provided and subdued solo that showed him at his greatest. the accompaniment for Mary Lou Williams and others. Every From then on, the entire night was filled with great outfit that played from Billy Taylor's trio to Dan Terry's big performances by just about every major artist within reach of band, seemed to be at peak form. Carnegie. All of them donated their services as a contribution Masters of ceremonies for the show included Barry Ulanov, to the fund. The biggest hits of the night with the audience Barry Gray, Al "Jazzbo" Collins and this writer. Stan Kenton were scored by Pearl Bailey and Sammy Davis Jr. Pearl appeared briefly to pay verbal tribute to Bird. coming on ostensibly just to take a bow, wound up doing a The concert was supposed to last from midnight till three a.m., 20:00 - 11 on his own or other labels according to the contractual availabilities of the artists. The whole proceeds from the sale of these albums would have been turned over to the fund and might have amounted to a couple of thousand dollars. But Lennie Tristano, though he had worked on the committee, went to the Union and objected to Grant's participation, as a result of which all recording was banned. At the end of the night, Dizzy Gillespie officially presented Hazel with a cheque for a thousand dollars for the fund, the proceeds of a previous benefit held at the Blue Note in Philadelphia under his auspices. Chan Parker was in the audience at Carnegie Hall. She must have been as touched by the extraordinary results of the night's performance as were the rest of the 2.8oo jazz lovers present on this unforgettable occasion. ========================================================================================================= but by 3.20, when a flock of musicians were still waiting backstage to get on, it was decided to throw all the leftovers into a giant jam session, which found out such veterans as RED ALLEN and BUSTER BAILEY in the same ensemble with THELONTUS MONK, GERRY MULLIGAN and DIZZY GILLESPIE, who had just hurried in from Philadelphia, where he had worked till one a.m.! By the time the last notes were sounded at 3.40 (at the insistence of the Carnegie managers and the Fire Department), Chet Baker and a couple of others were vainly hanging on the local doors backstage, trying to get in to pay their respects to Charlie's memory. "A COMPLAINT" - This amazing concert might have been preserved for posterity on LP records. Norman Granz, who had footed the big bill for the funeral expenses, had volunteered to have the whole show recorded, for release Pearlie Mae and Red – two happy people - 12 4/4/55 Mo., NYC., Bali Bar - Camp Fund Session with Red Allen as guest player NYAN-4/9/55p25 4/11/55 Easter Mo., 10 p.m.-3 a.m. ,NYC., Renaissance Ballroom - DANCE - Johnny Felton & All Stars, Danny Barrajanos & His Mambo Band - Honored guests: Louis Armstrong & Red Allen NYAN:4/9/55p13 4/11/55 Mo., NYC., Red Randolph's Shalimar Camp Fund Session with Red Allen as guest probably after the above event; NYAN-4/16/55p25 4/18/55 Mo. NYC., Brown Twins Bar - Camp Fund session with Red Allen & Buster Bailey Jr. NYAN-4/23/55p25 4/30/55, Mo.,NYC: La Mar Cheri; - Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest NYAN-5/7/55p25 NYAN-4/9/55p25: “SOME FUN”- Timmie Rogers, Eunice Hart, David D.Ehrlich, Heineken's Beer; Vivian Brown, Bali Bar; Red Allen and Elaine Ellis got quite a kick out of the going-on during the Monday night get-together and camp fund benefit held in the Bali Bar last Monday Night. NYAN-5/7/55p25: “GET-TOGETHER” FRIENDS – This group of smiling folk were the door prize winners at the camp fund benefit, Monday night in the beautiful La Mar Cheri. Front (l. to r.) Cherry Coleman, O.F.Cherry, Ruth Wallace, Gloria Dixon and Donald Grasty. Back row(l. to r.) Kathleen McGrane, Red Allen and Kenneth Murphy. DB-5/18/55: Free-wheeling jazz still on at The Metropole every night with Red Allen, Buster Bailey, Charlie Shavers, Cozy Cole, and their tireless cohorts … - 13 5/ /55 NYC., life session at THE METROPOLE - HENRY"RED"ALLEN & HIS ORCH. : Red Allen (t,v) Herb Flemming (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) Benny Moten (b) Cozy Cole (d) Al"Jazzbo" Collins (narr) part-1 2:02 5:30 intro: BUDDY BOLDEN SAID -vRA to ann.AC (J.R.Morton) KISS THE BABY -vRA&ch (0.Barker-H.Allen) Bethlehem/Lon.LTZ/ BFC-21 / N-1501 /RA-CD-16/ --- / --- / --- / CHARLIE SHAVERS´ ORCH.: Ch.Shavers (t) Frank Rehak(tb) Ed Barefield(cl,as) Ken Kersey (p) Milt Hinton (b) P.Francis (d) --- / --- / --- / part-2 8:50 intro band to ann. AC segue to- Cotton Tail JAM SESSION AT THE METROPOLE - HENRY RED ALLEN & CHARLIE SHAVERS AND THEIR ORCHs. : Red Allen, Charlie Shavers (t,v) Herb Flemming (tb,v) Frank Rehak (tb) Buster Bailey (cl,v) Eddie Barefield (as) Claude Hopkins, Ken Kersey (p) Benny Moten, Milt Hinton (b) Cozy Cole, Panama,Francis (d) part-3 13:20 WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN -vEns. (trad.) --- / --/ --- / -intro-ann.-Francis&Cole-Allen in Orch.-vHF&ch-Flemming-vHF&ch-BarefieldvCS&ch-Shavers-Rehak-Allen (ens.shouts"Ridel Redl Ridet)-vRA-vEns,-vRA-Bailey-vB8- Allen & -Shavers in ens.-coda-encore: Francis&Cole intro-Allen intro-Shavers & Allen-Allen in ens.- TRUMET SESSION: Red Allen, Charlie Shavers (t) Cozy Cole (d) Al"Jazzbo"Collins(narr.) 2:26 TRUMPET CONVERSATION -narrAC (Allen-Shavers) --- / --- / part-4 --- /RA-CD-12/ -annAC-Cole intro-vAC-Allen-vAC-Shavers-vAC-Allen-vAC-Shavers-vAC-Allen-vAC-Shavers-vAC-Allen & Shavers with some breaks of each one- Al"JAZZBO"Collins on Bethl.BCP-21: For the last two years or so there has been a very un-New Yorkish sort of Chicago-ish sort of place called the Metropole operating a series of Jazz Type concerts almost daily ... some of them starting as early as three o'clock in the afternoon and all of them featuring a line up of stars and attractions that would make any promoter lick his chops in anticipation of box office receipts and sounds to come. The Metropole didn't always swing. That is not quite in the manner it does today ... but that's another story. Actually the music and entertainment policy of the Metropole up until two years ago was a revival of Gay Nineties type songs, with Lillian-Russell-type hour glass figures and Beatrice Key facsimiles bird-in-a-gilded-cageing it up ... with even mustachined piano (upright) players complete with elastic sleeve garters and the beer stein a top. One dark (so they tell me) Tuesday night around 11:30 P.M. when the musical excitement was running high, a musician, itinerant, who shall remain unknown, calmy and without asking anyone if they were interested, removed from a brown paper bag, (wouldn't you know it) a rusty-type cornet and proceeded to make history of one sort or another. Actually he played the worst and it was pretty bad ... but the spark was set off ... the idea of Jazz was planted because as bad as he happened to be, the people responded warmly and not only applause ensued but a few coins made their way into his paper bag ... Later that week say Lon Harriman, who buys talent for Metropole, purchasing a few name musicians for a trial run ... a trial run ... that has up to this writing never stopped. The parade of Jazz names has been almost like a cavalcade of Dixie-land, although the music is not limited to that era or style ... At the Metropole, the musicians play from a parapet built over the bar, with huge pictures of the musicians hung up and mirrors on the wall. A tremendous amount of visual excitements is generated ... to say nothing of the music. The idea of this album was born out of customer demand. Customers attending a night at the Metropole would ask if records of the stars appearing were available ... Pointing up the fact, too, that the passers-by that came in to listen, the transients attracted by-the sound wafting out the door onto Seventh Avenue were not the usual jazz devotee, not the record collector, but a new audience beeing created from the stream of humanity passing by. I was delighted to participate in the preparation of this album, and especially so when I found out that RED ALLEN and CHARLIE SHAVERS and their respective orchestras were to be on the same stand. We recorded on a Friday night close to midnight with the place packed and everyone in a rather high spirit. BETHLEHEM was fortunate in being able to secure the engineering services of RUDY VAN GELDER of Hackensack, New Jersey, a rather legendary-type audio man who has the reputation of being a JAZZ ENGINEER. That night Rudy was playing his big AMPEX tuned especially for the occasion. Opening with a formal broadcast-type thing Red Allen comes on and sings a few bars of I THOUGHT I HEARD BUDDY BOLDEN SAY. Immediately after, Red introuces one of the Metropole house specialities, KISS THE BABY (Barker-Allen). This is a jam-session type number where everybody gets a chorus, and sometimes two, In addition to a few unison rounds. KISS THE BABY is also an audience-participation number, where even the waiters, bartender and bouncers joined in. Although Red Allen is the leader of this orchestra, you can easily see it is an all-star group. with wonderful tasty drums by Cozy Cole, some fine Buster Bailey clarinet, and a few youngters who are just coming up in the business (smiles) like Benny Moten on bass, Claude Hopkins on piano, and Herb Fleming on trombone. If you should ever be lucky enough to visit the Metropole when Red Allen is there, and he does perform “Kiss The Baby”, it is apt to last a full hour or maybe more. Side two has always got to be WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN. So. you have not one superb musical aggregation. but two - Count 'em! Two big, powerful swinging, spirited Dixieland bands with no mutes being used, and everybody fired to a full frenzy, and in some cases, as you will hear, being carried away. This is the full treatment and as many times as you probably have heard The Saints, I believe this recording will reach out through the material in your loud speaker, grab you by the earlobes and shake you up! There are vocals by Herb Fleming, Red Allen, Buster Bailey, and even duets, trios and quartets. The arrangement was definitely not pre-conceived, and even after the date was over several of the musicians, including Red Allen. were surprised when they heard the play-back. This is the way the Saints should be delivered; with all stops out and some of the stops so far out that they can never be put back in again. As you will notice, we had a little tape left at he end of the evening and I've always had the idea that musicians can carry on complete conversations with their instruments. If you're not a musician you need an interpreter. I'm not a musician, so I wrote the script, and CHARLIE and RED translated it into musical short hand - TRUMPET CONVERSATION (Shavers-Allen). It was like the rest of the session - just for fun and just for few laughs. I hope that when you're In New York you will visit the Metropole and hear in person first-hand what you're about to hear on record. DownBeat 6/29/55: Bethlehem cut an album at the Metropole with …(lineup & m.c.) - 14 - - 15 DownBeat 22/22, 11/2/55 - Beth.BCP-21: Rating: ** - The Metropole is a large, long, exuberantly full bar on Seventh Ave. in the Times Square district that has been booking Dixieland bands with noisy success more than a year. This is an accurate record of a crowded night at the Metropole. After Red Allen's Buddy Bolden theme, the opening number features Red's band with … Cotton Tail involves a Charlie Shavers unit with … Both bands combine on a long Saints that also features several vocals. Again, the best soloist is Rehak. The set ends in an amusing trumpet dialogue between Shavers and Allen, with Cozy on drums and Jazzbo as interpreter. Aside from Rehak, the musical level in less than optimum, mainly because the soloists are generally aiming at exciting the audience by force rather than invention. They succeed. Narration and notes by Al Collins. This is a good souvenir if you've visited the Metropole. Otherwise, there are much better Dixieland sets. ------------------------------------------------------------Peter Tanner Jazz Journal Sept.56: This LP takes the form of a commentated programme from the Metropole, The proceedings start off mildly enough with a nice, vocal by Red Allen on "...BUDDY BOLDEN SAID", but the following track is a horrible riffy ersatz blues called "KISS THE BABY", in which the audience join with shouts of uninhibited something or other surely it can't be joy! "Cotton Tail" introduces Charlie Shavers in a long, loud and boisterous performance which combines the worst aspects of JAPT with that of the average jam session . To be fair, I should say that Shavers' first solo chorus, before he goes into histrionics, is a neat piece of work, but it doesn't excuse the rest of this performance. The reverse is almost entirely taken up with an interminable and vulgar version of "THE SAINTS", which is presented as a short of prize fight between Allen and Shavers. The record ends with a corny gimmick routing between the two trumpets. I had to get out my copy of Red Allen's "Biffly Blues" to take the taste of this so-called jazz out of my mouth. H.Panassie to LondonLTZ-N5010 in Bul.hcf-No.68/5-57: Ces interprétations ont été enregistrées récemment (en 1956, je crois) ou « Metropole », une des rares boites de New-York où l'on entende encore beaucoup de jazz. Dans la première face, on entend tout d'abord l'orchestre Henry Allen-Cozy Cole ainsi composé : Henry Allen (trompette), Herb Flemming (trombone), Buster Bailey (clarinette), Claude Hopkins (piano), Benny Moten (bosse), Cozy Cole (batterie). Cotton Tail, par contre, est joué par l'orchestre de Charlie Shavers comprenant Shavers lui-même (trompette), Frank Rehak (trombone), Eddie Barefield (clarinette), Kenny Kersey (piano), Milton Hinton (basse), Panama Francis (batterie). Au verso, When the Saints go marching in est interprété par les deux orchestres réunis, tandis que Trumpet Conversation est un bref duo de trompettes par Henry Allen et Charlie Shavers accompagnés par Cozy Cole et quelques autres musiciens. Passons sur Buddy Bolden said, qui n'est joué que brièvement, en guise d'introduction. Kiss the babie, est la meilleure interprétation du disque, en bonne partie grâce à Cozy Cole dont le tempo implacable engendre un swing formidable. Le meilleur soliste est nettement Claude Hopkins (pas très bien enregistré, malheureusement) qui joue dans un style de piano mi-Basie mi-Ellington et qui swingue énormément lui aussi. Puis vient Buster Bailey, toujours grand clarinettiste, mais pas « at his best ». Herb Flemming ne casse rien. Henry Allen, pour ne pas changer, joue de façon quelque peu désordonnée, surtout vers la fin de son solo (c'est également Henry Allen l'auteur des chorus vocaux). L'interprétation de Charlie Shavers commence par un chorus d'Undecided (l´indicatif de Shavers) joliment swingué. Hélas, le morceau est vite abandonné pour un Cotton Taie pris dans un tempo casse-cou qui met les musiciens dans l'impossibilité de bien swinguer. Cependant, seul Frank Rehak (un progressiste) est franchement ennuyeux. Kenny Kersey au piano (mal enregistré), Eddie Barefield à la clarinette et surtout Charlie Shavers à la trompette réussissent à jouer parfois de façon intéressante. La virtuosité de Shavers est, une fois de plus, renversante, Et l'on entend vers la fin un pittoresque dialogue batterie-contrebasse entre Panama Francis et Milton Hinton. Le verso est bien inférieur. When the Saints, pris dans un tempo beaucoup trop vif, dégénère en pétaudière. Il n'y a pas un seul solo vraiment bon. ici, Eddie Barefield joue du saxo alita ou lieu de clarinette. Quant à la conversation-trompette entre Henry Allen et Charlie Shavers, elle est amusante puis swinguante ; aussi estil dommage que cette interprétation soit très brève (à peine la durée d'un disque 78 tours) 7/4/55, Basin Street, NYC., Red Allen was present for Louis Armstrong's 55th birthday celebration ca.Aug.1955, prob.NYC., Vaughan Monroe-TV featuring : HENRY"RED"ALLEN & HIS METROPOLE ALL STARS: 8/29/55 NYC., TONY PARENTI ALL STARS: Red Allen (t) Tyree Glenn (tb) Tony Parenti (cl) Hanc Duncan (p) Milt Hinton (b) George Wettling (d) (Pearlie Mae Allen had sent a Cartridge cassette with “alternate takes“ from the sides with Red Allen except OLD SUMMERTIME from test-records; but in fact they are recorded from the same takes but obviously from another studio corner – possibly an early try of stereo effects which had dropped on issued records) “HAPPY JAZZ” all with Red Allen on RA-CD-20a / Jazzt. /Jazzt. /Jazzt. /GDE./Membran(Ger)OLP/ a b c d e f g h i j k J-1215/J-1030/J1273/... / #26-223221-203 7:23 IN THE GOOD OLD SUMMERTIME (trad.) 4:08 FRANKIE AND JOHNNY (trad.) also on RA-CD-16/ --- / --- / --- / --- / --/ --- / / --/ 3:11 Tony's Rag (Parenti) by The Tony Parenti Trio: without Allen, Glenn, Hinton 4:34 Maple Leaf Rag (Parenti) by The Tony Parenti Trio --- / / --/ --- / --- / --- / --- / --/ 6:09 MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND (trad.) 4:21 BILL BAILEY, WON´T YOU PLEASE COME HOME (Cannon) --- / --- / --- / --- / --/ 3:37 THE BLUES (fault on cover, not *"City Of Blues" by the trio) --- / *--- / / --- / --/ 3:39 Vieux Carre (Parenti) by Tony Parenti & Hanc Duncan --- / / --/ --- / / / --- / --/ 4:27 City Of The Blues (Parenti) by Tony Parenti & Hanc Duncan 5:32 CARELESS LOVE BLUES (trad.) --- / --- / / --- / --/ 4:29 I´VE BEEN WORKING ON THE RAILROAD (trad) / --- / --- / --- / --/ Conte Candoli Blindful Test in DownBeat 23/1o, 5/16/56: FRANKIE AND JOHNNY on Jazztone: It sounds like one of those early Louis recordings, but I know it isn't. This thing must have been done about 3 or 4 years ago, and it was made to sound like it was recorded 20 years ago. I don't know who the trombone player is. I don't particularly care for the record because its an imitation. I won't give it any stars at all. DB 10/5/55: Allen, Glenn, Parenti - from the Metropole – cut sides for Jazztone Society label. DB 1/11/56: details of the Red Allen-Tony Parenti session 9/7/55 (source: J.Chilton letter without a copied note) Daily News NYC.2/25/56p18, Dream Street by Robert Sylvester, … Some of our older gentlemen – Tony Parenti, Henry Red Allen, Tyree Glenn, Hank Duncan, Milt Hinton and George Wettling, suh – have banded together for some upbeat two-beat Dixie called “Jazz That´s All” for a recording by the Concert Hall Society. Ty Glenn´s comic invention is evident and Red Allen´s horn soars happily. - 16 Paul Shapler covernotes on J-1030: "Happy Jazz"by Red Allen's All Stars. There's a fair amount of jazz being produced today that cannot both as a jazzman and as a more than competent commercial be categorized as "Modern, ""progressive,""West Coast,""tradi- musician. In 1927 he moved to New York. Then for nearly tional,""Dixieland,""Kansas City-,""Chicago-," "New Orleans twenty years, aside from a few odd jazz jobs, he buried style," or by any other regional, temporal or directional classi- himself in the comfortable obscurity of society bands, radio fycation. After listening to and enjoying this recording, we tried network staff work, in the pit orchestra of the Radio City to come forth with some all-embracing title sufficiently, descrip- Music Hall and, for six years, with the Ted Lewis band. With tive for the jazz neophyte but accurate enough to satisfy the acade- the end of World War II came Tony's return to the fold. He micians. No such luck. But of course, the solution was obvious. began by forming and leading his own small band at the last What kind of music was this and how did it make us feel? Well, remaining haven of traditional jazz on New York's 52nd Street Jimmy Ryan's. Soon afterwards, he moved down-town for a it was jazz, and it made us feel good. So, Happy Jazz it is. The musicians you will meet here are veterans. They're neither two year stint at Eddie Condon's, and then, for four years, he "cool" nor "mouldy" - just good They've been living jazz all worked in Miami Beach with Preacher Rollo's Five Saints, a their lives: working in the creative and fertile atmospheres of New popular Dixieland group. Now back In New York, Tony is a Orleans, Chicago and New York, and playing with just every steady hand at such lively jazz haunt as the Metropole, great names known to jazz. To put it simply, these are musicians, Central Plaza and the Stuyvesant Casino. For the past two years, New Yorkers have been fortunate who love to play, and, given the opportunity to play freely, they, enough to be able to both hear and see TYREE GLENN every make some of the happiest and swingin'-est you've ever heard. HENRY RED ALLEN ... Since 1940, Red has led and weekday afternoon on a local afternoon WPIX-TV show. recorded with his own groups. A stylist of great force and vigor, Tyree, as proficient with the vibraphone as he is with the slide Red Allen has often had to sacrifice his superb lyrical qualities trombone, has a long and distinguished , jazz career both in for the brash, loud and entertaining horn work demanded. of the United States and abroad. Born in Corsicana, Texas, on him by many of his less discriminating fans. This recording, November 23, 1912, he has worked with Benny Carter, Cab however, the first in many years on which he has been given Calloway, Don Redman, and, for five years, Duke Ellington. both the opportunity, the time and the freedom to play as he Both he and the others on this date feel that his chorusses on "Frankie and Johnnie" equal anything he has ever done. feels, presents the real Red Allen TONY PARENTI was born in New Orleans on August 6, Two members of our rhythm section are familiar to all: 1900, just two months, two days and less than two miles apart MILT HINTON, the busiest, the happiest and the most bass from Louis Armstrong. As a youngster, Tony played "legit" player i the business, and drummer GEORGE WETTLING, clarinet in a large orchestrated by his teacher, Prof. Joseph who not only was in on the beginnings of Chicago style jazz, Taberno. It was in 1914, in the halcyon days of Storyville, birth- but was also a vital part of the great swing surge as a member place of jazz, that Tony began to listen to and play the new music. of the Tommy Dorsey and Bunny Berigan bands of the late He did a tour of duty on the riverboats, end then settled down to '30s and early , '40s. Finally, on piano is HANK DUNCAN, whose first recordings were with King Oliver and Sidney a. round of jobs in Crescent City clubs, theaters and hotels. Long after the major exodus of New Orleans musicians to the Bechet, and who, as intermission piano at Nick's in green pastures of the newly jazz-conscious North, Tony stayed Greenwich Village for the last ten years, has endeared on in his home town and built a strong reputation for himself himself to many thousands of jazz lovers. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NAT SHAPIRO - "Paul Shapler"(from Col.Rec.) - session organizer for Concert Hall Soc. - in J.J.7/59: ... After that came my fafourite session of all, "Happy Jazz" under Tony Parenti's leadership but featuring the best Red Allen I had heard in years. I'm still convinced that this is Red's best work on records since the Jack Bland days. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PETER RUSSELL about Jazztone-series incl. JT-1215; Jazz Journal 6-59: Tony Parenti is a backtoom boy of jazz who has been quietly under his own name, recorded for Black and White in the parading his brand of music all over America for many years. A early 'forties. His work on such titles here as "Frankie and solid New Orleans background gave him considerable technical Johnny" or "Careless Love" mark him immediately as a fluency on the clarinet and an insight into the Creole style of play- significant talent. In the ten years he spent as intermission ing which has been the dominant factor in his particular style. pianist at Nick's in Greenwich Village it might have been He is closer to the Creole style in his playing than any other white expected that at least one A & R man might have recognised clarinettist. One of Parenti's particular interests has always been his potential. Duncan comes clearly from the Harlem school, ragtime music, in which he has done much to recreate an interest and plays with an individual touch,. some attention to modern by transcribing and arranging this music for band playing, and trends. and the authority of thirty years experience. He manages by writing many rags of his own. A combination of these two to extract that indefinably 'mellow' tone from the piano that influences has given an original and interesting quality to much only the most well-seasoned performers seem able to produce. of his recorded work. Parenti did not leave New Orleans until The full group tracks seem, on the face of it, to be aggres1927, by which time he had acquired a solid jazz background sively traditional. Like the 'Dixiecats' album, however, the which even close on two decades of New York studio work tradition is more in evidence in the choice of tunes than in any could not eradicate (though no doubt it caused some modifica- technique concerning their execution. The overworked tions). Returning to jazz at the end of the war, Parenti played at "Careless Love , must be one of the most threadbare themes in Jimmy Ryan's with his own band, at Eddie Condon's, and for the book. but this is by far and away the best track. The solo four years at Miami Beach in Florida with Preacher Rollo's strength makes the theme secondary to the originality of the Five Saints. This last group is well represented over here on improvisations, and this is the only justification for the record. His eventual return to New York was marked with much continued playing of themes already familiar from a hundred free-lancing activity, and this record is the product of one such other performances. Glenn solos extremely well over a rocking rhythm, while Allen gives a superb demonstration of pick-up group formed for the Jazztone recording dates. The Jazztone issue also features the two stalwarts from the his highly developed style. Those who maintain that the long Roulette 'Dixiecats' session, Henry Allen and Tyree Glenn, both Metropole stint have affected his playing adversely would be of whom enhance their reputations by their work with Parenti. well advised to hear his solo here and reconsider their verdict. Though they are not present on all tracks, it is true to say that Hank Duncan demonstrates that bouncing, on-beat chord style they, and Hank Duncan, are the dominant attractions. Duncan that distinguishes such white pianists as Stanley Mendelsson has been out of the recording studios for a long, long time, to the and Art Hodes, and which is an immense help to NOT best of my belief, and the evidence here suggests that he is clogging up a rhythm section or upsetting a front line. another sadly misused musician. Duncan is well remembered for "Maryland" has rather tiresome march-time opening and his work on the 1932 session by the New Orleans Feetwarmers, closing choruses, but the filling is pure delight. Parenti takes with Ladnier and Bechet. He has also been heard on two King his best solo on this. and Hinton takes a hilarious and Oliver titles from 1930; with Gene Sedric and his Honeybears quotations solo which nevertheless states the theme in no in 1938; with Snub Mosely in 1941-42 ("Blues at High Noon" uncertain terms. "Frankie and Johnny" has excellent solos all and "Snub's Blues" were issued here), and on some trio sides round, notably from Glenn who plays with a simulated Tricky - 17 Sam growl that is no doubt one of the tricks learnt during wards and enjoys himself immensely playing a complex his stay with Ellington. On "Bill Bailey", conversely, Glenn counterpoint to Allen's often complex lead. plays a staccato, nuanced solo more reminiscent of an up-toParenti, we find, has a limited appeal. and so too may this date Miff Mole. In the ensembles Glenn is completely at a record. But while nothing in the album approaches classic loss, and throughout the disc the ensemble work is virtually jazz, the entertainment value is likely to remain considerable two-part. Parenti, of course, knows ensemble work backover extended hearings. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Martin Richards about Red Allen/Tony Parenti All Stars 1955/57 on Jazz Connoisseur Cassette JCC71 - Jazz Journal July-88: (a) Good Old Summertime; Frankie And Johnny; Bill antecedents, his skill, polish and above all, versatility, cannot be Bailey; R And T Blues; Careless Love; Maryland My doubted. His lengthy solo on Good Old Summertime is a knockout. Maryland (30.06) - (b) Tony's Rag; Vieux Carre; Maple The rhythm section is exemplary and these tracks will serve to Leaf Rag; City Of The Blues; (c) Memphis Blues; remind us what an underrated] pianist Hank Duncan was. If you like Yellow Dog Blues; Cherry; Fidgety Feet (30.07); (a) New Orleans jazz with an authentic sound, then this is for you. Red Allen, Tony Parenti, Tyree Glenn, Hank Duncan, ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Milt Hinton, George Wettling, (b) same as (a) but minus H.Pannassie. bul.h.c.f. No.67/4-57 Allen and Glenn. (c) Same as (a) except Cutty Cutshall (tb) for Glenn and Ralph Sutton (p) for Duncan. La section rythmique est supérieure à la section mélodique. Cette This cassette is notable for the generous playing time dernière comprend en Tony Parenti un clarinettiste extrèmement. and the near-revelation of Tony Parenti's clarinet faible, dépourvu d'invention et de swing. Henry Allen est très playing. With the exception of R And T Blues, the (a) irrégulier. Dons certains passages (par exemple le 1st chorus and (b) tracks appear to have been previously issued d'ensemble de Frankie and Johnny et son solo de Bill Bailey), il on Jazztone J 1215, and some of them on Guilde Du joua de façon assez plaisante, mais le plus souvent il est désor-donné Jazz J 1030, although both of these had I've Been et sans grand u feeling » l'rnvraisemblable solo de trompette de Working On The Railroad which isn't here, Careless Love est typique du plus mouvais Henry Allen. Tyree Bruyninckx shows August 29th 1955 as the recording Glenn, le meilleur membre de la section mélodique, a mieux joué en date, under Parenti's name. d'autres circonstances, mais on l'entend avec un certain plaisir. Hank Disregarding his pre 1940 work, this is some of the Duncan se montre un solide pianiste d'accom-pagnement et certains nicest Red Allen that I've heard. His playing is power- de ses solos (celui de I've been working on the railroad) sont d'une ful and care-fully structured. It's also mercifully free excellente venue, si quelques autres (celui de Careless Love princiof the extravagant excesses which sometimes marred palement) contiennent quelques cafouilla-ges. En fin de compte, his performances, although you can't blame Red for c'est Milton Hinton le meilleur des solistes. Si son solo de I've been giving his audiences what they wanted. I've always working on the railroad est très amusant, celui da Maryland et enjoyed Tony Parenti and admired his pioneer New celui de ln the good old summertime (sans accompagnement) sont Orleans role, but if this was his only recorded work, tout bonnement formidables. Quelle netteté de phrasé ! Les on its evidence, you would have to place him with the adversaires les plus acharnés du solo de contrebasse (genre de clarinet giants. The quartet sides are particularly musique extrêmement fastidieux neuf fois sur dix, il faut en attractive, having a lovely ragtimey sound which is convenir) ne peuvent qu'être désarmés devant un pareil talent ! Et full of joy. I would go a long way, if necessary, to hear quel excellent enregistrement ! Tony's version here of Maple LeafRag. Milton Hinton joue aussi de façon remarquable dans la section Tyree Glenn's trombone sound is also well worth rythmique, convenablement épaulé par George Wettling. listening to. Noting his birthplace, I wonder if we might Je ne recommande ce disque qu'aux grands amateurs de contredescribe him as a 'Texas Trombone', but regardless of basse. NYAN-10/8/55p19: SHAKE – ROCK 'N' ROLL – sounds a little unusual for the Monday Night Camp Fund affair, but this is what happened up at Bowman's Monday night. This aggregation of guest musicians along with the current band here put on a “Rolling Jam Session.” L.to r.: Red Allen, trumpet; Comanche, exotic dancing “flame,” Ram Ramirez, organist; Jimmy Smith, drums, and Wally Richardson, guitar. - 17 a- Addenda out of Red Allen´s photo collection, courtesy Josephine Allen (Red Allen´s daugter in law), Metropole 54/55?:unknown-Red Allen-Harry Lim -Cozy Cole at the Metropole 1954/55 unknown date, location, persons; top right poss.Buster Bailey; Metropole date?: Bailey-unknown-unknown-Red-Herb Flemming; unknown date, location, persons; right front poss. Claude Hopkins at right poss.Herb Flemming with unknown person - 17 b- Addenda Allen graces a 1955 New York radio show with the voice that won him acclaim as one of the best of the jazz singers. at the Metropole possibly with guests & poss. Henry P.Allen III unknown place, backrow: poss. Moule Bourne & Buster Bailey -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DAILY NEWS, Sat. 11/12/55 p20 Dream Street - All Night . . . by Robert Sylvester: In recent years a lot of semi-serious people ranging from real authorities to the dedicated and raucous Eddie Condon have had a hand in the popularizing of jazz music as a true American art form. The list of these benefactors is long and every name on it deserves credit, from the editors of Down Beat to the New School of Social Research. But as so often happens in such art crusades, the best thing that has happened to jazz and jazz musicians is, possibly, an accident. The accident was that a Seventh Ave. saloon called the Metropole was staggering at the cash register and threw in some jazz guys as a last resort. This was 19 months ago and today Henry (Red) Allen is still up there behind the bar blowing off the roof and a long list of fine cats have found what looks to be a permanent home. Jazz goes there all the time. The joint rocks in the afternoon and continuously until closing. Buster Bailey is there with his clarinet and Cozy Cole presides over one set of drums. Sol Yaged is back for another repeat and Claude Hopkins does those solid piano breaks. Sonny Greer, the old Ellington stalwart, does afternoons there and happily reports his emergence as "a matinee idol." The saloon is jammed at night with screaming jazz buffs and it has become such a temple of the art that the Copper Rail, a saloon across the street, has become the off-hour hang-out of the talent. The best thing about the whole idea is that you don't actually have to go in the Metropole. You can hear the music just as well on the sidewalk. Matter of fact, you can hear it just as well 10 blocks away. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ - 18 Stick Evans now drumming with Red Allen's band at Metropole; by DB 9/7/55 9/26/55, Mo., NYC: Frazier's Restaurant: Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest NYAN-l0/1/55p19 10/3/55, Mo., NYC: Bowman's Bar - Camp Fund session with Red Allen, Ram Ramirez, Jimmy Smith;Wally Richardson; photo - NYAN-10/8/55p19 NYC., The Metropole, Times Square is getting a taste of Dixieland music via a combo comprised of Red Allen(t,v) Claude Hopkins & Luther Henderson(p) Cozy Cole (d) BAA-11/5/55p7 12/19/55, Mo., NYC: Wells' Music Bar - Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest(player) NYAN-12/24/55p17 Starkaste jazzen I stan … Orkester Journalen(Sweden) Oct.1955: Pa, väg till mina dagliga besök pa Claes Dahlgrens kontor pa 48:de gatan passerar jag det stället, som antaglien bjuder pa det starkaste jazzen genom tidera, Jag talar om Cafe Metropole,som har full skjuts pa underhallningen fran klockan 3 pa em. till fyra-snaret pa mor-gonem. Företrädesvis anlistar man äldre musikanter och därför är det som att se en god bit av Hot Discography i aktion, när man släntrar fram till baren för att ta sig en stilla öl. Sade jag släntra-anej, det är inte rätta intrycket. Trottoaren framför Metropole är packad med folk och först kunde jag inte begripa varför, men sa snart jag satte fotsulan pa trös-keln till baren klarnade det. Metropole har det mest effektiva försäljare jag nagonsin haft det tvivelaktiga nöjet att komma i kontakt med. Bartendrarna (som använder teckensprak eftersom ingen människa kan göra sig hörd i lokalen) formlignen drar en fram till disken och antigen beställer man nagon-ting med en förfärlig fart eller ocksa befinner man sig i en handvändning ute pa trottoaren igen. Ovanför baren pa Metropole, som väl är bortat en 30 meter lang, löper en teterbred hylla och där häller musiken till. För säkerhets skull har man präktiga föörstärkare ocksä och trumpetarna spelar rakt in i mikrofonen och – tro mig – de skulle kumma görna sig hörda utan. När Timme Rosenkrantz berättade att musiken pa Me-tropole kan höras i Europa en klar dag överdrev han inte. Pa Metropole spelar för jäm-nan Henry Red Allen och hans grupp samt Cozy Coles All Stars och da och da Sol Yagedes kvintet. Ibland är alla banden pa estraden samtidigt för en s.k. jam session det händer tre ganger varje kväll och hela New York vet om det. De kan inte undga det. Favorit-melodin pa Metropole är When The Saints Go Marching In. Det är förva-nande hur mycket vitalitet dessa oldti-mers besitter. Red Allen som verklingen ser ut som om han da och da tagit sig en magborstare men är värdig som en präst, skulle kunna göra succé fortfarande, om han presenterades pa en europeisk konsertestrad. Än mer förvanad blev jag över gamle Fats Wallertrumpetaren Herman Autrey - jag trodde han var död för länge sedan - som spelar alldeles ypper-ligst. Buster Bailey är husklarinettist och Kenny Kersey dito pianist. Tro nu inte att man spelar bara dixieland pa Metropole – där förekommer allt. Ena minutes kan Sol Yaged med trio spela Goodmansk kammarjazz, för att följas av den all-deles utomordentlige moderne trombonisten Sonny Russo - fran Sauter-Finnegans band - som levererar hetsiga modernistiska ongangar tal la Woody Hermans trombone-solister. Sol Yaged förtjänar nagra egna rader – han är nämligen den mest fulländade Goodmankopia jag hört. Inte nog med att att han later som BG, han ser ut som Goodman (fast en fot kortare) och har t.o.m. lagt sig till med Bennys benlyftningar och andra gymnastiska tilltag när inspirationen faller pa. Att han sedan mest fastnat för de goodmanska fraser, som i viss man berättigar Panassies karaktäristik av fagelkvitter, ligger i begreppet att han är en kopia och inte en skapandes musiker. Vill ni alltsa fa bekräftat att de gamla gudarna inte lagt näsan i vädret utan fortfarande lever och har hälsan, vare sig de heter Cozy Cole, Buster Bailey eller Red Allen, sa gör för all del ett besök pa Metropole – det är em upple-velse även om det nära nog kostar en hörseln för manga timmar framööver. PC 1/21/56p22 - Ted Watson-Chicago: HENRY RED ALLEN and his wife, Pearl, who reside in the Bronx, are now grandparents … Their son, Henry Jr., and his wife are now fondling baby Alconette Allen. … By the way, Red and his allstars are still scoring at the Metropole in Manhattan … Bennie Moten, Eddie (Moe) Boyd and Claude Hopkins. Claude Hopkins- Jersey Jazz ca.1975p10: … Next I accepted an offer to join Doc Cheatham, Vic Dickenson, Al and Buzzy Drootin, and Jimmy Woods at the Mahagony Hall in Boston, a fine little band, and we worked there fore about tree years from 1951 to 1953. When this broke up, we all went separate ways, and I wound up back in New York with Red Allen's bunch at the Metropole Café, where I stayed until 1960. Then I took a trio to the Nevele Country Club in the Catskills for a stint that lasted six years – well into 1966. NYA-3/17/56p20: Herb Flemming, the famed trombonist, held over at the Metropole for another six weeks. Downbeat acclaims him as one of the greatest jazz men in the business. Ditto: Red Allen, Cozy Cole, Buster Bailey and Claude Hopkins. . 3/2 & 3/3/56, Fr.& Sat. NYC., Central Plaza – Phil Napoleon & his Memphis Five, Buck Clayton & the Plaza All Stars, guest:J.C.Higginbotham; advert.in Village Voice:3/4/56p6 3/5/56 NYC., Col.Records 30th St.studio – BUCK CLAYTON JAM SESSION: Buck Clayton, Billy Butterfield, Ruby Braff (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Tyree Glenn (tb,vib) Coleman Hawkins, Julian Dash (ts) Ken Kersey (p) Steve Jordan (g) Walter Page (b) Bobby Donaldson (d) Jimmy Russing (v) Co 55544-1 7:24 All the Cats Join In /JCH-CD-4/ -1B 4:03 All the Cats Join In / --- / -5 9:40 All The Cats Join In Col.CJ44291/Mosaic MB8-144/ --- / Co 55545-4 8:44 After Hours / --- / --- /Meritt-10/ --- / --- / -5 9:44 After Hours Co 55546-4 6:30 Don´t You Miss Your Baby -vJR (omit Glenn) Col.CL882/Phi.BBL7129/ --- / --- / -5 5:45 Don´t You Miss Your Baby –vJR (omit Glenn) Col.CJ44291/ --- /JCH-CD-9/ - 19 DB 3/21/56: J.C.Higginbotham back in town, he has been playing weekends at the Central Plaza, N.Y. 3/23 & 3/24/56, F.& Sat., same place – Phil Napoleon & His Memphis Five, Roy Eldridge & The Plaza All Stars, guest: J.C.Higginbotham, advert.Village Voice:3/21/56p6 4/9/56 Mo. NYC., Place Pigalle - Camp Fund Affair; guests Red Allen, Billy Valentine Trio NYAN-4/14/56p17 4/30/56 Mo.,NYC., Frazier's Restaurant - Camp Fund session; Red Allen, Sarah Vaughn, Mary Archer, Bobbie Clark, guests NYAN-5/5/56p17 5/4 & 5/5/56, Fr.& Sat. NYC., Central Plaza – Wild Bill Davison, Henry Goodwin, Andy Russo, J.C.Higginbotham, Tony Parenti, Panama Francis, Zutty Singleton, Arville Shaw & others advert.in Village Voice:5/2/56p10 5/7/56 Mo.,NYC.; Brown Twins Cafe - Camp Fund session, Red & Pearlie Mae Allen guests NYAN-5/12/56p19 NYA-5/12/56p23: Trumpet player Henry "Red" Allen gifted his charming wife with 1956 caddy for her birthday last Saturday. Just a little trinket for her to do the grocery shopping with. ... DB 23/11, 5/30/56: Red Allen has celebrated his 2nd full year at the Metropole. 5/18 & 5/19/56, Fr.& Sat. NYC., Central Plaza – Roy Eldridge, Henry Goodwin, Andy Russo, J.C. Higginbotham, Tony Parenti, Zutty Singleton, Panama Francis, Arville Shaw & others advert.in Village Voice:5/16/56p3 5/21,/56 Mo. NYC., La Mar Cheri - Camp Fund session, Red Allen guest NYAN-5/26p17 since early June 56, NYC, Metropole: DB 6/27/56p6: … Marty Napoleon heads a trio Saturday and Sunday afternoons. Louis Metcalf, Hank Duncan, Zutty Singleton, and tenor Bob McCain play there Monday and Tuesday nights. Regular bands are Red Allen's and Sol Yaged-Cozy Cole … ; … Cozy Cole resumes his original drumming role in the City Center revival of Carmen Jones, running until June 17. Muriel Smith, also of the original cast is in this one too. Show may also play Washington July 19. … mid 56, NYC., Metropole: Henry Red Allen (t) Herb Flemming, Buster Bailey, Claude Hopkins, Eddie Bourne vs. Louis Metcalf (t) Bob McKain (ts) Hank Duncan (p) Zutty Singleton (d) ; & Cozy Cole Trio: Sol Yaged (cl) Marty Napoleon (p) O.Keller & J.Cosson in Bull.HCF No.58, May 56p5: Au “Café Metropole” 7 Ave., près de Times Square – L'orchestre de Charlie Shavers n'y joue plus depuis l'entrée de ce musicien chez les frères Dorsey. A signaler, un remarquable petit quatuor dirigé par Louis Metcalf (trompette) entouré de Zutty (batterie), Hanc Duncan (piano), et d'un trés jeune saxo ténor jouant dans la plus pure tradition swing. Son nom: Bob Mc Kain (orthographe donnée par Hank Duncan). – Il y a aussi un trio composé de Marty Napoleon (piano), Sol Yaged (clarinette), et Cozy Cole (batterie). Esprit plus moderne, jazz de qualité médiocre, surtout à cause du clarinettiste, très insuffisant. Pauvre Cozy ! Avant de quitter «Cafe Metropole», nous vous dirons quelques mots sur le pilier du lieu, Red Allen, accompagné par Herb Flemming (trombone), Buster Bailey (clarinette), Claude Hopkins (piano) et Eddie Bourne (batterie). Musique assez désordonnée (présence d'Henry Allen) mais moments assez intéressants avec Flemming et surtout Buster Bailey et Claude Hopkins. Mais ne jetons pas la pierre aux musiciens, car travailler dans une telle ambiance n'est pas une sinécure (atmosphère bruyante de cafe concert). Toutefois, depuis l'heure d'ouverture jusqu'à huit heures, il n'y aque très peu de monde et les musiciens jouent pour eux-mêmes et pour les quelques amis présents. 6/1 & 6/2/56, Fr.& Sat. NYC., Central Plaza – Phil Napoleon, Eddie Barefield, Roy Eldridge, Henry Goodwin, J.C.Higginbotham, Tony Parenti, Panama Francis, Zutty Singleton, Arville Shaw & others advert.in VV-5/30/56p6 6/15 & 6/16/56, Fr.& Sat. NYC., Central Plaza – Phil Napoleon, Willie”The Lion”Smith, Roy Eldridge, Danny Barker, J.C.Higginbotham, Tony Parenti, Panama Francis, Zutty Singleton, Arville Shaw & others advert.in VV-6/13/56p8 Aug.55, Vaughan Monroe TV - Red Allen; NYA-8/20/55p9: Henry Red Allen a solid-sender on the Vaughan Monroe TV opus - 20 9/25/(or18?)/56 NYC., NBC-TV, “Steve Allen´s - TONIGHT SHOW” - HENRY"RED"ALLEN & HIS NATURAL GIANTS: Red Allen (t,ann) Herb Flemming( tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) "Fats"?Morell(poss.Benny Moten) (b) Eddie "Moule"Bourne(d) Skitch Henderson(cod) Tony Randall (guest host) (according Doug Hague's note in JJ-Jan.57 Red Allen was against at Steve Allen's TV late Dec.56/ early Jan. only a poor tape fragment exists/RA-CD-16/ (1:28) intro: PRETTY BABY ( I miss the first part) --/ --/ 2:40 SQUEEZE ME (Williams-Waller) (0:43) HIGH SOCIETY /cut (Melrose-Steele) --/ ST.JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (not on this tape, if this is the session mentioned by Doug Hague in JJ-Jan.57 10/2/56, Tu. NYC., Rockland Palace - bandwagon "Musical Salute To "IKE"" with Maynard Ferguson ork.; Terry Gibbs Quartet; RED ALLEN'S DIXIELAND BAND: Red Allen, C.Higginbotham, Buster Bailey, Coleman Hawkins, Claude Hopkins.... NYA:9/29p22 NYAN-9/29/56p16: The Youth For Eisenhower Bandwagon's "MUSICAL SALUTE TO IKE" will be a real jamming session. MAYNARD FERGUSON and his orchestra along with the TERRY GIBBS QUARTET, RED ALLEN and his Dixieland Band featuring COLEMAN HAWKINS and J.C.HIGGINBOTHAM- But the big attraction is the fact that the admission is absolutely free. It's a Rockland Palace, Oct.2 with an 8:30(pm) downbeat. NYAN-9/29/56p35: MUSICAL SALUTE FOR IKE PLANNED BY YOUTH GROUPS A mammoth Musical Salute to Terry Gibbs and his Quintet Ike has been planned by the featuring Terri Pollard on Piano Uptown Young Republicans to and Vibes; and Henry “Red” take place Tuesday evening, Allen and his Dixieland band, direct from the Café Metropole on Oct. 2nd, at Rockland Palace. The program will include two the great white way. speeches by nationally famed Admission to Salute is free. persons with entertainment spot- Tickets may be secured at any of lighting Maynard Ferguson, the Citizens for Ike Headquarters. Down Beat's Poll winner and his Uptown headquarters are located brand new big orchestra coming to at 747 St.Nicholas Ave., and at the Salute direct from Birdland. 2230 Seventh ave. … DB 12/12/56: Nov. 56, NYC., Neapolitan City, a huge restaurant near Birdland tries jazz: Zutty Singleton, Tony Parenti, J.C.Higginbotham, Sammy Price and Louis Metcalfe. Bul.H.C.F.No.168/May-67: undated poss. around this time: Louis Metcalf-Taft Jordan-Joe Thomas-Red Allen; (c.Jack Bradley) - 21 Louis Metcalf as told to Derrick Stewart-Baxter in from the Luis Russell days, resulted in Red recommending him J.J.J in 1967: … He had married a charming Canadian girl for a stint at the then up and coming Metropole. At this period and felt it was time he had a permanent home of his own. the Metropole featuring an all jazz policy. Louis' engagement He therefore formed a new group, returned to New York, was most successful and lasted four years. From the Metropole and opened at Lou Terrasi's Jazz Club. The job lasted three Louis moved to another famous jazz spot, The Embers, leading months, during which time many famous jazzmen sat in a quartet with Clarence Johnson on piano. with the band. A meeting with Red Allen, his old colleague Doc Cheatham about Louis Metcalfe and Red Allen to Richard Rains, Storyville-14, Dec.67: ... When I spoke of Louis Metcalfe Doc said how well he on his return from a tour (remark: July-65 Roslyn-Blue was playing these days and then related sadly how, having Spruce Inn)) in favour of a succession of rock-and-roll bands. made the Metropole what it was, Red Allen was rejected 11/25/56 NYC., Central Plaza..... TV&....-bc - WILLIE "THE LION" SMITH CONCERT: Herman Autrey, Arvell Shaw, Arthur Trappier, Dizzy Gillespie, Cliff Jackson, Red Allen, Vic Dickenson, Eddie Barefield, Herbert Hall, Jimmy McPartland, Zutty Singleton, Hank Duncan, Meade Lux Lewis, Bobby Hackett, Louis Metcalf, Jo Jones, Panama Francis, Red Richards, Sam ”The Man” Taylor, Wilbur & Sidney DeParis, Omer Simeon, Gene Sedric, Tony Parenti, Fess Williams, Wingy Manone, (transcriptions were made for broadcasts - Jean Failows, Bul.H.C.F.No.64; Jan.57) part. incl. Red Allen (t): ...................….. .......................... NYAN-11/24/56p13: 40 YEARS IN SHOW BUSINESS FOR WILLIE At the recent Canadian, over 400 phone calls to the radio station followed Willie”The Lion”Smith's appearance on Red Allen, Bert Parks, Howard Smith, Wilber de Paris, the air; all wanted more. And the Lion did a second show, Dizzy Gillespie, etc. repeating a successful pattern the fabulous pianist and INFLUENCED MANY: Lion's records are avidly collected pioneer of jazz got accustomed to, here and abroad, for no by jazz connoisseurs and affectionate fans all over the world less than 40 years now. and his fellow musicians respect him as one of the most On Nov.25, many of the top names of jazz and entertainment influential jazzmen. will be present at the Central Plaza, 111, 2nd Ave., to play Willie's recent activities include this week's release of an tribute to Willie Smith, in a celebration that marks his birth- LP titled “Willie The Lion Smith, Accent On day and 40th year in show business. Piano”(Urania), current appearances at the Central Plaza Expected are: Duke Ellington, Count Basie, Ethel Waters, each week-end, his recent successes at the Fairfield Jazz Will Maston Trio, Buck Clayton, Roy Eldridge, Tommy Festival, his participation as an authority and artist at the Dorsey, Russ Morgan, Bobby Sherwood, Bobby Hackett, Lenox, Mass., Jazz Forum. DB 1/9/57: NewYork – Willie (The Lion) Smith's 40th year in music celebrated at a Central Plaza concert recently. Red Allen was present. 11/56 – RedAllen at the Metropole; by Johnny Simmen in Bul.hcf-No.64; Jan.57: C'est au < Metropole > que le public est le plus mauvais, ce qui empéche les musiciens de jouer avec abandon et détente. Dans l'orchestre de Red Allen (Herb Flemming tb, Buster Bailey cl, Claude Hopkins p et Ed Bourne d), il y a un musicien à demi-oublié et qui fait pourtant swinguer son piano d'une manière qui est un régal : Claude Hopkins. Je l'ai entendu improviser sur Three Little Words, accompagne seulement par la batterie, pendant plus d'un quart d'heure et les quelques musiciens qui se trouvaient lá ne se tenaient plus,et pour cause! Le danseur <Honey Boy>Thompson et sa femme, qui étaient présents au Métropole ce soir-là ne cachaient pas leur enthousiasme. <Honey Boy> jeta une poignée de dollars sur l'estrade en criant: < C'est pour toi, Claude, mais je t'en prie, continue, ne WON´T LET HIM GO – Henry Spot, gets everyone in the mood t'arréte surtour pas, JE T'EN PRIE ! > with his torrid trumpet tooting “Red” Allen now entering his Dans l'autre qroupement, celui de Sol Yaged, j'ai surtout third year at the Metropole café and singing. His quintet aimé le jeu de ces superbes musicien que sont Cozy Cole et on Seventh ave., has become a includes Claude Hopkins, Herb Kenny Kersey. Quant à Sol Yaged, le chef, il sonne exac- permanent fixture. Henry, who Flemming, Buster Bailey and serves as master of ceremonies tement comme Benny Goodman il y a quelques années. Eddie Burns. CD-12/22/56: in the New Orleans type jazz prob.late Dec.56 NYC., NBC-TV, “Steve Allen´s - TONIGHT SHOW” - HENRY"RED"ALLEN & HIS NATURAL GIANTS vs. Maynard Ferguson Orchestra: ST. JAMES INFIRMARY HIGH SOCIETY Doug Hague - Jazz on TV - Jazz Journal Jan.57: ... The Steve Allen show continues to be one of the biggest promoters of jazz with the presentation of the Maynard Ferguson orchestra end Henry"Red"Allen's Natural Giants, with ... and an unknown bass. "Red" was in rare form on ST.JAMES INFIRMARY whilst the band's rendition of "HIGH SOCIETY", with solo by Bailey, made a terrific hit with the studio audience. Buster's hair is now quite white but he still retains that well known boyish face... (It might be possible that Doug meant the 9/25/56 session with an existing tape fragment, but without the above mentioned ST.JAMES INFIRMARY and without the Maynard Ferguson sides. The last one played along with Allen on different sessions, for example at 10/2/56). trombonist J.C.Higginbothem weds childhood Sweetheart Margaret Stratton on Dec.27 in New Haven, Conn. NYAN12/29/56p11 - 22 - 1954-56, NYC., METROPOLE ALL STARS: front l.to r.: Eddie“Mole“Bourne, Claude Hopkins 2nd, Red Allen 4th, Herb Flemming; seated: Cozy Cole (E.Biagioni: Herb Flemming) 1956-57, Metropole: unknown woman-Becki Harding - Red Allen - Luis Russell - Bill Eagan (winner of $54,000 and $32,000 lottery) - Herb Flemming (E.Biagioni: Herb Flemming 23 - Red and his musician buddies at the Metropole; Cozy Cole, Buster Bailey, Herb Flemming, …. J.C.Higginbotham back with Henry "Red" Allen and Buster Bailey romping nightly at Metropole. NYAN-2/2/57p11 Spring-57, Higginbotham replaced Herb Fleming; Bul.H.C.F.-4/57 Feb.1957, Ed (Mole) Bourne has left Red Allen; DownBeat 2/20/57; Eddie Bourne decided to stay with Allen; J.C.Higginbotham is now with Red's band! Down Beat 3/6/57 At this time, at the Metropole 1957-59, different musicians played with Red on different days: Herb Flemming, J.C.Higginbotham, Vic Dickenson, later Benny Morton(tb.), Buster Bailey(regular), Tony Parenti & Sol Yaged (from opposite bands), Claude Hopkins (regular), Marty Napoleon, W. Lion Smith, later Sammy Price & Bob Hamner; Eddie Bourne & Cozy Cole ! 2/25/57 Mo.,NYC., Mike Hedley's Lounge - Camp Fund session; Red Allen guest MAKE CAMP FUND GIFT - (l. to r.) Charles Banks, Mike Hedley, proprietor, Royce Wallace Outerbridge and Red Allen make donations at Mike Hedley's Lounge Monday night at the get-together. These charitable minded friends help make it possible for some deserving child to go to summer camp. NYAN-3/2/57p15 DownBeat 4/16/57: “Victor To Wax Allen” ( with Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham, Cozy Cole, etc) DownBeat 11/12/57p31: Jack Tracy about RCA-LPM~1509: Rating***:I am most happy to see one of the grand veterans get a chance to record under good surroundings before the chop are entirely gone. Allen's companions here make up a congenial bunch, and that's the type of jazz that results. There's no earthshaking music to be heard here, but there is the constant reminder of the fire that was once Red's before the years of working set after set at the many Cafe Metropoles he has played took their toll. Especially on the ballads like WORLD ON A STRING and SWEET LORREINE does he sound at ease and unstrained. Hawkins fits in well, playing sympathetically and with firm control and knowledge that is his hallmark. Higginbotham, THE man on trombone for years when he was winning polls, has slipped badly and now sounds almost like a caricature of himself. The rhythm section and the rest of the soloists come through well, with Marty Napoleon's Hines-like piano gleaming in spots. From these quarters, at least, a hearty thanks to Fred Reynolds for offering Red the chance to wax this one - 24 HENRY"RED"ALLEN & HIS ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v) J.C.Higginbotham (tb, not on -2816/-3383/-85) Buster Bailey (cl, not on 2816) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Marty Napoleon (p) Lloyd Trottman (b) Everett Barksdale (g) Cozy Cole (d) Whitney Balliet, Martin Williams (v) among the –vch (P.Mae Allen had sent a cartridge cassette from Red Allen with 3/21/57 NYC., several alternate takes 1933-57, but 2698-#2? Is 100% -#1; for 3385-#2? I am unable to get them 100% simultan but nearly identically at all) H2JB2698-1 5:47 2699 2700 3/27/57 2815 2816 2817 2818 4/10/57 3382 3383 3384 3385-1 LOVE IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER /RCA LP/RCA RD/RCA FX/ RCA /Rarities/RCA CD/ M-1509/ 27045 /M1-7285/430256 / No-24 /-36404 2/RA-CD-C9/ (I.Robin-L.Gensler) 5:3o LET ME MISS YOU, BABY (L.Russell-H.Allen) RCA1644/RCA FXM1 7326/& -7014/ --- /-36402-2/ --- / --- / 4:4o RIDE! RED! RIDE! -vch (Millinder) Lps as 2698-1:RCA1509/-27045/FX-7285/ -430256/ --- /-36404 2/ same: --- / --- /FX-7326/ -/ --- / --- / --- / 5:28 'S WONDERFUL (G.&I.Gershwin) / / --- / --/ --- / 8:25 I COVER THE WATERFRONT - (J.Green-E.Heyman) --- / --- / --3:45 ST. JAMES INFIRMARY (J.Primrose) --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / 6:52 ALGIERS´ BOUNCE (H.Allen) same: 5:12 LOVE ME OR LEAVE ME (Donaldson-Kahn) RCA 1644/ / --- /FXM17014/ /-36402-2/ --- / / --- /-36404-2/ --- / 5:34 I'VE GOT THE WORLD ON A STRING (Koehler-Arlen) RCA 1505/-27045/ --- / 4:08 AIN'T SHE SWEET (Yellen-Ager) --- / --- / --- /RCA430256/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / 5:32 SWEET LORREINE (Mitchell-Parish-Burwell) all sides on CDs of RCA-Bluebird-ND82497-2/BMG(D)82497/ Bluebird 2497 2RB (the 2-cartridge tape sides on RA-CD-c10) Marian McPartland in Down Beat 1/9/58 - the blindfold test about "S WONDERFUL": I think I've been at the Metropole enough to know that's player was laying down a beat that was the end all the way Henry Red Allen. It was really swinging. Sounded like Buster through. It is a little wild at times, but that's the way those Bailey and Coleman Hawkins. The rhythm was going like New Orleans boys are. I liked it very much. It had a lot of mad but the recording sounds a little funny at times. The bass spirit and I'll give it four stars.. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Stanley Dance; Jazz Journal 2-58: The years of over- good to hear Lloyd Trotman's fine bass again, and Everett Barksdale blowing and crowd-pleasing antics at places like the proves that Freddie is not the only rhythm guitarist - and Everett Metropole have done Red no good, but if his tone has solos, too. COZY exercises his usual command, but I wonder why spread, it is really surprising how much is left. His there is so much more off-beat emphasis than there used to be. Odd vocals on "St. James Infirmary" and "Ain't She Sweet" man out is pianist Marry Napoleon. are warmly evocative of the great yesterday, full of Steve Race's "hopeless bigot" doesn't want to offend with a "tetchy" personality, and endearingly sung. On the horn, be can remark about "modern", recognises Napoleon to be a good pianist, but still play prettily and imaginatively, and he achieves suggests his style was ill-suited to this group. Hearing Napoleon on some effective music here in the low register. He this record during one of Leonard Feather's blindfold tests, Marian swings, of course, but there is at times a dismaying McPartland remarked that "he sounded very beboppy." people do inconsistency, or unpredictabilitv, in taste. Thus, he say such awful things about other people, don't they? will execute a different riff perfectly and then follow it Note the long long-playing time. Good cover and studio shots on the with an entirely inappropriate flutter. back make this add up to value for money. But is the peculiar "Ride, Red, Ride", the first track, and the one by which recording balance due to one of those crazy stereophonic deals? the LP is named, is the worst. Skip it, and try the last. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------H.Panassié to RCA 430259 in Bul.hcf-No.83/12-58: and best - "Algiers Bounce". Here the group really falls Les interprétations consistent en une suite de solos, parfois encadrés in a groove and rocks all the way. In fact, if you, play d'rmprovisations collectives. La valeur de ces solos est très variable. this you are unlikely to be able to resist buying the Ceux d'Higginbotham sont généralement les meilleurs. Sa puissance„ record. After the introduction, Higginbotham takes off impressionnante, est mise en valeur par une excellente prise de son. on a long solo that builds well and recaptures much of Hawkins est peut-être aussi bon, mais l'enregistrement durcit et his old glory. Hawk follows smoothly, not really exten- appauvrit so sonorité de telle manière qu'il est difficile d'en bien juger. ding himself, but just surging along with exciting Buster Bailey est loin de sa meilleure forme; sa sonorité à lui aussi est suggestions of plenteous reserve power. I can't decide durcle par l'enregistrement. La sonorité d'Henry Allen, au contraire, a whether it is due to the reed or the recording, but his été favorisée par la prise de son, mais il y o toujours dans son jeu ce tone seems more wiry on this record. Next is Henry côté désordonné qui gâche ses meilleurs chorus : chaque fois qu'on Allen in a solo that is, by his standard. relatively rela- croit qu'il est parti pour bien jouer, il détruit tout par un de ces effets xed and simple, and much the better for it. Last soloist emphatiques ou vulgaires dont il était déjà coutumier il y a près de 30 is veteran Buster Bailey, 55 years old, and he puts ans. On entend également en solo (mais brièvement) Everett Barksdale down an extremely ingenious and attractive clarinet à la guitare (excellent) et Marty Napoleon au piano (fastidreux). Le jeu improvisation that steals, for me, the whole record. de contrebasse de Lloyd Trotman « sort » très mal. Le swing de Cozy Most of the "Down Beat" readers who voted Jimmy Cole à la batterie est la qualité principale de ce recuell, la plus constanGiuffre top clarinet for 1957-to the sound of ironic te surtout. Cozy fait des choses fantastiques dans 'S wonderful et Love laughter around the world-have probably never heard is just around the corner, et frappe implacablement le contretemps Buster Bailey. Buster, of course, has been playing his avec une précision extraordinaire tout ou long (ou presque) d'Algiers lacy clarinet style for a long, long time, and here he is Bounce.Cette dernière interprétation, prise dans un idéal tempo moyen proving that he still has something fresh and rather est nettement la meilleure du recueil. C'est là que Higginbotham et elegant to offer. The secret of "Algiers Bounce" is its Hawkins prennent leur meilleur solo, toute une série de chorus sur le fine, medium tempo. and Buster begins wailing and blues; au cours des siens, Higginbotham - casse tout. then building on it like all the others. He finds a La plus mauvaise interprétation du recueil, par contre, est Sweet Lorfetching, rocking phrase and, as he comes to what you raine, où Henry Allen fait preuve d'un mouvais goût invraisemblable, think is a climax with it, he suddenly goes into the Notons encore que Ride Red Ride (variations sur le thème principal lower register for the last twelve bars. The effect is de Tiger Rag) est loin de valoir la version 1941 de Lucky .Millinder quite delightful. All those who have been disturbed by qu'elle suit parfois d'assez près; que Buster Bailey prend un solo d'une the clarinet trends in jazz of the last two decades ought belle virtuosité dans ce dernier morceau; que Higginbotham est to get a special lift from this solo. particulièrement bon dans St James Infirmary et Ain't she sweet; que Throughout the record it is Buster who gives me the Hawkins brille surtout dans Love is just around the corner (et pendant most pleasure (dig him behind the vocal on "Ain't She le vocal de Red Allen dans St James Infirmary) et que la guitare Sweet?"), but there is naturally a great deal of fine d'Everett Barksdale est parfois enregistrée beaucoup trop fort à music from Hawk, I was going to describe him as l'accompagnement, ce qui rend désagréable l'audition de certains "ever-reliable", but he does excusably sound a bit passages. disgusted with the tiger-riding in the first number. It is Bref, un disque très inégal... - 25 - Cozy Cole-Lloyd Trotman-Buster Bailey-J.C.Higginbotham-Red Allen-Coleman Hawkins-Marty Napoleon-Everett Barksdale Keith Smith about ALGIERS BOUNCE in Jazz Journal 8-69: bone is fine, what a player he has been through the years! Really I must tell you that above all Red Allen is my favourite Again that huge, fantastically large tone. Coleman Hawkins trumpet player. When I think about the many trumpet players is superb, I can't say anything else; but it is a beautiful record I think, Red comes out on top because to me he seems to all the way through both sides. The only comment I have to have all the qualities. By that I mean that although He is make that is not the highest praise is that, try as I may, I closely linked with the New Orleans men. by reason of his have never been able to become really fond of the playing timing, big tone, and all the best qualities of the New Orleans of Buster Bailey. I have listened a lot and maybe am men, he also has the musical ability, control and technique missing something, but have never been able to see what to make him the best. This particular record is a really fine people rave over. It makes me wonder, as I know he has one that funnily enough I have been listening to quite a lot always been used by all the very best musicians; so it seems lately. The rhythm section is lovely, swings freely - this is in as if they must like him. But to me his tone is too thin and fact my type of rhythm section. I don't mind listening to the his timing is, well just ordinary, a bit metric if you like. I like old type rhythm section, but I don't care to play with them the off-beat merchants, like Barney Bigard or Ed Hall or the banjos and things tie down the beat too hard, it never George Lewis who all have that kind of off-beat timing. becomes flexible enough. I like something looser; not too Finally I would like to say that in addition to being the keen on guitars to be honest, much prefer piano, bass and governor trumpet player, Red Allen was from all the drums, but this is wonderfully loose. Higginbotham on trom- musicians I have ever met the governor bloke. John McDonough cont. about RCA-556 (7/15/30; 3/6/34) in Down Beat 5/1/69: A lot had happened to Allen by 1957, where the LP ends. Like Buck Clayton, he came to give much attention to volume and dynamics (he sounds very much like Clayton on LOVE IS JUST …, also his conception was more asymmetric). Stylistically, he went perhaps farther than any other direct descendant of Armstrong. - 26 UK-trumpeter Bob Wallis, J.J.I.Sept.6o; IN MY OPINION - St.James Infirmary, RCA-RD-27o45: Well, I'd rather talk about this band in general, as that track New Orleans stuff. is one I like least on the on the whole LP. Red Allen, he's Red also plays beautifully in the lower register, a thing the ultimate to me. He's the boss, the gov'nor. He's got which not many trumpet players do - or can do-nowadays. everything: heat, immense feeling, VERY good technique, In fact, he's good in any range, but especially in that and he SAYS something all the time. He is, of course, lower register. Bunk used to do it a bit-on "Franklin St." similar to Louis in many respects, and is often dismissed and the American Music "Careless Love". Allen might on that account, but I don't agree. There are a lot of play in New York, and I know he's got Hawk there, but trumpet players who sound like Louis, but I think that this is a New Orleans style of playing. As for the rest of there was a school of trumpet players - Lee Collins, the band, they're great. I'm not too keen on Buster Bailey, Punch Miller, Louis and Red Allen - and that the others though he doesn't ever get in they way, and Higgy is not don't just copy Louis. Red's just similar, that's all. Some- particularly inspired here, but Hawk and the entire rhythm times, I'll admit, his playing is a little vulgar, but I can section are magnificent. Hawk is especially fine on excuse that-he's such an exuberant bloke. WONDERFUL - he just takes off. Lloyd Trotman is an Yes, Red is the boss. He's like Lewis in many ways-George excellent bass player, and Marty Napoleon follows Red Lewis, that is. You know the stuff Lewis does on very expertly on the slow stuff. "Jerusalem Blues" or "Burgundy St."! Well, Red does the I've played two copies of this record completely out. First same things on this album -- the same mood, the same class. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------John Forrester about RCA-RD-27045,in Jazz Monthly,1/58: home in a big all-out effort. This is exceedingly good jazz and most enjoyable music. It is All the numbers are performed with precision and that always pleasant to see this type of group being put on record unmistakable air of spontaneous fun; recording sessions such and it is to be hoped that 1958 will enable us to hear far as these make it evident that "dead pan" seriousness is not more of it than has been possible during the year just passed. necessarily a, prerequisite of good music. All through, the It will be seen by the line-up that little less than very fine can playing by Coleman Hawkins is exemplary and makes him be expected, and this definitely proves to be a fact. All the in his rightful place as a front rank tenor player. It is good to titles are well known standards and are played with that total hear again J.C.Higginbotham whose big gutty tone is al-ways exuberance which goes towards keeping them in that an asset to any group. Buster Bailey's clarinet is capable of the most intricate weaving patterns and when needed can also category. Side 1 commences in stirring fashion with the title number, produce an extremely hot low register. Drumming by Cozy RIDE,RED,RIDE, being sung by leader and trumpeter Red Cole is a byword for some of the most simulating and solid Allen, very ably helped out by the full group. J.C.Higginbo- rhythm work in jazz. Lloyd Trotman, bass, Marty Napoleon, tham swings in to take up a chorus in wonderful big-toned piano, end Everett Barksdale on guitar, back up the group trombone style, handing over to Marty Napoleon's powerfully with mastery. Leading the band, Red Allen plays very spirited swinging piano which then gives way to the melodic trumpet, alternating powerful drive with delicate variations of chordings of Everett Barksdale's guitar. Buster Bailey takes tone, this being heard to particular advantage on I COVER I feel this complete off on two extremely good choruses, vocal again, then THE WATERFRONT. Coleman Hawkins produces, with his usual apparent ease, a session is summed up most adequately by Buster Bailey when he says "Man, it's been a wonderful time!" very fine chorus. The end comes with Red leading the group -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Don Locke about RCA-RD-8o49 in Jazz Monthly 3/1970 (the reviews of 1929-30 were not included in the bio-disco-part-1a, p99): 7/16/29 IT SHOULD BE YOU -3/BIFFLY BLUES -2; FEELING DROWSY-2/ SWING OUT-3; 2/28/30: DANCING DAVE; 7/15/30: ROAMIN'-2 /SINGING PRETTY SONGS -2/ PATROL WAGON -2/ I FELL IN LOVE -2; King Oliver 30: STINGAREE ; Fl.Henderson 1934: HOCUS POCUS -2; Allen 46: THE CRAWL; 57: Let Me Miss You/ Love Is Just …/I Cover the Waterfront; This let me say it loud and clear, is jazz of the very highest quality, with one of the masters of the music at the height of his considerable powers. Heaven knows what Allen's standing would be if, especially in the 50s, he had more of the recording opportunities he deserved. As it is, it was only around 1930 that he had anything like full exposure, mainly in the ranks of the Luis Russell band, as in the first nine tracks here. They tell a fascinating story of how Allen's own highly individual style developed from his original role as Victor's Louis Armstrong. At first the Armstrong influence is plain for all to hear, but although the delivery and the decorative touches are pure Louis, Allen's phrasing is rather more oblique, in place of Armstrong's majestic inevitability, and his tone has more rasp to it. Then, in ROAMIN' and PRETTY SONGS, though hinted at in the impressive DROWSY, we note the important stylistic differences, the tendency to delay accents and spread phrases across the beat, to drag the music out where Louis pushed it foreward. In this, as in his way of turning the phrases away from the theme rather than moulding elegant paraphrases in the classic Armstrong manner, Allen anticipates Lester Young. Indeed it is only since Prez that we can fully appreciate the strength of these early Allen sides; and we can also understand how, despite the power of his tone, Red may have seemed slightly hesitant and unforceful along-side Louis, just as Young at first seemed weak and pallid alongside Hawkins. I think it no accident that PATROL WAGON, probably Allen's most popular record from this period, is also the closest to Armstrong in inspiration and execution. By the time we come to Fletcher Henderson in 1934 Allen is very much an individual voice, with his solos beginning to break up into the constantly shifting patterns and textures of his later work. We then jump - and jump is the word - twelve years to a rocking small group, with Red's growling trumpet and Don Stovall's Hodges-flavoured alto riding powerfully over a rolling Tympany Five-type beat. And finally there are three tracks from the 1957 RIDE RED RIDE LP. The music here is so exceptionally fine that one hesitates to complain, but complain I must. Two of the selections, good though they are, were overshadowed on the original LP by even more striking examples of Allen's mature style. The third, WATERFRONT, has an astonishing trumpet solo, so fascinating and varied that I could devote this whole review to it alone, but just when Allen has brought things to this pitch and Hawkins comes storming in to take up the challenge, the track is faded out (I am afraid I cannot remember whether the other tracks are edited also). I knows it is all a question of time - and this record lasts 53 minutes as it is - but if it was necessary to butcher the music in this way, surely we could rather have done without Napoleon's bland piano solo! And although it is worth having some of the music from RIDE RED RIDE in whatever form, the greater shame is that this will inevitably delay the reissue of the original record. In fact I should have thought there was a strong case here for two Allen LPs, an early Red and a late Red(*). The former might have covered more of Allen's Henderson records, for example, or have included all the Luis Russell Victors. The second LP might have replaced the one or two dispensible tracks on RIDE RED RIDE by some more examples of that 4o's jump band, for which my appetite is now well and truly whetted. But however one carps at the production, the music on this release is such that there is only one possible verdict: go out and buy it. And what without considering other fine contributions: the Henderson band's delicately floating swing; Hawkins in top form, both in the gentle whispy mood he favoured in the early 30s, and in his tougher style of the 50s; first class solos from Holmes and Higginbotham; and a characteristic muted moment from King Joe on STINGAREE. - 27 Down,Beat 1/22/59: "Bread, Butter & Jam in HI-Fi"RCA-1644 :(M.Williams): "Let Me Miss You" & "Love Me Or Leave Me" - ...The ease with which Allen handles rhythms, time, and space (you never hear him having to state his own beat), the way he uses dynamics and the range of his horn, and his originality seem to me just about exemplary. And his conception has had a lot more influence than anyone acknowledges. Granted that he may introduce an idea in bar nine that doesn't immediately follow on those in his first eight, such is not the compulsion of unsureness nor is it bluff. Would that this LOVE ME had been included in his own often excellent LP (Victor 1509) rather than the nonsense of RIDE, RED, RIDE that did get included. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------J.P.Daubresse, translated by Don Waterhouse on RCA 7326: "What other trumpet player plays such asymmetrical rhythms The Dixieland Revival enjoyed such a tremendous vogue- and manages to make them swing besides. What other trumwith Red Allen playing a central role - that the Metropole peter plays ideas that may begin with a whisper, rise to a management cast its net a little wider and began to feature brassy shout, and suddenly become a whisper again, with no soloists from the thirties such as Coleman Hawkins, Charlie discernible predictability. Who else has the amazing variety Shavers and Roy Eldridge. It even opened its first-floor to of tonal colors, bends, smears, half-valve effects, rips, moderns of the ilk of Dizzy Gillespie and Horace Silver. glissandos, flutter-tonguing (a favourite on a high D), all During the sixties the basement housed Rock or Twist combined with iron chops and complete control of even groups in the afternoon, whilst at nights Woody Herman, softest, most subtle, tone production. ... No one has a wider Gillespie and, of course, the ever faithful Red Allen were scope of effects to draw upon, and no one is more subtle rhythmically and in the use of dynamics and asymmetrical the featured attractions. The band played nightly and the alcohol flowed liberally; phrases than Henry (Red)Allen." much too liberally, unfortunately, for the music to be of Some people have accused Red of being unduly adventurous, anything like consistent quality. An unkind story recounts even to the point of untidiness, but this view seems to that some of the clienté1e used to turn up not for the music neglect the true quality of the musician, especially in his but to hear Red Allen's ineffable reminiscences of New pre-1940 output. His melodic explorations and rhythmic Orleans, and then to watch the musicians fall off their chairs flexibility enabled him to forge a thoroughly personal style as the alcohol began to strike home. It is from this period which allied the wailing lament of the blues to the delicate (1957) that the recordings in this final Volume 5 of the Red- lyricism of the ballad. In practice, no musician between the Allen Victor "integrale" originate. Luckily, the musicians Louis Armstrong-Coleman Hawkins and Roy EldridgeLester Young eras has proved to be such an outstanding seem to have laid off the bottle for the occasion. Because of his New Orleans origins there has been a frequent innovator as Henry Allen. tendecy to associate Red Allen with the typical Louisiana Indeed, it is in the company of a still highly inspired, masterly school and even out-and-out Dixielanders and Revivalists. Coleman Hawkins, that Allen made these famous 1957 In fact, the so-called New Orleans and Dixieland styles are recordings. We also find J.C.Higginbotham providing based principally on the element of collective improvisation; ample evidence of his solo prowess, although he was no Allen, on the other hand, despite having played a purely longer a young man by the time these sides were cut. We collective role in his days with Fletcher Henderson, the Blue should not forget that Higginbotham, along with Jimmy Rhythm Band and Louis Armstrong, was undeniably an Harrison, made a vital contribution to the evolution of the individualist. Eight years Armstrong's junior, he belonged to jazz trombone. The rhythm section on these sessions the same third generation of New Orleans musicians, the era provides adequate support, but Buster Bailey's clarinet is of the soloists. It is quite apparent that his conception and somewhat disappointing. approach were much closer to those of a Coleman Hawkins It is interesting to note that, although Red Allen was for the than of a Freddie Keppard and that a good number of his American public the epitome of revivalist jazz, few of the phrases were much too advanced and complex to fit into the themes used here have anything to do with the revivalist collective ensembles of the New Orleans style. Although repertoire. On the contrary, these are some interesting without doubt capable of expressing himself in the originals (LET ME MISS'YOU and ALGIERS BOUNCE), Dixieland idiom, his preferences nonetheless urged him to pleasing ballads (I COVER THE WATERFRONT and I take on a melodically and harmonically more complicated GOT THE RIGHT TO SING THE BLUES) and unashamed repertoire. He attacked the melody with a relaxed sense of standards (AIN'T SHE SWEET and ST.JAMES INFIRMARY). phrasing and a very sure sense of tempo, without needing to The high spots of the album are a sensitive version of SWEET LORREINE and a IS WONDERFUL; this latter resort to any of the usual Dixieland clichés. In 1965 young trumpeter Don Ellis, who had made a name number is more than a little evocative of the atmosphere in for himself in avantgardiste George Russell's outfit, confessed Nice during the summer "Grande Parade du Jazz". Allen's his admiration for Red Allen in a Down-Beat interview: hit RIDE RED RIDE is to be heard on Vol.4 RCA-7285. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THE RESURGENCE OF RED ALLEN - Whitney Balliett modern jazz. The unsteady, staccato blare that has characin "The Sound of Surprise": IT HAS BEEN nearly thirty terized his work now frequently gives wav to a thoughtful, years since Red Allen, the tireless, sad-faced trumpeter, more generous tone and a myriad of soft glancing notes that became one of the first practitioners of the instrument to resemble nothing so much as a nervous, vigorous Miles move away from the blanketing influence of Louis Arm- Davis. strong. Today, at the age of forty-nine, he is an unspoiled, Allen's rejuvenation is apparent in the recent “Ride, Red, non-repetitive musician who, astonishingly, is still widening Ride in Hi-Fi” (Victor), which contains nine numbers. Also his style. Allen left an identifiable mark on the early work on hand, among other are Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham, of Roy Eldridge, who, in turn, influenced Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman Hawkins, and Cozv Cole. The recording is exasthe present champion of modern jazz trumpeters. Allen is peratingly uneven. The barely skeletal arrangements are erratic, restless, and highly lyrical. Sustained legato phrases climaxed a couple of times by meaningless grandstand that undulate like a calming sea are linked by jumpy con- codas, and a desperate, semi-burlesque number, "Ride, Red, nective passages - full of seven-league intervals and slightly Ride," is done at a flag-waving tempo full of boiling flatted notes - that may or may not land on their feet. His trumpet and a chorus of voices that chants the title. Both thin, coppery tone occasionally softens, but more often it Bailey and Higginbotham are in uncertain form, and Cole, pierces straight to the bone. Once in a while, too, he ascends who usually combines a faultless technique with sensitive wildly into the upper register or relies on technical tricks, support, indulges in a door-slamming after-beat that contisuch as a rapid, birdlike tremolo, achieved by fluttering two nually joggles the melodic flow. Nonetheless, in "Sweet valves up and down, that sound more difficult than they are. Lorraine," "I've got the World on a String," and "I Cover the At his best, Allen is one of the most eloquent of jazz Waterfront, " all taken at slow speeds, Allen produces long musicians. His melodic feeling is governed almost and memorable solos, in which he alternates judicious high completely by the blues; he infuses just about every tune notes with lush, booming, trombone-like phrases. He does with broadly played blue notes. In the past few years, a not, however, top Hawkins, who has recently abandoned the remarkable thing has happened to Allen's playing. Unlike cool, precise museum of tenor saxophonology that he had many of his contemporaries, who tend to ignore what become ten years ago for a heated, angry style that suggests has come after them, he appears to have been listening to the work of a young, uninhibited imitator. - 27a - Addenda JOHNNY SIMMEN July 1976 about RCA-Black & White series with 4-Red Allen volumes in Le Point Du Jazz no.13: … In 1957, when the two last tracks on this album were and for all puts the hierarchy matter in correct perspective. recorded, Red's use of dynamics (see also 1946 review) was Coleman Hawkins, when he was in Europe (1934-39) the first even more amazing than ten years earlier. For this I regret that time, mentioned Red Allen frequently and he seemed to like neither I COVER THE WATERFRONT, SWEET LOR- his playing very much. When Harry Pfister once asked him RAINE nor I'VE GOT THE WORLD ON A STRING from how he explained the radical changes in Red's playing in the the same date (or just a bit later,) are included because they years between Russell and Henderson, Hawk replied that Red show Red Allen's amazing development in this direction much had copied Louis Armstrong in the 20s and until about 1933 better than LOVE IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER and but that at that time he started listening to him (Hawk) and especially RIDE RED RIDE which are to be found on his that he tried to play some of the things Hawk did on the album. Red's ballad playing became a thing of plain beauty as saxophone, on the trumpet. Hawkins referred Harry to both the years went by. The two tracks have good playing by Red, versions of QUEER NOTIONS (Fletcher Henderson) and we Hawkins and Everett Barksdale but this was one of those listened to the one available (Columbia) right there with Hawk. many dates (too many) when a few of the older musicians not He added that he found Red's playing "even more interesting together and too many drinks were taken. some musicians did than before" but expressed doubts that "Red could go far with so because they were heavy drinkers, others "had a few" that style because a saxophone is a saxophone and a trumpet because they were happy to meet their old pals whom they is a trumpet. The saxophone allows a lot of flexibility while a met rarely (so some "celebrating" seemed to be appropriate) trumpet doesn't give you the same possibilities." Recently at the wish of P.W. Erwin I had put the five interpreand still others who played rarely overindulged because they were nervous and hoped to find the necessary relaxation by tations which Pee Wee Erwin recorded with Red - under the taking a few drinks. An uncalculable number of concerts and latter's name - for Vocalion in January 1935 on a cassette for recording sessions got spoilt this way, from the late fifties to him. In his following letter Pee Wee wrote: "I liked everythis day. I'm surprised how few jazzfans are hearing what thing Red played. He was a great musician. The 5 numbers I happened. Most of the time they just conclude that "the had the honour of making with him, are from his Henderson musician is finished" and that's all to the question as far as period, perhaps his happiest musically and personally." IN 1959 Red Allen recorded two albums with Kid Ory and they are concerned. But, as mentioned, it is a much more complexe matter to those who really care and who are not just also came to Europe (for the first time) on tour. These two Lps (made for Verve) and the concerts made me realize that "record collectors". The rhythm-section with the quasi-infallible Cozy Cole(s) Red was an even more versatile and adaptable player than I and Bostonian Lloyd Trotman on bass is one of the strong thought. I went to the Zurich concert with them and, in the points of the two interpretations at hand. Buster Bailey plays in taxi, Ory said: "That's the best trumpet-player I played with a strange way - as he sometimes do - and I'm afraid that many since the old days with King Oliver and Louis Armstrong. jazzfans think that THIS is the typical Bailey. Fortunately this Red is one of the few who still can lead a New Orleans jazz is not so : Buster was one of the most irregularly inspired ensemble. I know." Mr. Ory sure was the man to know (Red musicians but when he felt right - and there are about 100 was beaming with joy at Kid Ory's comment since he had tremendous respect for him and considered it an honour to records on which he did - he was a great, admirable musician. One of the most often printed clichés in literature about jazz is have been invited to make this tour with the great trombonist) the following: Jazz trumpet playing developed like this: King and the records are lasting proof of what Ory said! I think in Bolden to King Oliver to Louis Armstrong to Red Allen to 1959 Red played better lead than on any of the records he Roy Eldridge to Dizzy Gillespie to Miles Davis. One American made with Jelly-Roll Morton. Don't ask me how he could do critic - I don't remember which there are so many - brought it it after all these years … He could and that's all that matters. I have nothingpersonal against J.P. Daubresse but I have to up and since then most everybody has accepted the hierarchy correct another statement he made (on Vol.IV): "La fâcheuse mentioned as gospel truth. Well, I could not comment on Buddy habitude de boire inconsidérément qu'avaient prise Red Bolden-King Oliver because I have never heard the first-named (and neither have the writers who insert that list in their writings) ALLEN et J.C. HIGGINBOTHAM rend ses interprétations and I don't know enough about Dizzy-Miles-to give an opinion bien souvent inégales." I have spoken of Higgy's drinking and of any value. However, I always found the inclusion of Red don't add anything about it. However, where Red Allen is Allen strange, not to say downright wrong. As much as I concerned, the statement is a pure invention. Red was not the admire him I did never feel that he was an "influence" on a man to refuse a drink but he always had control over himself. If really big scale. Sure there were a few trumpet-players that Red was drinking inconsidérément, 80% of the musicians are tried to copy him at one time or another: Harry James and in the same boat. I have not only met Red 16 times in those Ziggy Elman with Good-man in the 30s, Rex Stewart on Duke's years I had mentioned, but I know from what many musicians initial IN A SENTIMENTAL MOOD, Irving "Mouse" Randolph told me that these 16 nights were not exceptional but the rule when he was sitting side by side with Red in Fletcher Hender- where Red's drinking was concerned. I'm also interested in son's orchestra in 1934. But Rex - as he told me himself - did these questiones where jazz musicians are dealt with because it just "because I wanted to prove that I could emulate him - he I have always wished to know as much as possible about had been offered Posey Jenkins' chair in Ellington's band but them. If Red Allen had been an excessive drinker, I would Red refused and I got the job - and that solo proves I could. I say.so because that would not have been a crime but an always liked Red Allen's playing but I never was influenced illness. In those years, I used to drink a lot myself - wishing to by him." As for Randolph, he was another who almost made it have a ball - and I told Red. However, he just smiled and we his specialty to play like other trumpet players. Later with Cab drank - but reasonably! HE wanted it that way. I think all.this Calloway, he took pleasure in sounding like Doc Cheat-ham, largely proves that Mr. Daubresse's statement is untrue. Why much to the despair of those who are trying to find out who's did he write - on an album cover! something utterly wrong? who ! - But why go further without getting the opinion from Something Mr. Daubresse oviously has no knowledge of? I'm the very trumpet-player who is said "to have got it from Red sorry this is not at all the way how somebody who admires Allen", namely Roy Eldridge ? The book: THE JAZZ MAKERS. and respects great jazz artists speaks or writes about them. I The chapter: ROY ELDRIDGE. The writer: NAT HENTOFF. can tell from the way Mrs Daubresse writes about the music Page: 310. "Was Red Allen one of your influences?" Roy: "I on these four LPs that he is a rather young man. That's OK like Red, but, oh God, no ! When I first came to New York I 'cause nobody can be accused of being young or being old, used to wonder why people were saying he was playing such but I can also tell that Mr. Daubresse has no real feeling for wonderful chords. But I wan't the type of cat that would say a the music and the artists he writes about. Since I have lived cat wasn't playing until I heard what he was doing and felt I with this music and have a personal and deep relationship and understood. red used to come in and sit in with Teddy Hill, and involvement for what's on these records, I deplore the tenor of I felt something was wrong. I didn't know exactly what it was Mr. Daubresse's writing. It's not modest and not repectful until I went with Fletcher, and from the experience I got there, I enough for someone who has so little knowledge of it. Hope knew he had often been playing the wrong chords". I think he will learn ... that about settles that question. Roy Eldridge not only did not Henry "Red" Allen was a proud and an impressive man. He, be influenced by Red Allen but, at the same time, he is was one of the great figures of and in jazz history. As long as criticizing him more severly than anyone. Despite this there are people who listen to the music with a heart and an negative judgement, I wished to quote Roy because it once open mind, these facts will keep their full validity. - 28 GIANTS OF JAZZ – HENRY RED ALLEN – 1981 Time Life records ; notes on music by John Chilton: Mx H2JB2699 - I Cover the Waterfront: Henry "Red" Allen's All Stars Henry Allen, trumpet; Coleman Hawkins, tenor saxophone; Marty Napoleon, piano; Everett Barksdale, guitar,. Lloyd Trotman, bass; Cozy Cole, drums. Rec. for Victor, May 27, 1957, New York. Courtesy of RCA Records, Inc. Victor LPM1509. . This reunion between Allen and Coleman Hawkins shows with brilliant ideas. Here he really develops his excursions that neither musician had lost his powers of improvisation into the low register. Very few jazz trumpeters have ever almost 25 years after they first recorded together. utilized low notes as Allen does here; the stratospheric flights of In the intervening time, Allen's trumpet style had changed trumpeters are now commonplace, but the beauties of the considerably. Surveying his career on record, one can hear him lowest register are much less frequently explored. On each of the continually adding accessories to this technique. In the early bridges in his solos Allen deliberately takes a bold line. On the 1950s he also developed a new tonal approach to his low second of them, he becomes almost brash, grow-ling his way notes, consistently exploring the trumpet's hot-tom register. through a maze of daring phrases that leads to a last eight Allen had never been afraid to dive suddenly to a low note and where he seems to be shouting out his solo. then to surface quickly to the middle register, but in his latter days Only a master jazz musician could successfully follow such a he developed a sort of aqualung technique that allowed him to barrage. of musical ideas, but Coleman Hawkins proves stay down among the lowest notes for a long time. His tone himself equal to the task with an exquisite, force-fully blown had changed too: It became more cloudy and husky, which chorus. It is full of inimitable touches: the long, majestic gave a wistful, melancholic edge to his playing at slow tempo. phrases projected with an awesome energy, the astute use of This expressiveness, coupled with the freedom that extended harmonies and the huge tone. microgroove timing allowed, produced a tour de force of Allen's low-note playing had taken no toll of his range in the ballad playing on I Cover the Waterfront. After an elegant top register, as he proves by blowing high and handsomely in four-bar guitar introduction by Everett Barksdale, Allen plays the last bridge. The last eight bars are punched out the first chorus close to the melody, but embellished with dramatically, and this ride out leads to a showy finale, typical subtle paraphrases, daring time lags and full-toned low notes, of the sort of arrangement that Allen was playing then at the one of which, slotted into the end of the first eight bars, Metropole, with drummer Cozy Cole pounding out the beat provides an ingenious, husky-sounding link with the next skillfully and energetically. This example of Allen's latter-day burst of phrasing. A dramatic flurry of notes introduces the ballad playing-and particularly the sound and expressiveness bridge, and in the last eight bars Allen invokes an effect from of his sonorous low notes-is music to be treasured. his salad days by trilling at considerable speed. After a tasteful piano chorus - neatly phrased but lightweight-Allen re-enters to play two amazing choruses packed -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------C.H. about RCA-7326, in J.J.I. 4/77: This volume finds Red Allen among erstwhile friends during the Metropole era. Allen during this period established a reputation, at least among those who particularly enjoyed his earlier exploits, for waywardness and aggressiveness. The passing of further years has allowed us to realise that this was a natural development of his style, and although the music here lacks the youthful grandeur of his playing with Luis Russell he still contains many of his earlier qualities along with a good deal of sophistication. Red here is still recognisably a New Orleans trumpet player, but also a man supremely at ease with the music of the time. His work is always worth studying closely, as complex as it is logical aware of the tenets of Bunk as well as the innovations of Eldridge and even Gillespie. As one would expect, all of his colleagues are equally expert in making full use of their instruments and also in maintaining a full swinging sound. The result is robust but not indelicate music which gives me a good deal of pleasure, enhanced by the singing of the leader, a jazz vocalist whose vast talent is perhaps too much obscured by his prowess on the trumpet. I shall still go back to the Russells for the best of Red Allen, but those whose tastes are more advanced may well find this record as well rewarding as anything he ever did. ========================================================================================================== 4/30 & 5/7/57 NYC., COOTIE WILLIAMS –“COOTIE & REX IN THE BIG CHALLENGE”: Cootie Williams (t) Rex Stewart (c) J.C. Higginbotham, Lawrence Brown (tb) Coleman Hawkins, Bud Freeman (ts) Hank Jones (p) Billy Bauer (g) Milt Hinton (b) Gus Johnson (d) 6.03 I´m Beginning To See The Light Jazzt.J1268/ 4.07 Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me --/ 9.20 Alphonse And Gaston --/ 4.04 I Got A Right To Sing The Blues --/ 4.35 Walkin´ My Baby Back Home --/ 5.05 When Your Lover Has Gone --/ 4.50 I Knew You When --/ Jazztone J1268-THE BIG CHALLENGE - COOTIE AND REX: … April and May-57. It has been encouraging recently to notice that some recording studios, influenced by some of the discerning jazz writers and by such executives as Avakian, Hammond, and Dance, and beginning to amend their long-standing policy of recording only the progressive 'new star' names of the jazz world. These current pets of cultural improvement, whose claim to distinction is frequently no more than an honours degree from Juillard, have held sway for far too long. Through the post-war period many of the outstanding jazzmen of the pre-war period, though still active and in most cases playing better than ever, have been driven out of the music altogether, or else have had to content themselves with playing occasional jazz for fun and other music for a living-music which, in most cases, has given no outlet to their creative abilities. Such musicians as Cootie Williams, 28b - Addenda Rex Stewart, and J.C. Higinbotham, all famous jazzmen in their prime and featured on countless pre-war recordings, had not, until recently, been heard on record dates for years. These three, with the more fortunate Lawrence Brown, Coleman Hawkins and Milt Hinton, make this release not only a welcome return but an outstanding record by any standards. This should make us even more concerned about what we have been missing, and doubtless are still missing in the cases of many still 'un-rediscovered' jazzmen. After a decade of vibratoless, thin-toned trumpet players, would-be valve trombonists still unaccountably using a slide, and saxophonists all dragging their feet in Parker's footsteps but so painfully far behind, this is a hot-blooded, exuberant sound to blow through your loudspeaker like the proverbial breath of fresh air. The outstanding title is "Alphonse and Gaston", which displays all the attributes of the individual members of the group, and throws the horns together in pairs for some uninhibited chasing of a very high calibre. This is a long blues, written and arranged by Ernie Wilkins, and taken at a bouncing tempo. An electric atmosphere is established immediately by the opening ensemble, and is maintained right to the end. (The nearest thing available in this country is the fine "Algiers Bounce" from the Henry Allen "Ride Red Ride" LP on R.C.A.) The trumpets, trombones, and finally the tenors engage in battle successively, the challenge producing some spectacular results. Even Bud Freeman. outclassed though he is by Hawkins, manages to exceed his previous best. Of the other titles, the only unfamiliar theme is "I Knew You When", a Rex Stewart original that I would commend to any swing group in search of material. This closes the record and, according to George Simon's sleeve note, the sessions also. Of basically 32-bar form, the opening chorus contains fortyfour bars, of AABA form with the A section having twelve bars, the B being of normal middle-eight form. Rex and Cootie are subsequently featured, and at what was supposed to be the end Hawkins appears to have been reluctant to finish, and returns with a strongly blowing chorus before the closing ensemble is repeated. Even then, presumably, the number did not close, for the track fades away with no sign of the music flagging. "Do Nothing Till You Hear From Me" and "I Gotta Right to Sing the Blues" are made without Rex, and both feature Cootie. The arrangements for these are done by Joe Thomas, while the scores of all the other tracks were mapped out, by Ernie Wilkins. Under the original title "Concerto for Cootie", the first of these was written with Cootie in mind and recorded by him with the Ellington band in 1940. Not surprisingly, he turns in a faultless performance. On "I Gotta Right" Cootie lays down the theme against an elaborate obbligato from Hawkins. Brown and Higginbotham split the second chorus, before Cootie returns. "When Your Lover Has Gone"features the tenors and trumpets in a chorus each. Hawkins plays an exceptionally well-developed solo, and finishes the piece off with a virtuoso cadenza. "Walkin' My Baby" swings intensely, and again omits /cut =============================================================================================== April/May-57, Bronx: Stardust Room, Boston Road - Sunday afternoon Dixieland sessions with the Sol Yaged and Red Allen combos -alternating. (DB 24/1o, 5/16/57) - 29 DIXIELAND ALL STARS / THE DIXIECATS: Red Allen (t) Tyree Glenn (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Boomie Richman (ts) Willie"The Lion"Smith (p) Arvell Shaw (b) Zutty Singleton (d) 5/8/57 NYC., RED ALLEN & HIS 3:42 THAT´S A PLENTY (Gilbert-Pollack) (N.O.R.K.) 5:22 TIN ROOF BLUES 3.25 ROYAL GARDEN BLUES (C.&5.Williams) 2:46 MUSKRAT RAMBLE (Gilbert-Kid Ory) 5/15/57 NYC.,-same but Milt Hinton (b) for Shaw 2:14 WOLVERINE BLUES (Spikes Craemer-Layton) 6:36 BASIN STREET BLUES (S.Williams) (Palmer-Williams) 5:36 I FOUND A NEW BABY 3:04 BEALE STREET BLUES (W.C.Handy) Roul. /Roul.LDM/Col 33SX/Storyv./Jazz React./RA-CD-18/ 25015/ -30143 / -1580 /SLP-104/ JR-161 / --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --- / --- / --- / --------- / / / / --------- / / / / --- / --- / --- / --- / --------- / / / / --------- / / / / on WOLVERINE and is still a uniquely individual musician. Paul Rossiter about Co.33SX1o8o, in Jazz Monthly 5/58: This LP is drawn from the Roulette label. While glad to see TIN ROOF has excellent Glenn in stop-time, very good musicians of this type recording again, it is a pity that they Smith, and professional solos from the rest of the front line. The rhythm section is very fine, and is far superior to those were confined, in this instance, to somewhat hackneyed usually heard on records of this kind, with Zutty Singleton Dixieland numbers. The record as a whole is pleasant without being outstanding. showing once again that he is in the top rank of drummers. There is no attempt at ensemble playing, but the solos are These musicians can turn out good performances at will, and generally of a high order. BASIN STREET is the outstanding show here that they can cut most of the Dixieland musicians at track, with a fine contribution by Allen in a sober style, and their own game, but with less rigid supervision and more excellent choruses by Glenn and Smith. The latter is featured stimulating material I am sure that they would do better. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------S.Traill about Col.33SX 1080; in Jazz Journal 5-58:This is in old fire, and his lead of the final all-in choruses is exemplary. The anonymous sleeve notes are informative and the pretty some ways a strange record. for although I would be the first to admit there is quite a lot of good jazz here, I feel. that the cover picture of three kittens should please everyone - always music doesn't suit the musicians. Red Allen's trumpet lead is excepting that monstrous 'Lord Rochester' of course. much too flashy for a so called Dixieland band and much of --------------------------------------------------------------------------the time he sounds as if he were playing with his tongue in Olaf Hudtwalker about Storyville SLP-104: Jazz Podium-12/59: his cheek. Every track contains really excellent solos, but Eine in ihrer Seltenheit pompös kostbare Besetzung allgemein there is little cohesion in the ensembles which are in the main unterschätzter Harlem-Musiker! Leider verschweigt die Platten-tasche, wie diese Aufnahmen zustande kamen und wer very untidy. The rhythm throughout is very strong. Willie The Lion (a strange choice for such a party) provides auf die grandiose Idee kam, Willie, den Löwen (er kämpfte wie some nice snatches of good old fashioned stride piano, particu- ein solcher im Weltkrieg Nr.1), - einer der großen Harlemlarly on the swingy "Wolverine" and the slower "Tin Roof", Pianisten! - mit New Orleans' letztem Trompeter-König Henry and Tyree Glenn (another strange choice) plays excellently Red Allen, Oldtimer Bailey, Zutty Singleton und den anderen throughout. He plays a beautifully balanced solo on "Tin Roof" zusammenzuführen. In jedem Fall gebührt ihm Dank und Ehre, and embellishes such good melodies as "Way Down Yonder" denn ihre Musik schwingt mit Fülle und Persönlichkeiten, sie and "Basin Street" with telling improvisations. The two reeds hat ihre Gesichter und bereichert die Dixie-Discothek um eine also make interesting music. Boornie Richman plays an easy LP, die “anders“ ist. Allen scheint bei Zutty's Beat ganz zu paced tenor, which swings more than one realises at first Hause und demonstriert sein Format - als sanfter Riese der hearing - he is at his best on "Royal Garden" and "Tin Roof". Vitalität und Technik, auf der Grenze zwischen Armstrong und Buster Bailey has a rather spikey tone which may worry you Eldridge. Lediglich das Alt von Boomie wirkt bei der Session at first, but he gets around his instrument and shows an ability deplaciert. Sagte Allen kürzlich bei einem Interview in to create a really hot solo. I like him best on "That's A Plenty" Frankfurt über das europäische Publikum: “they make you feel and "New Baby", two quick ones, and the slower and more like you are doing something“ und auf die Frage, ob er wieder thoughtful "Tin Roof". Henry Allen's best solo work is reserved kommen würde: “can't be fast enough“! Herzlich Willkommen, for the last track, "New Baby". Here he shows some of his Henry Red Allen!! Newport 1957: Arvell Shaw-Jack Teagarden-Kid Ory-Higginbotham-Red Allen-Buster Bailey; Jazz Journal 6-68 - 30 - above photo from cover Verve-8233 Teagarden-Ory-Higginbotham-Bailey above right, out of Jazz Monthly July-59p7: Red Allen- B.Bailey-J.C.Higginbotham advertisement Village Voice 6/5/57p9--Jazz Festival Set July 4-7 NYAN:5/11/57p15:– A mammoth concert, they will have an additional day with two extra concerts this year, keyed to celebrate the birthday of Louis Armstrong, will kick off the three-day Festival. This year the Festival directors have persuaded the owners of some of the large mansions in Newport to take in “guests”, thus eliminating the ever increasing lodging problem. A tentative schedule of the concerts is as follows: Thursday evening, July 4: Louis Armstrong Band, Sidney Bechet Quartet, Ella Fitzgerald, Edmund Hall, Earl Hines, Jack Tagarden, Kid Ory, Red Allen, Cozy Cole, Buster Bailey, and J.C. Higginbotham with a long list of the program (see the advert.) DB 5/30/57: Red Allen scheduled to appear July 4 at Newport Festival. Village Voice 7/10/57p8: Eartha Kitt gives her all at the 4th annual Newport Jazz Festival last week-end at Newport, R.I. The greatest of all American jazz events filled the air over Newport for four days and four nights with hot and cool sounds of every variety in the jazz spectrum. The series of concerts was kicked off on the evening of July 4 with a salute to Louis Armstrong on his birthday by such greats as ELLA FITZGERALD, KID ORY, JACK TEAGARDEN and HENRY ”RED” ALLEN. - 31 least, and Jack Willi's trumpet lead, although not lacking in facility, was a trifle weak - at least for a band of this kind. Nevertheless, playing for the most part in the ensemble style (as, after all, is fitting for a New Orleans group) the band generated terrific rhythmics excitement. Lewis's recent bands. as Dick Freniere has pointed out, are really rhythm bands; which, in these days, is something to he thankful for. Bobby Henderson, a pianist recently rediscovered by John Hammond, followed with a group of Waller tunes: "Jitterbug Waltz", "Keeping Out Of Mischief Now", "Honeysuckle Rose". and a number dedicated, for some strange reason to Louis Armstrong entitled "Blues For Fats". Henderson is supposed to have been one of the Harlem stride pianists of the '30s (under the name of Jody Bolden, if my notes can he believed) who sank into obscurity. I can only admire a pianist who can play, in this day and age, without bass and drum accompaniment, hut I cannot feel that his disappearance from the jazz scene was any great loss. Claude Hopkins, Arvell Shaw, Red Allen, Cozy Cole and Buster Bailey discussion of the-performances I might as THE NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL well admit right now that I did not attend all the programmes (1 blush to admit how by Jerome Shipman-J.J, Oct.57; many I actually did go to), but I was pict. by Dr.H. Fine Freebody Park, which appears to be present at both the best and worst of the Newport´s municipal base-ball stadium. sessions, which I propose to talk about in would seem to be a ridiculous place to hold some detail. For reports on some of the a jazz festival. But then jazz festivals others, I am indebted to Art Goldwyn and themselves are pretty ridiculous. The place Dick Frenière any of you malcontents out - Freebody Park, that is - has no acoustics there who are grumbling because you are to speak of; when the public address getting a third-hand, rather than a secondsystem broke down, as it did twice during hand, account of Newport should know that Louis Armstrong's set, not even those of us both of these guys are true eclectics; I hate in the press section could hear the music. everything). There were also two panel Indeed, even with the amplifying system discussions, one on "Music, and the Use of working, the music in certain sections of Habituation and Addicting Drugs", the the bleachers is scarcely audible; the other on "Working Conditions of Jazz audience there sits around drinking beer Musicians. Present and Possible", I never from paper cups. talks. and generally did run across anybody who had been to enjoys itself as it would at a baseball either discussion, so I still do not know match. The whole affair, in fact, reminds whether it was possible musicians or me of a baseball match or, if that image is possible working conditions which were too recondite. a circus, rather than any discussed. The concert on the opening night of the presentation of Art. Vast hordes of people mill about. hawkers sell official program- festival. July 4, was without doubt the mes (pie-pared, as if you didn't know, by low point of the whole affair. Billed as a Downbeat) and funny hats, fireworks go "Louis Armstrong Birthday Celebration", off in the distance. planes roar overhead, the idea was to present musicians ;with and at least! twice during each performance whom Armstrong had been associated at your neighbour is sure to squeeze by you various stages of his career and we were (hipping cold beer and mustard on your led to believe by the advance publicity freshly laundered linen. In the face of such surroundings it is almost that grand reunions would be the order of beside the point to speak of music. but the evening, and that he would play with music, or at least jazz, there was. Days of his old friends, notably Sidney Bechet, jazz, nights of jazz, hour after hour of jazz, who was being flown in from Paris for big bands, small hands, old bands, new the occasion. Kid Ory, and Jack bands, singers. dancers - enough jazz to Teagarden. I must confess that I was last an ordinary mortal a lifetime. Provi- looking forward to the program-me with ding he could hear any of it in all that keen anticipation ("the hope that springs hubbub, and providing any of it was any good. Good, did I say? Whether the music eternal within the human breast" as ;hat was good or had is completely it relevant great poet Ernest L. Thoyer said), and I in view of the hard facts that more than 50 was bitterly disappointed. George Lewis's current band opened the thousand people paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to cheer madly Ella Fitzgerald's concert, and played well, if not in a partiimitations of Rose Murphy and Louis cularly inspired manner. This group, with Armstrong. Jazz is America's Native Art Rob Thomas. trombone: Joe Robichaux, piano; Alcide Pavageau. Bass; Joe Watkins, Form: what could be more American than to present more of it than anyone could drums; and a fairly young trumpet player possibly enjoy, to more people than could new to me. Jack Willis, is not one of Lewis's best bands. Joe Watkins played possible understand it? The above observations will please nobody. I much too loudly although this may have imagine (least of all our editor), so I sup- beers the fault of bad microphone placement: Robinchaux's solos were peculiar, to say the pose I will have to get down to a concrete Red Allen's Metropole band Buster Bailey, J. C. Higginbotham, Claude Hopkins, Arvell Shaw, and Cozy Cole rounded out the first half of the programme. Their first two numbers were totally, excruciatingly, unbelievably bad, but when they were joined by Jack Teagarden, who did "China Boy" and his "Basin Street" routine, things picked up considerably. Teagarden seemed to he on top of the world, and his playing reflected it, being as fresh, as brash, and as selfassured as ever it was. Teagarden retired after introducing Kid Ory, himself as spry and as vigorous, despite his 72 years, as anybody around. Ory was allowed to display his marvellous tailgate style, at once simple and, like so much of New Orleans music, deep and satisfying only with "Muskrat Ramble" before he was joined by Teagarden and a rather glum (with good reason) Higginbotham for a three trombone version of "High Society". The trombonists, as Henry Fine observed. competed more than cooperated, but it was all amiable. and harmless enough. Besides, Willis Conover (who runs the jazz programmes for the Voice of America, a fact which goes a long way toward explaining why we are losing the Cold War) who acted as compare explained that both Ory and Teagarden would be back to play with Armstrong. Ella Fitzgerald, tastefully dressed in dyed red hair and a lime-green gown, began the second. and presumably climacteric, half of the show. Being, alas, completely immune to whatever charms her art may have I can say nothing about her performance save to remark that most people who praise her scatsinging extravagantly have obviously never heard the late Leo Watson. For my part. she was on much too long, but the audience, clearly one on which good jazz would have been wasted. would hardly let her leave the stand. Finally, Louis and the All Stars - Edmund Hall. Trummy Young, Billy Kyle, Barrett Deems, and on bass. Squire Girsh, one-time tuba player with Lu Watters (as Squire Girsback), a point a few people may wish to brood overfiled on stage, and I waited expectantly for things to happen. But .nothing ever did. Bechet didn't show up at all. Armstrong never did play with either Ory or Teagarden. - 32 and all we got was the current repertory "Now You Has Jazz", "Moritat", and, for God's sake "Stomping At The Savoy-- played utterly without warmth or conviction. Readers of this magazine, and of Mr. Stanley Dance's column in particular, need hardly he reminded that Armstrong has been made the focus of all the hatred the International Jazz Press and assorted other smart money boys feel toward traditional jazz and the values it represents. Yes, painful as it is, I must agree with a local pundit (who never misses a chance. and he has plenty of them, to discredit traditional jazz) that Armstrong's performance left a bad taste in the mouth. It isn't that he doesn't play jazz this music is jazz fully as much as Ella Fitzgerald's), or that he clowns. (surely no more than Dizzy Gillespie). but that his music has grown increasingly empty. One feels more and more that he simply does care about, not his audience. which would make not a particle of difference, but his art. One of the curses of jazz, in some respects, is the gramophone record. but not for the reason usually advanced. The trouble with the gramophone record, all too often, is that it preserves, for eternity as it were, an impossibly high level of performance, so that all the time one is listening to George Lewis one is comparing his playing with the 1943 Climax sides: listening to Red Allen one is comparing hint with his 1929 Victors (there is, in Allen's case, not a tragedy - it wasn't hubris that brought him down - but a story of real pathos, and I wish someone more sensitive, shrewder, and with more psychological insight than myself would dig it out), With Louis it would be cruel (or idiotic) to insist he reach the heights, or plumb the depths if you prefer, of his 1925 blues accompaniments. but surely we have the right to expect he maintain the standards set in the W.C. Handy LP of a few years back: his playing at the Festival made a mockery of even that. As to why Bechet never showed up. no explanation was offered. I heard that he never got on the plane at Paris, which leaves us still in the dark. I did hear a story, unconfirmed (as such stories always are), that Louis absolutely refused to play with Ory and Teagarden, and that two hours of pleading with him before and during the concert were fruitless. This particular tale may apocryphal, but it has a symbolic truth. I am not the only one who left Freebody Park that night disappointed. distressed, and not a little hurt. After the Armstrong fiasco, it is a pleasure to he able to report cut the thrilling Gospel concert given Sunday afternoon. A relatively small audience. quite different in make-up front the usual one at Newport (there were a considerable number of older Negroes) sat for almost three hours under a pitiless sun and felt better and more refreshed after it was all over than they had at the beginning, such was the extraordinary impact of The Ward Singers. The Drinkard Singers. The Back Home Choir, and Mahalia Jackson. The idea for the concert was John Hammond´s; my debt to him would have been greater and my enjoyment even more intense had he not, characteristically, also inflicted an unctuous, patronizing and thoroughly annoying compare named Joe Bostic on us. But when Mahalia Jackson starts singing. the Joe Bostics of this world are quickly forgotten. Everybody. I trust, knows what Gospel singing is. and all about its relation to jazz. I thought I did. until it suddenly struck me - in the midst of tapping my feet and clapping my hands - that I hardly knew the first thing about this music. For what we heard seemed a long way from Mitchell's Christian Singers and Mind Willie John-son. I would not be at all surprised, for example; if modern Gospel singing were more strongly influenced by jazz than the other way around. Certainly the accompanying pianists Sylvester Dean for most of the groups, Mildred Falls for Mahalia played the stompingest piano I have ever heard "live" on the faster numbers• and what can only he described as pure blues piano on the slow ones. I believe that the Gospel audience. and indeed the musicians (singers and instrumentalists) themselves, do not pay any attention to what, for want of a better name, I call revivalist jazz except as in the case of Mahalia Jackson, to ignore it pointedly. This is really a pity, for the two styles. if that is the proper term. have a lot in common. as such records as Madame Ernestine Washing-ton with Bunk Johnson band. Sister Lottie Peavey with the Yerba Buena Band (Bunk on trumpet!, and Ann Cook with Wooden Joe Nicholas' Band amply demonstrate the Gospel field could furnish the broader base, both in audience and in performers, today's traditional jazz so surely needs. It seems to me (although I could, of course, he completely wrong) that many of the young Gospel musicians are those who would have bean playing (or singing) jazz twenty or so years ago; why they do no: now, and why the gulf between Gospel and jazz (the myth that the Young modern jazz-men arc deeply influenced by Negro religious music I take to be just that - a myth) I would dearly like to know. One thing is certain; not :all young Negroes want to play, or hear hard bop. But the concert itself: Clara Ward and her Ward Singers and the Drinkard Singers. both groups accompanied by Professor Herman Stevens, organ. and Sylvester Dean. piano seemed to have a similar approach to the material such songs as "All God's Chillun Got Shoes" (if I am reading my -notes right). "Packing, Getting Ready to Go", and "Somebody Bigger than You and I" - and both generated the most fantastic rhythmic excitement I have ever heard, outside of New Orleans music. I am not sure this effect is what is meant by swing, and I certainly could not speak of its superstructure, infrastructure, or its tension-relaxation dichotomy, I only know I simply could not stop tapping stomping would he a better word - my feet, and I had all I could do to slop from shouting. Most of :he songs were begun in ensemble- with the "barber-shop" harmonies much in evidence: then there would he solos by one or two of the singers, often quite long and always rising to heights of emotional intensive backed up by riffs- in the form of short phrases by the other singers. It seemed to me. Incidentally, that :here was a good deal of improvisation on the part of the soloists. Both the Ward Singers and the Drinkards were compelling and quite marvellous: when one of those groups got to rocking, the whole atmosphere was electric. The Back Dome Choir, a group of fifty mixed voices from Newark. New Jersey as were the Drinkards, although they originally were from Savannah) were something else again. Obviously the interplav among the voices and the improvisation possibly with a group of five are no longer possibly with one of fifty; consequently the Back Home Choir sounded much more arranged. What Jeff Banks, the organiser and leader of the choir has done, for the most part, is to set Joe Deloach a remarkable singer, against the massed voices (learned readers of Prof. Stearns' book will need their heads salegy and repeat the shibboleth "antiphony"). The overall effect was somewhat lacking in spontaneity, but Mr Beloach was as impassioned and as convincing as say, the reverends Gates and McGhee. And then there was Mahalia Jackson. Her appearance was without doubt the high point of the 1957 festival, let alone the afternoon's concert. With her glorious voice (not entirely untrained. I would imagine) and her majestic stage presence she captivated the audience completely; she left the stage, at the end of her performance,. to a standing ovation. There is little I need say Mahalia; superlatives, at any rate, get :boring very rapidly. … I was particularly pleased to note that Mahalia "sang one for Mr. Russell (William Russell, the doyen and. to my mind. the best. of critics of New Orleans jazz)". The afternoon was a triumph for Miss Jackson and she. alone with the other Gospel groups and one or two others. are what made the Festival worth while. I have two reservations to set against what seems to have become a paean of praise: Some of the Gospel singers did seem theatrical at times, and :he sentiments expressed in some of the songs. particularly the slow ones, where banal at best. The myriad others who rounded out the Festival were, almost without exception, very much like their recorded selves. The Ruby Braff Octet, featuring Pee Wee: Russell, went over big; Eartha Kitt danced with the Gillespie band and got everybody mad at her: the Basie Band sounded tired: Sonny Stitt carved Roy Eldridge to ribbons: Turk Murphy s new group was tremendous; Dave Brubeck swung like mad - for him; the Jimmy Giuffre Thee exploited the full dynamic range from pp to pp; Pete Brown is sick; Bobby Hackett's Sextet. exploiting the versatility of the likes of Dick Cary was intriguing. if you like that sort of thing; Stan Kenton wasn't, even if you do; etc.. etc. If there were any Moment of Truth such as folklore attributes to previous Newport Festivals, they escaped my notice. I suppose. finally. I will have to say something about the Wunderkinder from Farming dale High School and their gigantic (well 28 piece) dance hand which made the pages of Life. Time, and for all I know Armstrong's Little Green Sheet. These apple-checked youngsters, whose average age, we ate told. is 14 years (I'd like to see the arithmetic which led to that results play well-known arrangements (as for example Basie's "It´s Sand. Man") and have an altoist who sounds just like of course- (Charlie Parker. The attention they received was all out of proportion to what they deserved. Having myself played in just such band (in an otherwise misspent youth). I Was not impressed. By the time this note appears in print, there will have been in addition to Newport several other jazz festivals, including the Great South Bay (Long Island) Festival, the Randall Island Festival, and the festival at a spot hitherto not known for its jazz activity, Lynn, Massachusetts. Where will it all end? After Newport our little group swore we wouldn't go again (we are going to have an opportunity to hear Mahalia Jackson under more favourable condition soon). But some time has passed. and already there are rumors that John Hammond is going to round up all the back country jug and skiffle bands in the South, which means we'll all be back next year to hear even more jazz amid even more confusion. America. America. - 33 7/4/57 Newport-life; HENRY"RED"ALLEN COMBO & guests: Red Allen (t,v) +Kid Ory (v,tb) *Jack Teagarden, J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) Arvell Shaw (b) Cozy Cole (d) Verve MHV/Verve(G)/Verve(F)/Col.33CX/Am.Rec.- / 3:48 intro-ann. by Willis Conover (narr) 8233/MV-2624/817792-1/ -10106 /Soc-G-436/RA-CD-18/ / --/ --/ --- / --- / 8:04 STRUTTIN´ WITH SOME BARBECUE (Armstrong-Raye) --- / --4:50 ST.JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (Primrose) --- / --/ --/ --/ --- / --- / (Winfred-Boutelje) --- / --/ --/ --/ --- / --- / 2:52 *CHINA BOY -vJT 4:50 *BASIN STREET BLUES -vJT (Williams) --- / --/ --/ --/ --- / --- / --- / --/ --/ --/ --- / --- / 3.12 +MUSKRAT RAMBLE -vK0 without JCH (Gilbert-Ory) (Melrose-Steele) --- / --/ --/ --/ --- / --- / 4:25*+HIGH SOCIETY CHINA BOY on Phil.(Eu)838347-2/ ST.JAMES on Verve(G)845144-2/ + on Mosaic189-2(CD X 8set) & on RA-CD-21&RA-CD-43b covernotes Bill Simon on Verve 8233: JULY 4, 1957 WAS WILLIAM "BUSTER"BAILEY is believed to have been THE DATE OF THE OPENING CONCERT AT THE the first legitimately trained clarinetist to make it big as a FOURTH ANNUAL 'NEWPORT JAZZ FESTIVAL. And jazzman. He was born in Memphis in 1902, but studied in it also was Louis Armstrong's 57th. birthday. On hand to Chicago with Franz Schoepp, who also taught Benny Goodhelp him,celebrate, and to pay tribute to the all-time great man the fundamentals. Bailey was on the scene as early as jazzman, were some of his old cronies, going all the way 1917, with W.C. Handy's band,.and worked with most of back to the New Orleans days, which Satchmo himself has the big-game colored bands of the '20's and '30's. He was a recalled so colorfully in his book, "Satchmo-My Life In mainstay of the popular John Kirby crew from '37-'46, and New Orleans." The fact that Louis himself did not cotton to has worked with Allen off and on since '51. the celebration did not prevent a lot of good music from JACK TEAGARDEN... There were just a few significant trombonists in early jazz: Kid Ory, tailgate king from New being blown before his appearance, by those old friends. Following the turn by the George Lewis band from New Orleans; lucid Jimmy Harrison from New York; and the Orleans, and pianist Bobby Henderson (who, incidentally, is first real jazz virtuoso on the horn - Miff Mole. It was a nephew of the legendary pioneer New Orleans trumpeter, Teagarden, a Texas boy (born 191 1 ) who translated Buddy Bolden), master of ceremonies Willis Conover Louis Armstrong's brand of expressive jazz to the slide brought on the Red Allen combo, fresh from the daily horn, and he has taken his place alongside Louis as one of Broadway battles at the Metropole, a midtown New York the timeless, sanguine heroes of jazz. bar which features "wall-to-wall" jazz, virtually around the He played as a youngster around home, usually with the clock. Most of the men in this band are veterans of the early legendary pianist Peck Kelly. He left for New Orleans, and big jazz bands - of Fletcher Henderson's, McKinney's and of latched on with an important group of white musicians, those Louis' own bands. Even Arvell Shaw, the junior member, identified with the illustrious New Orleans Rhythm KingsLeon Rapollo and such. In '27, he hit New York and the played with Louis' combo for some times in the 50s. The music they played was high-decibel, boisterous following year joined Benny Pollack's band, which also had Dixieland, blasted out with maximum showmanly verve. brought Benny Goodman to New York. Jack began to Then Jack Teagarden joined the group and provided one of record with Pollack, and with the Red Nichols groups. the high spots of the Festival with his warm, red-blooded, Harlem musicians remember Jack's nightly excursions to lucid and lyrical tromboning of CHINA BOY. Then, of their part of town, and how he jammed with them into the course, there was his lithesome, lazy singing of his early hours. Jim Crow customs at the time. forbade inevitable BASIN STREET BLUES. Then Jack introduced professional engagements with his Negro confreres. the daddy of tailgate trombonists, Edward "Kid" Ory. This During much of the '30's, he was featured with Paul Whiteseptuagenarian strolled on stage looking exceedingly dapper man, as vocalist and jazz trombonist, then for About eight in his white jacket and performed as though he might have years, struggled with his own band. In '47 he threw in the been a "kid" for real. His featured number was the great old towel and joined Armstrong's combo, staying until '51. standard he himself wrote about 4o years ago-MUSKRAT Since, he has had his own small combos, and currently is RAMBLE-and just to show he was riding with the times, he being "rediscovered" he did some of the best playing of his even shouted out a vocal, using the lyrics written just a few career at Newport. years ago by Hollywood writer, Ray Gilbert. Then Teagar- EDWARD "KID" ORY was born in the vicinity of New den and Higginbotham joined Ory for a three-'bone blast at Orleans on Christmas Day, 1886. Buddy Bolden, legendary trumpeter-leader of what is believed to have been the that other New Orleans perennial, HIGH SOCIETY. THE CAST: HENRY"RED" ALLEN, JR., is the son of a first jazz band, was still active at the time Ory turned pro, New Orleans brass band pioneer, and he was born in nearby and Kid is supposed to have sat in with him. Later he had Algiers, La., in 1908. Although he began his career in the his own band, with such men as King Oliver, Armstrong, New Orleans street bands, most of his professional activity Bechet and the Dodds brothers. He pioneered jazz on the was with the big Northern bands, and much of his career Coast in 1919, then joined Oliver in Chicago in '24. was spent in the shadow of his idol, Louis Armstrong. He He was with Louis on the monumental Hot Five discs of followed Louis into King Oliver's band in '27, and in '29 he '25-'27, then returned to Los Angeles. He virtually retired joined Luis Russell's band, which in several periods was from music during the depression, to run a chicken farm. fronted by Louis. He also was with Henderson in 33. During By the '40's, he was back in the swim. Orson Welles tapped the '40's, together with his sidekick J. C. Higginbotham he him for several radio shows and he was involved in a few film tracks. In '57, he toured Europe with his own band, was a familiar attraction on 52nd Street. JACK (JAY C.) HIGGINBOTHAM, was born in Atlanta, Ga., most successfully, returning just in time to make Newport. in 1908. He was a protegé of the late great Jimmy Harrison WILLIS CONOVER, master of ceremonies at the Newport in the '20's. He has played with Russell, Chick Webb and Jazz Festival, is the jazz voice of "Voice of America" His Henderson, and was with Red Allen in the Armstrong band erudite, illuminating commentary is heard every week in just about every country in the world.. of '37'40. He and Red have been together ever since. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NEWPORT FESTIVAL, THURSDAY NIGHT – Barry Ulanow in DownBeat 8/8/57: A Night at NY's Metropole Cafe was created on stage by the Henry Red Allen group. Their set, STRUTTIN' WITH SOME BARBECUE and ST.JAMES INFIRMARY BLUES, embodied most of the noisier elements of Dixieland, although Buster Bailey's clarinet work was impressive and Allen's big toned trumpet, when edited, proved exciting. Jack Teagarden joined the group for a percussively tongued CHINA BOY, which he closed with a dazzling cadenza. Jack sang BASIN STREET BLUES and blow a handsome solo which apparently spuned Allen into a clean, precise chorus and Bailey into one delicate and aimy. Kid Ory replaced Teagarden for a raucious MUSKRAT RAMBIE which he sang. Then Teagarden teamed with Ory and Higginbotham to blow with Allen's group, including Claude Hopkins, Arvell Shaw and Cozy Cole. They united in three part harmony on HIGH SOCIETY. - 34 O.Keller-NPT-1957; Bul.hcf-No.70/Sept-57: Nous eûmes ensuite un groupe de musiciens jouant réguliè- Jack Teagarden vint se joindre à l'orchestre et ce furent rement au « Métropole » de New York et ayant à peu près Basin Street Blues et China Boy. Kid Ory, également en tous joué une fois ou l'autre avec Pops: Red Allen, J.C.Hig- vedette. interpréta Muskrat Ramble sur lequel il prit un ginbotham, Buster Bailey, Claude Hopkins, Arvell Shaw et vocal désopilant. Buster Bailey prit un formidable solo sur Cozy Cole. Musique très soignée, que ces musiciens durent ce morceau et j'avoue n'avoir jamais entendu Buster jouer aimer jouer dans une ambiance pour une fois farvo-rable. aussi bien. Pour terminer 1eur programme, tous ces Buster Bailey et Higginbotham brillèrent tout spécia-lement musiciens jouèrent High Society, avec des ensembles exédans Struttin' with some Barbecue et St James Infirmary, cutés à l'unisson par les trois trombones Kid. Higgy et Mr. T. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------H. Panassiè about Barclay 5oo5 in Bul.H.C.F.,No.93,Dec.59: La face s'ouvre sur une présentation de l'orchestre par cette avec lui), suivi de Buster qui jouerait très bien s'il ne se immnense andouille de Willis Conover (quelle que soit la croyait pas obligé de faire plusieurs incursions dans 1e couleur) qui énumère interminablement entre quelle et suroigu de la clarinette à chaque solo. Enfin, bon « iff » quelle année chacun des membres de l'orchestre a joué amorcé et mené par Red Allen, et coda grandiloquente par Teagarden. avec Louis Armstrong. Struttin' with some Barbecue commence par une impro- Teagarden annonce ensuite Kid Ory au trombone, « the visation collective d'assez bonne qualité et se poursuit par daddy of all tailgate trombones, the famous boy from New deux brillants chorus de piano de Claude Hopkins, qui Orleans, that started all this noise in jazz… Kid Ory » (le emploie par moments le « stride » aveç un swing considé- père de tous les trombones d'ochestres de parades, le rable et joue aussi quelques phrases d'une fraicheur mélo- fameux enfant de La Nouvelle Orléans, celui qui a créé ce dique rappelant Willie Smith « Le Lion »; c'est un des genre de bruits dans le jazz ... Kid Ory). meilleurs solos de tout le disque. Vient ensuite Higginbo- Avec Kid Ory au trombone, à la place de Teagarden, l'orchetham, qui ne trouve pas sa meilleure inspiration mais qui stre attaque alors Muskrat Ramble. Àh, mes amis, quelle est soutenu par Cozy Cole avec un swing fabuleux; Cozy révélation ! L'orchestre est transformé, transfiguré ! Red se déchaine à fond pendant le second chorus de trombone. Allen est méconnaissable: plus de surcharges, de fantaisies Red Allen suit (joliment accompagné par Claude Hopkins douteuses, de notes en l'air. Son jeu devient très proche de au piano); les phrases qu'il joue sont meilleures que la celui des grande trompettes Nouvelle Orléans. Il s'appuie manière dont il les joue, qui n'est pas terriblement swingu- sur le temps, joue des phrases bien découpées dans la tradiante; mais Cozy, lui, fournit constamment un swing à vous tion Armstrong, en un mot il mène excellemment les copieurendre dingo. Puis c'est le tour de Buster Bailey à la clari- ses improvisations collectives de ce Muskrat Ramble, nette, dont le solo est inégal mais contient quelques superbes swinguant bien plus que dans les outres morceaux et faisant passages dont un d'une étincelante virtuosité, un peu avant preuve, pour une fois, d'une inspiration régulière, constante. le milieu de son second chorus. Enfin vient Arvel Shaw, Dans l'ensemble ce Muskrat Ramble est la meilleure dont les deux chorus de contrebasse sont formidablement interprétation que nous ayons de Red Allen en disque. accompagnés par la batterie de Cozy. Une improvisation Buster Bailey, lui aussi, fournit une bien meilleure partie collective quelque peu brouillonne termine l'interprétation de clarinette dans les ensembles de ce Muskrat Ramble ... du moins on le croit, mais il y a une « reprise » un peu (une partie appropriée à l'improvisation collective, non. déconcertante car une coupure dans la bande en a supprimé plus une partie de soliste). Il n'est jusqu'à son solo qui soit le début. Nous devons cependant nous féliciter qu'on nous mieux développé que dans les autres morceaux du recueil; ait donné cette « rallonge » car elle se termine par une partie on le sent beaucoup plus à l'aise. Le tempo, qui a dû être ici de batterie de Cozy (d'abord seul puis soutenant trompette donné par Kid Ory, est du reste le meilleur de tout le et autres) d'un swing tellement HALLUCINANT qu'on ép- recueil. rouve le besoin de rejouer plusieurs fois ce passage avant Mais le plus étonnant de tout, c'est le contraste entre le jeu d'en croire ses oreilles. Un sommet, un monument de swing ! de Kid Ory lui-même et celui de Teagarden et même ! ! Et une technique non moins stupéfiante ! On aurait voulu d'Higginbotham. En entendant Kid Ory aussitôt après les deux autres et avec le même orchestre, on s'apercoit non que Cozy joue ainsi pendant au moins 5 minutes! St James Infirmary, après uns improvisation collective seulement qu'il sait jouer infiniment mieux en improvisation plaisamment menée par Henry Allen, fait entendre un collective mais encore que sa sonorité, ou plutôt ses intoexcellent solo de piano de Claude Hopkins, merveilleuse- nations ont un accent rugueux, « méchant », plus exactement soutenu par Cozy Cole (cette sonorité qu'il tire des ment « gutty », comme d'sent les Noirs (c'est-à-dire, pour cymbales ! Inouï !), puis c'est le tour de Buster, qui a l'air appeler les choses par leur nom, « qui a de la tripe »), qui de bien jouer, mais à chaque audition la partie de batterie est beaucoup plus « jazz » que celui des autres trombones, me captive à tel point que je ne sois pas si j'ai réussi une qui est, en fait, LA sonorité jazz par excellence. Et l'on seule fois à écouter ce solo de clarinette de bout en bout ! jouit avec une intensité extraordinaire de chaque note Viennent ensuite d'exubérants chorus vocaux par Red que joue Kid Ory dans ce Muskrat Ramble, d'autant plus Allen, puis un solo d'Higginbotham (avec Cozy toujours que la prise de son met le trombone très en relief. renversant !), puis d'Arvell Shaw à la basse (employant Oui, vraiment une des choses les plus purement JAZZ qui l'archet); et l'interprétation se termine par une improvisa- existent au monde, c'est le jeu de Kid Ory tout au long de ce Muskrat Ramble. tion collective confuse et désordonnée. Au début du verso, Red Allen annonce Jack Teagarden, C'est également Kid Ory qui chante un instant dans ce qui remplace Higgy au trombone, et c'est un China Boy en Muskrat Ramble (entre parenthèse, ce n'est qu'e 1950 que grande partie joué en solo par Teagarden, ni meilleur ni des paroles furent ajoutées sur ce morceau). pire que de coutume, c'est-à-dire bon technicien mais Enfin, vient High Society, morceau pour lequel Teagarden médiocre swingman. Heureusement que Cozy Cole fournit et Higginbotham se joignent à Kid Ory, et c'est le désordré un swing à tout casser derrière lui, et qui ne cesse de croître habituel à ces « jam sessions » finales : des interludes pendant lesquels 1es instrumentistes se courent les uns jusqu'à la fin. Puis c'est le sempiternel, l'inévitable Basin Street Blues après les autres, des passages faux etc. Dommage, car le annoncé par Teagarden qui tient à préciser que ce sont tempo adopté est bon et Buster Bailey joue si excellemGlenn Miller et lui les responsables de l'affreux couplet et ment de la clarinette qu'on aurait aimé l'entendre plus des paroles « corny » qui furent ajoutées ou morceau en longuement sur ce morceau ...mais l'interprétation est 1931. Teagarden chante et joue ce morceau que je l'ai courte, étonnamment courte, au point qu'on se demande si entendu interpréter, en disque ou en « direct », des dizaines plusieurs chorus n'ont pas été purement et simplement (peutétre même des centaines) de fois, puis Red Allen supprimés. prend un chorus de trompette à peu près satisfaisant, où Bref, un disque fort inégal, comme vous le voyez, mais l'on ne compte qu'une ou deux surcharges (ce qui est rare extrément intéressant par certain, côtés. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ - 35 Albert McCarthy about NPT-1957, in Jazz Monthly 7/58: The Red Allen Group (Co.33CXlolo6) is exhibitionistic, but there are occasional solos in the two lengthy tracks on side one that are passable. Higginbotham seems a shadow of himself and his tone has deteriorated unbelievably; Hopkins and Bailey are adequate; Allen is quite exciting, but given to the now inevitable lapses in taste. Teagarden is as assured as ever on the two numbers on which he plays, and Allen is in much better form behind the vocal on BASIN STREET. Ory joins in on the last two numbers and is quite as expected. Bailey takes the traditional solo on HIGH SOCIETY very competently. The rating for this would be fair to good. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Sinclair Traill about Col33CX10106 in Jazz Journal 5/58: blues, but I am not over impressed by his singing. Best things on Side 1 for me are the piano solos by that for- The second side is also too full of gallery fetching gimmicks. gotten man of jazz Claude Hopkins. On both tracks his play- Mr.T. is at his best on the nicely swinging version of “China ing is neat and effective, his second chorus on “Barbecue” Boy”, the rhythm section really gets working here, and being particularly good. Allen also takes a good solo on this “Bain Street” is exactly as you have come to expect. track, but the performance as a whole degenerates into a “Muskrat” has Ory introduced as a singer – Bailey takes a noisy crowd-fetching turmoil. “St.James Infirmary” is a good chorus here – and the final all-in swings to some little better, the rhythm being nice and jumpy. Bailey starts extent. The last track features the three trombones to not his solo with a nice descending phrase and builds up a well very good advantage, and the ensemble playing is unbeliebalanced solo. Allen always sounds good when playing the vedly untidy. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------7/20/57 Sat. L.I., bc VoA No.? Great South Bay Jazz Festival - FLETCHER HENDERSON REUNION: Rex Stewart (c,dir) Bobby Williams, Joe Thomas, Paul Webster, Emmett Berry (t) Alton Moore, J.C.Higginbotham, Fernando Arbello, Benny Morton (tb) Garvin Bushell, Hilton Jefferson, Jimmy Wright, Edgar Sampson, Haywood Henry, Coleman Hawkins, Buster Bailey, Gerry Mulligan (reeds) Don Redman (as,v,arr,cond) Red Richards (p) Bernard Addison (g) Hayes Alvis (b) Jimmy Crawford (d) John Nesbit (arr) (two hours session with below on broadcast) tape poss.exists Down South Camp Meeting -aFH, -feat.Rex Stewart, cl-trio, Chinatown, My Chinatown -aJN Honeysuckle Rose -feat.Higginbotham,Berry Sophisticated Lady -feat.Jimmy Wright(ts) Wrappin' It Up -feat.Jefferson,Higginbotham,Thomas, -aFH Talk Of The Town -feat.Hawkins Shanghai Shuffle -feat.Bailey, Berry Memphis Blues -feat.Bailey Blue And Groovy -feat.Higginbotham, Berry Chaos -Teo Macero score Gee, Baby, Ain't I Cood To You -vOR Nagasaki -Redman, Hawkins,Bailey,Higginbotham,Mulligan I´ve Found A New Baby -Mulligan, Higginbotham King Porter Stomp -Joe Thomas PC-8/17/57p23: CAFÉ METROPOLE FOR DIXIELAND JAZZ N.Y. - Broadway's Café Metropole, which features Among the regulars who have had a long stand at the Metropole music to be listened to on Times Square sidewalks, is are Henry (Red)Allen, Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham, Claude demonstrating that there is still much interest in Hopkins and Eddie Bourne in one combo. There is another Dixieland despite the recent emphasis on the cooler group headed by clarinettist Sol Yaged whose crew includes versions of jazz. Cozy Cole, Bob Hammer, Pete Comp and Harry Sheppard. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DB 9/19/57p9: MUSIC NEWS: Meanwhile, around the corner in Times Square, the Metropole stepped up its torrid wall-to-wall jazz pace. In addition to the regular roster of jazzmen, including Henry Red Allen, Charlie Shavers, Coleman Hawkins, Zutty Singleton, Claude Hopkins, Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham, Marty Napoleon, Tony Parenti, Cozy Cole, Arvell Shaw, and others, something new was added – The Metropole hired a press agent. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------JOHN POSTGATE in Jazz Monthly, 5/58: "THE METROPOLE" in Nov.1957 HENRY ALLEN's home. Forbiddingly dark, with two ends with a jam session number, Allen's group being joined characters out of Damon Runyon guarding the glass doors by Sol Yaged (cl), Dave Sheppard (vib) and Gene Ramey (b). and keeping back the permanent small crowd of rubbernecks Uproar, solos all round, uproar and Allen's group retires. in the street outside. Inside is a long bar behind which, on a Ken Kersey (p) and one Alexander(ds; unknown to me) narrow strip, the band plays in single file. Two drum kite mount the strip and we have the Sol Yaged quintet for 45 and two pianos are permanently set up. Allen, a great giant minutes. Yaged's lot are much swingier than Allen's, mainly of a fellow with a drooping face, plays as recognizably as he because of Ramey, but the group differs little from a hundred did with Luis Russell, Billy Banks and under his own name, other clarinet-vibraphone followers of Goodman except that it but louder than any recording can convey. J.C.Hig- is extraordinarily loud. Yaged's clarinet playing is fluent and ginbotham I find quite unrecognizable, contributing to the satisfying. Kersey, the only soloist familiar to me from uproar with solos that seem little more than R and B licks. records, plays nothing memorable and spends most of the Buster Bailey is, by contrast, dignified and musicianly, but time with his head turned sideways looking out of the door. again I should not have recognized him from what I know This, incidentally, is a chronic state of the METROPOLE of his records. Claude Hopkins might have been anyone; musicians; they are always looking to see whole coming in, Eddie Bourne on drums unexpectedly produced one of the and must develop permanent twists in their necks after a few drum solos I have ever enjoyed. This personnel differs prolonged stint there. They were all doing it on each of my from that stuck up on the window (as always at the Metro- four visits; whoever they expected, hoped for, or just wished pole) but may be taken as more nearly correct-nobody for, did not come while I was around. In all, the Metropole of an evening was very, very loud. But, seems really certain who's playing. At first one will take anything from so distinguished a in contrast to very loud jazz haunts in Britain, the musicians galaxy of names, but one soon realizes that Allen's group is, are supremely competent. This, and the fact that no in fact, an unqualified rabble rouser. Allen even calls for musician was on the stand for more than 45 minutes at a applause during numbers - "Let's make him happy! really stretch, are probably the features .that prevent the proceehappy!" - a practice that causes in me an acute attack of dings from becoming boring. Competence and variety is English reserve. A set lasts three-quarters of an hour and provided in plenty, if little originality. - 36 J.J.10/57/57p5 (& with photo without of interest on p7): Metropole - Red Allen Band: Red Allen, J.C.Higginbotham, Buster Bailey, Claude Hopkins, Eddie Bourne & Cozy Cole 11/1/57 NYC........ bc "Jazz From New York": Joe Thomas (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Al Williams (p) Benny Moten (b) Eddie"Moule"Bourne (d) 6:07 J.C. Jumps JCH-CD-5/ illustrated on RA-DVD-1b --- / 9:59 Bill Bailey, Won't You Please Come Home 11/late & 29/57 NYC., FLETCHER HENDERSON ALL STARS- Rex Stewart (c,dir): Taft Jordan, Joe Thomas, Emmett Berry or *Dick Vance (t) J.C.Higginbotham, Dickie Wells, Benny Morton (tb) Garvin Bushell, Hilton Jefferson (cl,as) Buster Bailey (cl) Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster (ts) Haywood Henry or *Norman Thornton (bars) Red Richards (p) Al Casey (g) Bill Pemberton (b) Jim Crawford (d) 4:13 Sugar Foot Stomp (Oliver-Melrose) Jazzt.J 1285/JCH-CD-5/ --/ --- / 6:56 King Porter Stomp (Morton-Burke-Rubin) (Waller-Razaf) --/ --- / 7:24 *Honeysuckle Rose 6:32 *Wrappin´ It Up (Henderson) --/ --- / (Rex Stewart) -without Webster --/ --- / 4:10 *The Way She Walks 12/2/57: Rex Stewart (c) J.C.Higginbotham, Dickie Wells, Benny Morton (tb) Hilton Jefferson (as) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Red Richards (p) Al Casey (g) Bill Pemberton(b) Jimmy Crawford(d) 4:52 Casey Stew Jazzt.J 1285/JCH-CD-5/ --/ --- / 4:10 A Hundred Years From Today 4:32 Three Thieves --/ --- / --/ --- / 3:23 ' Round About Midnight 12/4 & 12/5/57 NYC., "GOIN' TO KANSAS CITY" - JIMMY WITHERSPOON (v) & Ray Copeland(t at 12/4) Emmett Berry (t at12/5) J.C.Higginbotham(tb) Haywood Henry or *Al Sears(bars) Jay Mc Shann(p) Kenny Burrell(g) Gene Ramey(b) Mousey Alexander(d) / Mosaic / RCA LPM 1639/MCD-1011/ H2JB8195 3:06 Jumpin´ The Blues -8196 3:20 Hootie Blues NYAN-l0/26/57p15: --/ --/ LADY --/ --/ -8197 5:31 Piney Brown Blues DAY TO BE ON TV JAZZ -8198 4:16 Confessin' The Blues SALUTE - “The Sound of --/ --/ --/ --/ Jazz,” a musical salute to the -8199 3:42 Blue Monday Blues --/ --/ blues as the roots of jazz, and -8200 3:16 Rain Is Such A Lonesome Sound -8201 2:56 Ooo Wee, When The Light Go Out --/ --/ featuring today's leading jazz -8202 3:20 *Cee Baby, Ain't I Good To You --/ --/ performers, will be presented -8203 2:38 *Froggy Bottom on CBS Television's “The --/ --/ Seven Lively Arts” Sun.Dec.8 --/ --/ -8204 2:48 Until The Real Thing Comes Along (5.00-6:00 p.m. EST), it was --/ 3:14 Cloudy announced this week by John 3:30 Fare Thee, Honey, Fare Thee Wel --/l Houseman, executive producer --/ 3:30 Ride On of the new entertainment series. In 1957 Vic Dickenson returned to New York and once more took J.C.Higginbotham's The major forms of jazz through chair, this time with Red Allen and Buster Bailey at the Metropole. which the blues find expression-Dixieland, swing, modern and experimental-will be interpreted by such artists as Billie Holiday, Count Basie, Pee Wee Russell, Coleman Hawkins,Jimmy Giuffre trio, Roy Eldridge, Red Allen and Broonzy. Approximately 30 musicians will appear on the program, which is produced by Robert Herridge. No hard and fast format is being set by writer John McGiffert for “The Sound of Jazz,” which will originate 'life' from New York. Producer Herridge and director Sidney Lumet hope to create the atmosphere of spontaneity in which jazz musicians work best. A representative of each of the major forms of jazz will tell in his own words how he became a jazz musician, and will illustrate, musically, his particular style. Sound of Jazz: Vic Dickenson - Red Allen - Rex Stewart --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DB 11/14/57: NEW ITEM – Nat Hentoff and Whitney Balliett picked the talent for CBS-TV Sound of Jazz show, due Dec.8. - 36a - rehearsal- - Sound Of Jazz (court. Milt + Mona Hilton) Vic Dickenson & Red Allen – Sound Of Jazz TV-1957 (courtesy D.Schiedt) L.Feather: „New Encyclopedia of Jazz“: Sound Of Jazz - 37 12/5/57 NYC., rehearsal & rec.session for CBS-TV serie "Seven Lively Arts" - SOUND OF JAZZ; prod.: Robert Herridge, dir.: Jack Smight, musical advisors: Nat Hentoff, Whitney Balliett, musical dir.: Nat Pierce (arr), Host: John Crosby; part-1: HENRY"RED"ALLEN ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v) Rex Stewart (c) Vic Dickenson (tb) Pee Wee Russell (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Nat Pierce (p) Milt Hinton (b)Jo Jones (d) WILD MAN BLUES (L. Armstrong-J.R .Morton) Col.CD-CK66082 also the two below sides/RA-CD-16/RA-DVD-2/ WILD MAN BLUES (L. Armstrong-J.R .Morton) Col.JCL 1098/Font.TFL 5025/SONY(J)503420NP/ RA-DVD-2/ Co59469-1 8:45 Co59469-2 4:55 Co59470-1 5:01 -Allen-Hawkins-Dickenson-Russell-Stewart-ens.-vRA (W.H.Woods-Earl Hines) ROSETTA Col.CS 8040 /Font.TL682015/CBS 57036 / --- / --- / --- / --- / --/ /RA-CD-16/ --- / --/ -Allen-vRA (Stewart-Hawk)-Hawk-Dickenson-Stewart-Russell-Jones-Allen-ens.-Pierce-ens.12/8/57 NYC., CBS-TV/film "Seven Lifely Arts"- SOUND OF JAZZ part-1: same with Danny Barker (g) (several videos exist) /PAL video/ 2:32 intro to Count Basie´s piano by W.Balliett 013-KayJ./ /Bandstand /Landscape/RACD-12/RA-DVD-1/ part-1: 6:45 WILD MAN BLUES -soloing as 12/5 --/Phoenix-24/Pumpkin-116/BDCD1517/ LS2-912 / --- / --/ 4:45 ROSETTA -vRA -soloing as 12/5 --/ --/ --/ ---/ --/ --- / --/ Douglas Hague - A SALUTE TO THE BLUES (about the complete TV) - J.J.2-58: ... After this fine jump blues (played by the Count Basie Band), came a. group led by Red Allen, .... Their first number WILD MAN BLUES had particularly fine work by Rex, and again on ROSETTA behind Red's vocal, more exuberant sounds from Rex over a really cookin' rhythm section. Hawk, Red and Pee Wee (What a pleasure to hear him again!) all turned in fine solos and the session brought strongly to mind the old Rhythmakers and Chicago Rhythm Kings discs that Red cut many years ago - real happy jazz! ... -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Trevor Tolley about Phoenix-24 (1944/1957/1963),in CODA-2-79: ...(1963/1944) ... The faster ROSETTA does not come off very well, but on WILD MAN BLUES Allen shows some of his old power to move us with his daring plangency, to be at once natural and surprising. It is a track that unfortunately shows up the rest of the record ... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------John Chilton: “Ride, Red, Ride” p156: RedAllen and Rex Stewart were good friends but this did not eliminate an air of competition between them. Each man stirs the other into producing dramatic solos, with Rex summoning up reserves of energy and daring to blow a series of fierce, high notes on his cornet. Vic Dickenson, Coleman Hawkins and Pee Wee Russell all parade their unique sounds on both numbers, but despite each of these musicians having a markedly individual tone the overall sound makes an eminently satisfying blend. … ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- IAJRC-… Jack Sohmer about PHOENIX 24: (A=1944) THE THEME; RED JUMP; RIDE, RED, RIDE; DARK EYES; DEAR OLD SOUTHLAND; GET THE MOP; JUST A FEELING; (B=Dec.57) WILD MAN BLUES; ROSETTA (C=Feb.63) MEMPHIS BLUES; YELLOW DOG ; CHERRY; FIDGETY FEET. For Side B, we leap ahead fifteen years, or so, to find Red assurtling leadership of a specially assembled crew of jazz greats. The occasion was CBS-TV's "The Sound Of Jazz" and the selections included here are those taken from the telecast; they do not duplicate the studio-recorded performances released on Columbia. "Wild Man" has Red playing with Armstrong-inspired authenticity, but equal kudos must go to the others, as well. Hawk, who is in top form throughout, charges in like a tiger and registers some of the most fantastic breaks of his career. Vic and Pee Wee are characteristically personal, with Rex culminating bit puckish entry with some seldom heard high note work Red leads them out, but wisely cautions them not to lot the tempo drag on the next tune, "Rosetta." Here, Red sings to Rex' accompaniment but when Hawk comes in, it's like "Hello Lola" all over again. His driving staccato solo, a model of the arpeggiated style, rivals even that earlier masterpiece for its sustained inventiveness and swing. Rex follows him with a phrase recalled from the first chorus and even Pee Wee seems undaunted by the tempo, his superb sense of rhythm coming to his aid at each turn. (cont.1963) Covernotes by ERIC LARRABEE on Co.JCL-1098: The best thing that ever happened to television happened on CBS between five and six in the afternoon on Sunday, Dec.8. At least that was where and when it happened first; the program may have been run at a different hour and date in your part of the country, and-if there is any justiceit will be repeated, the more often the better. It was an installment in "The Seven Lively Arts" series cal-led "The Sound of Jazz," and as far as I'm concerned you can throw away all previous standards of comparison. This is where live television began to amount to something. It was opened and closed, and from time to time interrupted, by John Crosby as "host," but mostly it was musicians playing jazz-in a bare studio, dressed in whatever they liked (hats, sweat shirts, it didn't matter), smoking, talking to one another, or just walking around. Each group was introduced and then away it went, with time enough (in nearly all cases) to get the music going, while the camera roamed over the faces of participants and spectators. There were no phony or elaborate explanations. As the executive producer, Jack Houseman, remarked approvingly to the music critic Virgil Thomson, during the dress-rehearsal: "This is the first program about jazz that doesn't say it started in New Orleans and then went up the river." Technically "The Sound of Jazz" gave the appearance of being very (as they say on the Avenue) "primitive." You knew that you were in a studio and that these people were being televised. If it sounded better to have a micro-phone right in front of a man's face , there the microphone would be; and if one cameraman got in another's way he didn't scurry ashamedly out of it. But this impromptu effect, of course, took a deal of contriving. The musicians couldn't believe at first that hats were really okay, and Billie Holiday had to be persuaded to appear in slacks and pony-tail instead of the gown she had specially planned on. The air of casualness was in fact the end product of months of work. THIS milestone was primarily made possible by House-man, his assistant Robert Goldman, and the producer for this show, Robert Herridge, who had the unbelievable courage and good sense to hire good taste and turn it loose. They found two jazz critics with some ideas, Whitney Balliett and Nat Hentoff, and after the usual round of conferences and memos, gave them complete artistic control. Balliet and Hentoff, from the start, had the kind of program in mind that they eventually producedone that would concentrate on music. When I asked Balliett at what point they had decided in favour of visual realism and informality, he thought a moment and said, "I don't think it ever occurred to us to do it any other way." They got the musicians they wanted, whether currently well known or not and whether or not "485" (the address on Madison of the Columbia front office) would have made the same choice. They were able to assemble combinations of musicians whose booking arrangements usually keep them apart, and also let an old-timer like Pee Wee Russell play side by side with a modernist like Jimmy Giuffre. The name of one performer made "485" nervous, but Balliett and Hentoff put their feet down-and they won. Let it be written that as of 1957 there was still some decency left, and somebody willing to fight for it. As "The Sound of Jazz" came into the final weeks before airtime, it began to make other people uneasy, and for better reasons. Since there was so little of the normal panic on the Composed in equal parts of transcription material and airchecks, this release from Phoenix looms as one of that label's most faultless products to date. (review about Side A see RA-bio-disco-part-2,p59) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- - 38 surface, everybody panicked inside. The director, Jack Smight, found that he was twice as jumpy without actors around to worry about; and when "485" found out in the last few days that there really wasn't any script to speak of it began to emit angry noises: "What are you doing down there?" Balliett and Hentoff could only answer that everything was going to be fine, the musicians would turn up, and there would be some music. They hoped this was true. THEY needn't have worried. If you were lucky enough to have seen "The Sound of Jazz" I don't have to tell you how great it was and, even if you weren't, what I'd want to do anyway is sell you an explanation of why it was great. The cornerstone of live television, class will please now repeat, is the human face-with its spontaneity and tension, its halo of contradictions, its hints of life lived and life to come. Of course the TV camera is merciless; it draws on the person behind the face for all the resources that it can find there. It is not one eye but millions of eyes; it has high expectations and asks that the person before it be poised in the balance, somehow challenged or tested, so as to bring forth the most meanings from the everchanging interplay of expressions in the face. What made the jazz musicians extraordinary, when the camera put their features through its harsh examination, was how much it found there. Children and animals make the best movie actors, as Douglas Fairbanks said, because they are unself-conscious and unable to fake. No more could these musicians be anything but them-selves, for they are committed to independence and to a headlong attack on the cosmos. It showed; here and no kiddingwere individuals of stature and profundity, of flesh and substance, of warmth and bite. The music was good, yes, but what lifted "The Sound of Jazz" to a level hitherto unattained was the sight of it being made. As a lady in White Plains sat down and wrote CBS as soon as the show was over, one so seldom has the chance "to see real people doing something that really matters to them." Neither Balliett nor Hentoff expected the visual effect to be as sensational as it was. They knew that director Jack Smight "dug" jazz, but they would never have dared anticipate the deft and intricate camera work that enabled him to cut from one shot to another as skillfully as though he were a movie editor, working with developed film instead of a live show. The cameramen simply out did themselves (for the record, and giving them a credit line they should have had on the air they were Bob Heller, Harold Classen, Joe Sokota, Jack Brown, and Marty Tuck). Balliett and Hentoff's long and careful planning had made it possible for the musicians to extemporize; now the cameramen and director could extemporize too, with the freedom to smudge the edges-leave that head half in the way-of practised talent, the artistic intelligence that dares to risk a blunder because it knows precisely what it is doing. Jazz is like that, and as a result the two effects of "The Sound of Jazz"-on the eye and on the ear-were miraculously in tune with each other. NOW there is talk not only of a repeat but of a series, and no one could better deserve it than this new-found team. But one wonders if the miracle can happen twice. Part of the reason that Balliett and Hentoff were let alone was that no one in high authority really understood what they were up to. Now the secret is out and there will be many hazards. As I sat with them in producer Robert Herridge's office, going over the first day´s mail, the phone rang and Herridge answered it. He listened, laughed explosively, and hung up. "Lawrence Welk," he said, "demands equal time." - Copyright, 1958, by Harper & Brothers, Reprinted by permission from Harper's Magazine. York, N.Y Irving Townsend on same cover: Eric Larrabee's hymn of praise to CBS' "The Sound of Jazz," reproduced here by courtesy of Harper's Magazine, omits one important reason for the brilliant success of the show. Four days before the show went on the air, during a driving blizzard, all the jazzmen on the show appeared at Columbia's 30th Street studios to record the show for this album. They wore the usual recording uniforms, hats, sport shirts, snow-drenched shoes, and they played up a storm of their own that day. What you saw on television looked like the recording session; what you hear now is the sound of jazz. Credit for this remarkable event belongs to a number of people, including the show's producer Robert Herridge, its director Jack Smight, associate producer Charles H. Schultz, and musical advisors Nat Hentoff and Whitney Balliett. Also responsible for this album are the executives of the various record labels who graciously allowed their exclusive artists to participate in the recording. And finally, and of course most important, credit goes to the real pros of the show, the musicians, who worked quickly and flawlessly to blend their highly individual styles of jazz into a single swinging performance. To all of these we express our thanks that what they contributed is here forever to be enjoyed. To help you enjoy the music more, the following is a summary of solos by each of the all-stars. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Side 1 Wild Man Blues-Henry "Red" Allen All Stars including: Henry "Red" Allen and Rex Stewart, trumpet; Pee Wee Russell, cla-rinet; Coleman Hawkins, tenor sax; Nat Pierce, piano; Jo Jones, drums; Milt Hinton, bass; Vic Dickenson, trombone. lst chorus: Allen 2nd chorus: Coleman Hawkins and Vic Dickenson 3rd chorus: Pee Wee Russell and Rex Stewart 4th chorus: Ensemble Rosetta-"Red" Allen All-Stars lst chorus: Allen 2nd chorus: Allen (vocal) 3rd chorus: Hawkins 4th chorus: Dickenson 5th chorus: Stewart 6th chorus: Russell 7th chorus: Allen 8th chorus: Ens.& Pierce Fine and Mellow-Billie Holiday with Mal Waldron All-Stars including: Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster, tenor sax; Doc Cheatham, trumpet; Vic Dickenson trombone; Mal Waldron, piano; Jo Jones drums; Danny Barker, guitar; Jim Atlas bass. lst chorus: Holiday 2nd chorus: Young 3rd chorus: Webster 4th chorus: Holiday 5th chorus: Cheatham 6th chorus: Hawkins 7th chorus: Holiday 8th chorus: Dickenson 9th chorus: Holiday 10th chorus: Holiday Blues -Jimmy Giuffre, Pee Wee Russell, clarinet; Jo Jones, drums; Danny Baker, guitar. Side II I Left My Baby-Count Basie All-Stars featuring Jimmy Rushing, incl.: Lester Young, Coleman Hawkins, Harry Carney, Earl Warren, saxophone; Roy Eldridge, Joe Newman, Doc Cheatham, Emmett Berry, trumpet; Vic Dickenson, Dickie Wells, Frank Rehak, trombone; Count Basic, piano; Eddie Jones, bass, Jo Jones, drums; Freddy Green, guitar. lst and 2nd chorus: Rushing with Young 3rd chorus: Ensemble 4th chorus: Basie 5th chorus: Hawkins 6th and 7th chorus: Rushing with Wells sax, and clarinet; Jim Hall, guitar; Jim Atlas, bass. The Jimmy Giuffre Trio appears through the courtesy of Atlantic Records. Nervous-piano solo by Mal Waldron. Dickie's Dream-Count Basie All-Stars (same band as for I Left My Baby) lst chorus: Young, Wells, Newman 2nd chorus: Young 3rd chorus: Rehak 4th chorus: Newman 5th chorus: Carney 6th chorus: Dickenson 7th chorus: Berry 8th chorus: Hawkins 9th chorus: Wells 10th chorus: Eldridge The Train and the River-The 11th chorus: Basie Jimmy Giuffre Trio including: 12th chorus: Ensemble Jimmy Giuffre, baritone, tenor The Sound of Jazz was presented by "The Seven Lively Arts" over CBS Television Sunday, December 8,1957. Note: One member of this great assemblage of jazz immortals did not appear on the show or on these recorded performances. Walter Page, one of the greatest of all bass players and an alumnus of the Basic rhythm section, could not leave his bed to join the others. Walter Page died of pneumonia Friday morning, December 20, 1957. Columbia and the musicians appearing on this album dedicate it to his memory. - 39 - Mouldy Rigg-Red Allen+P.W.Russell-Count Basie-Freddie Green-Lester Young(at rehearsal session)-Ed Jones-Rex Stewart-Jo Jones - 40 H.Panassié about Phil.Réalites V13 "Panorama Du Jazz"(LP) in Bul.hcf-No.91 /Oct.59: Les deux autres inter-prétations orchestrales, Wild man blues et Rosetta, ont été enregistrées par un orchestre de circonstance com-posé d'Henry Allen et … /line-up). Elles ne sont pas désagréables mais pas transcendantes non plus. Hawkins et, à un moindre degré, Vic Dickenson sont les seu's solistes vraiment inspirés. Les chorus d'Henry Allen sont, comme d'habitude, un mélange de bonnes et de mauvaises choses (c'est lui qui joue tous les solos sauf celui, avec sourdine, de Rosetta, qui suit le trombone, solo joué par Rex, assez bon). Quant aux solos de clarinette de PeeWee, ils sont aussi pleurnichards que d'habitude. ----------------------------------------------------Articles about “Sound of Jazz” in the Chicago Def. 12/7/57p14 & 12/21/57p15 (without of detailed interest for this book) are reprinted in JAZZ AD.Vol.6. ----------------------------------------------------- photos from cover Jass-Ten: 12/16/57session 12/14/57 NYC., Cafe Metropole, AFRS No….-bandstand-USA, METROPOLE ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) Eugene Ramey (b) Eddie"Moule"Bourne (d) 0:28 intro ann. by Leonard Feather and Willis Conover (narr) RA-CD-17(poor quality)/ 1:45 BEALE STREET BLUES (W.C.Handy) --- / 4:45 MUSKRAT RAMBLE (Kid Ory) --- / 4:54 ST. JAMES INFIRMARY (J.Primrose) --- / 3:15 HIGH SOCIETY (Melrose-Steele) --- / 2:45 MARIE (...........) --- / 0:37 leave ann. --- / 12/16/57 NYC., Reeves Soundcraft broadcast; DIXIELAND JAMFEST: Red Allen (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Sol Yaged (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Lou Stein (p) Milt Hinton (b) Cozy Cole (d) 0:58 3:02 5:07 4:32 6:32 3:01 4:25 3:57 intro-ann only on 21 min.tape/RA-CD-c10/ BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC (trad.) Jazz Groove 002/Jass-10/Stash JCD-2/ BLUES (William Grant Still) --- / --- / --/ WON'T YOU COME HOME, BILL BAILEY (Camon) --- / --- / --/ SOUTH (TODDLE) --- / --- / --/ WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN --- / --- / --/ FRANKIE AND JOHNNY Meritt-26/ --- / --/ MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND --- / --- / --/ --------------- / / / / / / / - 41 EDDIE LAMBERT covernotes Jazz Groove 002: During the improvisation and the slow-medium tempo 'South'. Coleman late fifties Henry Allen was frequently to be found sha-ring Hawkins again sets a high standard, while another long-term the bandstand in New York's Metropole with clarinetist Sol associate of Henry Allen's trombonist J. C. Higginbotham, Yaged. The fast numbers from this 1957 session are typical plays with typical drive and individuality. Again the rhythm of the kind of music most favoured by the Metropole clientele. section is a distinguished gathering which blends well as a The solo standard is very high on these tracks, but the team; and again the bassist - in this instance Milt Hinton - is musicians are heard to even better effect on the long blues outstanding. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Howard Melton and Ralph G. Ferguson cover-notes on Jass-CD-2(& 8/7/58): COLEMAN HAWKINS and RED ALLEN Art and technology resemble and dissemble each other in year of this century and earlier, being art of the most basic surprising ways. You wouldn't be caught flying a Wright repertoire of dixieland jazz. Most are by authors whose Brothers airplane in the '60s, yet Coleman Hawkins (1904- names were either never known or have long since been 1969), the Wilber ad Orville of the tenor sax, could hold forgotten. Neither Allen nor Hawkins were strictly his own against any streamlined or jet propelled newcomer thought of as traditional players, though they each worked and Red Allen (1908-1967), the last great New Orleans at New York's Metropole where this style set the norm, trumpet-player in between Louis Armstrong and Wynton and each was a total jazzman who could sound at home in Marsalis, could be declared the "most avantgarde trumpet- any genre. Perhaps its because they didn't play "Bill player in town" in his mid-'50s. Bailey" and "The Saints" night after night that they're able If the '60s were to be a period of avant-gardism for both to approach these tunes with such refreshing candor - i.e., Hawkins and Allen, the late '50s, as you can hear on these Red tearing the head off "Battle Hymn" and Hawk casting two Jass albums, would be a time for looking back. Hawk himself as the vengeful lover in "Frankie and Johnny". and Red, of course, went way back together. Both had The seven remaining songs (available on LP as High been band mates in Fletcher Henderson's greatest Standards, which, like this compact disc, contains two Orchestra, and at the same time co-led a series of albums worth of music) may also seem ancient in the late remarkable sessions released as by "Henry Allen, '80s, but they come from a full generation later. Taken Coleman Hawkins and their Orchestra." 1957 and 1958 together, they form a valuable document of the rise of Tin saw a burst of renewed and reunited activity by the team Pan Alley, from the beginning up through to the'30s that of Hawkins and Allen, most notably on Allen's Ride, Red, Alley intersected with 52nd Street. Most of these songs Ride ! in HiFi album for Victor, CBS-TV's The Sound of gradually fell out of favour; certainly by the war they had Jazz and various Henderson reunion projects. All three of been replaced by a growing body of jazz's own standards the above also captured Allen and Hawkins in moments of as well as the more modern pop tunes of Berlin, Porter and retrospective contemplation. On Standards and Rodgers, as well as two composers represented here, Warhorses, two great jazzmen fully exploit a rare Harold Arlen and George Gershwin. opportunity to reinterpret the past - both their own and When Larry Clinton and Dewey Bregman put together the that of the music in toto. arrangements and musicians for these sessions they must Speaking of art and technology, one of the best uses for have experienced something similar to what the producers the latter is, obviously, the preservation of the former. of The Sound of Jazz went through: total surprise that so The four albums in the Jasstereo series this compact disc many of the greatest musicians in jazz history were not of Hawkins and Alien (issued on two long-playing albums), only all available on the same date, but really needed the The Zoot Sims-Al Cohn Septet is Happy Over Hoagy work. Today, we treasure every little scrap of music that Carmichael (Jass Twelve) and Charlie Shavers, Sam the Coleman Hawkins, Red Allen and their colleagues have Man Taylor and Urble Green "We Dig Cole" (Jass-13) all left us, in spite of the gatekeepers to the major media who feature the finest jazz musicians of an era rich with great still prefer to think that they never existed ' and that their jazz musicians playing some of the greatest songs ever modern day equivalents should be similarly ignored. Even written, recorded in brilliant stereo sound. if the contemporaneous generation of jazz lovers were The first songs on this CD (issued on LP as Warhorses cheated out of the chance to hear this beautiful music, it Jass Ten, and cassette as J10/11C) come from the first belongs to us and to the future. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------John Chilton: “Ride, Red, Ride” pp147-149(shortened): you've got on Sol?' he signified, peering at Sol's tuxedo with Business at the Metropole thrived. An upstairs section was exaggerated disdain, 'You look like a waiter'. 'What do you opened, and jazz giants such as Lionel Hampton. Gene Krupa want to play?' Red demanded. Sol suggested a tune we all and Illinois Jacquet were featured as special attractions. Woody knew, 'After You've Gone'. 'Okay, "After You've Gone" in B Herman's big band played several residencies at the natural' Red snapped, calling a key he hoped Sol would find Metropole, the musicians achieving a swinging cohesion by uncomfortable. He stomped it off quickly, before any-one watching drummer Jake Hanna's hi-hat cymbal in the could demur. After an ensemble led by Red's exuberant mirror(the leader of the Band by Gene Lees 1995). The musici- melody line, we all played choruses, fee-ling our way through ans' working hours at the Metropole were long, usually from the unusual key. Red waited to solo last and was ready for us. 8 or 9 p.m. until around 3 a.m. (later on Fridays). Bands Standing with his shoulder blades pressed against the back alternated by playing sets lasting 30 or 45 minutes, usually wall of the narrow bandstand, he pumped a continuous stream changing over on the same number, with the oncoming of swinging, belligerent jazz through his horn. As he played musicians replacing the incumbents by joining them in a jam he began marching in place. As he continued shifting his session. Red Allen was not above employing gamesmanship weight from one foot to the other, his sizable shoes began to in this changing-of-the-guard routine. He would choose a carry him forward, an inch at a time, so that by the end of his well-known num-ber, but he would play it in a very unusual last chorus his feet protruded halfway over the edge of the key, making the musicians who were about to take over stage. With his mouthpiece jammed against his leathery struggle to find appropriate notes as they joined in. This ploy embouchure Red pointed his trumpet over the customers' did not endear him to the musicians in the other group. heads and bounced the last notes of his chorus off the mirrors Bassist Bill Crow was part of one of these uneasy on the back wall, winding up with a screaming high B. changeovers. (In Allegro Nov.87 he said): Dripping with sweat he accepted his applause like a fighter Henry'Red'Allen was a powerful trumpet player, a member of who had just KO'ed his opponent." the old New Orleans school of combative jazzmen. He The Metropole crowd responded to Red's personality challenged all corners, not content until he had established almost as much as to his playing and singing. As one visitor his supremacy. I got to watch him at close quarters while observed, (MM-Nov.87:)'They either applaud or drink up and working at the Metropole with Sol Yaged, opposite Red's go'. At the Metropole Red introduced the old New Orleans band. Sol and Red played alternate sets, and twice during the tactic of repeating a number (or part of it) when he felt the night we had to play a 'jam session' set combining both crowd's applause justified a reprise - and sometimes as a ploy bands, with a double rhythm section. On the first of these to whip up what had been a sporadic response. Red's excellent Red immediately threw down the gauntlet. 'What is that memory, and his friendly manner toward the - 42 customers, soon built him a coterie of new fans, many of whom became personal friends. Some were locals, but many were out-of-town people who began making the Metropole an automatic port-of-call whenever they returned to New York. Red made it his business to wave at them from his vantage point on the bandstand, greeting them individually during his intermission, asking about their families, the new house or the new job, enquiries based on the vast amount of information he had stored away in his mind. Dan Morgenstern felt (in a letter to J.Chilton 1998) that Red's public relations exercises sometimes interfered with his music-making: 'He'd start a solo and get a groove going, and then abruptly jerk the horn away from his chops to yell "Hey, good my man!" to greet a fan who'd just walked in'. Red's arrival at the Metropole was usually spectacular. He drove up in his Cadillac, parked it temporarily outside the Metropole, then flamboyantly threw the keys to an attendant who went off to park the vehicle for the duration of Red's gig. Then, weather permitting, Red would don a maroon dinner jacket on the sidewalk and stride into the club. The Cadillac was still religiously replaced by a new model every other year. 12/14/57 NYC., Cafe Metropole, AFRS-bandstand-USA, METROPOLE ALL STARS: same as 12/14/57 but Claude Hopkins (organ), Willis Conover, Leonard Feather (narr) 4:55 intro: BUGLE CALL RAG (Pettis-Meyer-Schoebel) 4:22 SQUEEZE ME (Williams-Waller) 4:06 THREE LITTLE WORDS (Ruby-Kalmar) 6:03 INDIANA (J.F.Hanley) 1:45 leave out: ST. LOUIS BLUES -spLF (W.C.Handy) RA-CD-17(poor quality)/ --------- / / / / late 1957 & early-58, at first Vic Dickenson(tb), replaced Higgy, then Freddy Bonito(d) for Eddie Bourne (Bul.HCF-3/58) NYAN 1/18/58: J.C.Higginbotham has broken off his longtime association with Red Allen at the Metropole and isn't too happy about it although he needed the rest. … Mole, the drummer also left Red's Natural Giants to go with Dorothy Donegan. … 1/11/58 NYC., Cafe Metropole, AFRS-Bandstand USA-METROPOLE ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v,ann) Jay C. Higginbotham, Vic Dickenson (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Claude Hopkins (organ) Eugene Ramey (b) Eddie "Moule" Bourne (d) 0:32 3:28 5:00 4:30 3:24 3:08 ann. I WOULD DO ANYTHING FOR BASIN STREET BLUES RIDE! RED! RIDE! SONG OF THE ISLAND CLARINET MARMELADE YOU (poor quality)AFRS-END- on RA-CD-17/. -feat. Hopkins (Hill-Williams-Hopkins) --- / -feat.Dickenson (S.Williams) --- / -w.Vic & Higgy (Millinder-Allen) --- / -feat.Hawkins (King) --- / -feat.Bailey (Shields-Ragas) --- / CD-1/18/58p16: RED ALLEN RADIO STAR - An all-star line-up of jazz instrumentalists plus Johnny Richard's orchestra was heard on Mutual's jazz festival Bandstand, U.S.A. broadcast Saturday. Bobby Hackett and his trumpet were heard from New York's Voyager Room, while alto sax specialist Donald Byrd and the Lou Donaldson Quintet featured from Cafe Bohemia. Also from New York were the Richards unit, headlining the show at Birdland. Six jazz favorites were heard from New York's Metropole. Trumpeter Red Allen. clarinetist Buster Bailey, trombonist J.C.Higgenbotham, pianist Claude Hopkins, bass Gene Ramey and drummer Eddie Bourne were heard also. Henry Allen Part-1 by Albert McCarthy Jazz Monthly 2-58p29: The last decade and a half has been a difficult time for most reality, has tended to give up hope. From the strength and of the jazz stars of the 'thirties. Regular groups of these musi- emotional intensity of a record like Feeling Drowsy (1929) to cians have been almost non-existent and the men themselves the vulgarity and empty clichés of When the saints go have eked out a parlous living by means of part-time studio marching in (1955) is a creative decline almost without work, odd gigs and appearances at the jam sessions at such parallel in jazz, and the latter is by no means an isolated venues as the Metropole. Some have become embittered and example. Even if one considers the economic and other factors retired from music, others have taken a daytime job and played which would react unfavourably on a musician of Allen's on occasional gigs, white a few like Roy Eldridge and Lester background in the 'forties, there is no reason to anticipate quite Young have been saved by the paternalism of Norman such a lessening of value in his work (Coleman Hawkins also Granz. It is possible that there is a trend towards recording went through a period of neglect but is today playing as well these musicians more frequently, but whether that will lead as ever). I personally believe that Allen was unfortunate in as to the building up of a sufficient audience for this type of far as he might have brought about a great change in trumpet music is problematical. It would appear that the jazz follower playing, but was not able to follow through the logic of his in the States is swayed excessively by prevailing fashion or, own development. It was left to Roy Eldridge and others to alternatively, is rigidly split into modernist or traditionalist take advantage of the pointers which Allen seemed to be factions neither of which have much time for the swing giving and they did it with a success that he missed. I also period performers. Recently, in Down Beat, Ralph Gleason believe that the seeds of the vulgarity which has marred so commented on the fact that the younger modernists seem much of Allen's later recorded work were present from the unable to appreciate any jazz made prior to Lester Young, beginning and that they only needed a certain set of conditions while it is also true, that the revivalist followers are quite as for them to become uppermost in his playing. These views will intolerant of other styles. The subject of this article, Henry be dealt with in the second part of this article, but for the "Red" Allen, is a trumpeter who was highly regarded by jazz moment it is necessary to start from the beginning. fans in the 'thirties but who today is hardly known to a large Allen was born in Algiers, Louisiana, on Jan.7, 1908. His percentage of record buyers and those who support live jazz. father was a well known musician who led a brass band in Allen is of more than usual interest, for at one time he which the son played when a youngster. In 1924 he joined the seemed set to influence a great many other trumpet players, Excelsior band and two years later he took a job with. the !ate and his exuberant, if erratic. playing was highly regarded by Fate Marable on the riverboats. In 1927 he had his first big fellow musicians. Yet, within a few years of the period when chance when King Oliver called him … When Oliver left for he seemed likely, to develop into a man whose work would New York City Allen remained with him. ind he made his first have far reaching implications he was a spent force creatively record with Oliver on July 8, 1927, when still only twenty (or so it seemed) and exuberance had been replaced by a years of age. This was an unissued side of Aunt Jemina. vulgarity and frenetic quality that made his recorded work … it follows a list of available records 1929- 1930 … dreary in the extreme. Throughout his life Allen seems to be (The second part of this article will appear in the March or a man who has just missed great success at a time when it April issue.) could reasonably be expected, and one who, faced with this - 43 New Yorker 1/18/58: Metropole 7th Ave. at 48th St. – Shooting gallery from the word go, go, go. Mid shot and shell are visible Red Allen, Sol Yaged, Roy Eldridge, Cozy Cole, Buster Bailey, Marty Napoleon, Tony Parenti, Claude Hopkins, and Vic Dickenson. The cannonade is just about continuous from 3 p.m. to 3 a.m. Monday through Fridays. Saturdays and Sundays from 1:30 p.m. on, the Messrs. Parenti, Napoleon, and Eldridge hold a group discussion with Zutty Singleton, Coleman Hawkins, Pee Wee Erwin, Charlie Shavers, and Russell Moore. Very warm, all in all, even for Dixie. (nearly all above took part at the 2/1/58 Carnegie Hall concert). DB-1/23/58p15 "THE TRUMPET IN JAZZ" by Leonard Feather, ... … Red Allen, playing in 1929-'34 with the Luis Russell and Fletcher Henderson bands, was probably the first trumpet player to escape from the sometimes stultifying effects of symmetry, of phrasing in terms of one or two bars at a time. Allen's longer melodic lines, mosquito-like tone, and narrower vibrato opened up a new road, one that was followed during the 1930s by such bearers of even newer tidings as Roy Eldridge, Buck Clayton, and Charlie Shavers. Eldridge, whose primary era of influence was 1935-42 (in person with Teddy Hill, Fletcher Henderson, his own band and Gene Krupa: on records with Teddy Wilson, Billie Holiday, and Mildred Bailey) brought to jazz a quixotic, loosely-phrased style: a tone that might be called bright gray, a little akin to Allen's: and an approach that showed, especially at slower tempos, the ubiquitous imprint of Armstrong. ... 1/27/58, Mo., NYC., Palm Cafe - Camp Fund Affair; jam sessions with Red Allen, Illinois Jacquet, Al Hibbler, The Cadillacs, The Drifters, Moohn Glows, Don & Lee, Timmie Rogers, Jimmy”Baby Face”Lewis, Sam Cooke, Jack Walker, Johnny Brantley, Mickey and Sylvia, Johnny & Joe, Jocko Henderson.; The amount taken in was making the grand total in the Camp Fund $1,505.05 (NYAN-2/1/58p22) 2/1/58 Sat. NYC., Carnegie Hall, 8:30-12:00 p.m. - "DODY IN DIXIELAND" - Robert Sylvester (narr) with Henry Red Allen, Cozy Cole, Wild Bill Davison, Roy Eldridge, Pee Wee Erwin, Bud Freeman, Bobby Hackett, Max Kamisnky, Jimmy Partland, Miff Mole, Ricky Nelson, Tony Parenti, Stan Rubin and Tigertown Five, Pee Wee Russell, Charlie Shavers, Zutty Singleton, Willie Lion Smith, George Wettling, and many others; The whole concert or its rehearsal at the same date was recorded but only parts were issued on several LPs: Pee Wee Ervin & members of the Allen band (they met again at 10/23/58 and recorded Design DLP-39) Stan Rubin & his Tigertown Five Coral CRL-57185 DIXIELAND AT CARNEGIE HALL: Roul.R-25038/Col.(E)33SX-1122 -McPartland, Dickenson, P.W.Russell, Freeman, Schroeder, Tomy Potter(b) Mouse Alexander(d) Royal Garden Blues / Basin Street Blues -Joe Barufaldi, Parenti, P.W.Russell & same rhvthm Tin Roof Blues -Mc Partland, Freeman, prob.Dickenson, Z.Sinqleton & same as last) High Society / When The Saints Rosetta -Dickenson, Tyree Glenn, Miff Mole, Schroeder or Al Hall (d) -Dickenson & Mole out Sidewalks Of New York -W.B.Davison, Ricky Nelson, Bob Wilber, Sam Price, Al Hall, Drootin(d) Riverboat Shuffle -Tyree Glenn (vib) Zutty Singleton & Cozy Cole(d) Drums vs. Vibes (Just Blues Harmony) -McPartland & unidentified group That´s A Plenty part-1: -2: -3: part-4: RED ALLEN´S METROPOLE ALL STARS: Red Allen (t) Vic Dickenson (tb) Tony Parenti (cl) Sammy Price or Willie The Lion Smith (p) Cozy Cole & Zutty Singleton(d) tape said to exist as confirmed by Cozy Cole ………..............….. / ……………………….. part-5: Roy Eldridge; part-6: Charlie Shavers; part-7: Bobby Hackett; part-8: Max Kaminski NYAN-1/25/58p11: "DODY IN DIXIELAND" CARNEGIE HALL FEB.1 Dody Goodman, television star of the Stan Rubin and Tigertown Five, Pee Jack Paar “Tonight” Show, will make her Wee Russell, Charlie Shavers, Zutty Carnegie Hall debut as commentator of a Singleton, Willie The Lion Smith, Dixieland Jazz show, entitled "Dody in George Wettling and many other outDixtieland," which will be given on standing jazz musicians. Saturday evening, Feb. 1, for two perfor"Dody in Dixieland" will mark Miss mances only at 8:30 p.m. and midnight. Goodman's first public appearance The musical show will feature 40 top since she became a television Dixieland instrumentalists and four jazz personality via the Jack Paar show. bands. Robert Sylvester, author and As a nightclub and stag performer, columnist for the New York Daily News. Miss Goodman has appeared at the will write the narration. Village Vanguard and Four Below, Appearing on the all-star program will and in the musicals "Call Me be Henry "Red" Allen, Cozy Cole, Wild Madam," "Miss Liberty" and Bill Davison, Roy Eldridge, Pee Wee "Wonderful Town" on Broadway, and Erwin, Bud Freeman, Bobby Hackett. in two Ben Bagley "Shoestring Max Kaminswky, Jimmy McPartland, Revues" off Broadway. Milf Mole, Ricky Nelson, Tony Parenti, --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Douglas Hague, Jazz Journal 4-58p5: Carnegie Hall again rang to the strains of good old Dixieland in a concert called "Dody in Dixieland", Dody let me explain is comedienne Dody Goodman (no relation to Benny Goodman) who presided over the affair. Heard on stage were cornetists Jimmy McPartland, Bobby Hackett, end Wild Bill Davison, trumpeter Max Kaminsky; trombonists Miff Mole and Vic Dickenson; tenor saxist Bud Freeman; clarinettist Pee Wee Russell; pianist Willie "The Lion" Smith; and drummer George Wettling. A touch of New Orleans was supplied by Tony Parenti, "Red"Allen, and Zutty Singleton, with the "Swing Era" touch given by trumpeters Roy Eldridge, PeeWee Erwin, and Charlie Shavers. Allin-all it was a pleasure to bear again some wild swinging jazz. Tickets for the two performance are now on sale at Carnegie Hall. - 43a - Addenda Jimmy McPartland, Red Allen and Will Bill Davidson are three of the top Dixieland jazz instrumentalists who will appear with Dody Good-man in "Dody in Dixieland" at Carnegie Hall for two performances, 8:30 p. m. and midnight, on, Saturday, Feb. 1. Dody will make her Carnegie Hall debut as commentator of the jazz show which will feature 40 Dixieland star instrumentalists and four bands. DODY "DIGS" DIXIELAND —(unknown source poss. Daily Press) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DAILY NEWS, Thu.1/23/58p47 Dream Street - The Big Bash . . . by Rober Sylvester A week from Saturday night, Feb. 1, there will arrive at Carnegie Hall something call a Dixieland Jazz Concert. It will utilize musicians ranging, alphabetically, from Henry Red Allen to Zutty Singleton and including Willie The Lion Smith and Wide, Wild Bill Davison. We haven't had a Dixieland bash like this in years and one hopes that this one will hold to tradition. It will have for its conferencier Miss Dody Goodman. This week's TV joke has it that a guy sends out for a TV repairman because, on his set, he is beginning to understand Miss Goodman. Since the keynote of all jazz bashes is lunacy, she may take her place in a glorious and fabled company. The first real jazz concert at Carnegie Hall was back before the war when Eddie Condon and Ernie Anderson put Fats Waller up on that hallowed stage. Fats did some great piano work and then cut out for the intermission. Back-stage he attacked a gin bottle and decided to change from tails to tuxedo. Also from piano to organ. He played "Summertime." It seemed to fascinate him. He played several other organ solos, including classics, and they all came out like "Summertime." "I never knew," Oscar Levant said afterward, "how much Tchaikovsky was influenced by Gershwin." … The coming Carnegie bash has all the old boys who were around when the early concerts were put on. This bash lists 40 of them and all of them are now famous and fabled. It is interesting to note that every one of them is steadily employed and must "double" to the concert. Years ago, hardly any jazzman was working steady. Today jazz is everywhere and, indeed, the stage of Carnegie Hall can be credited for much of the current general acceptance of the music. I don't know where you're going a week from Saturday, but I'm going to Carnegie Hall. =============================================================================================== undated photo out of Red Allen´s scrapbook : probably at the Metropole 1959/60 ----------------------------------------------------------- photo at the left and also that of p-46 (in better quality than in NYAN:6/7/58p15) are out of to p-46 6//2/58 Palm Café: Lionel Hampton, Ruth Brown, Curley Hamner. Red Allen, Ted Smith. Red Allen´s scrapbook without any notes - 44 Feb./March 58, NYC., Minton's; Billie Holiday and Red Allen were among recent sitters-in at Minton's, where Tony Scott has added baritone sax to his clarinet sound. There was another session at Minton's reported by John Chilton: “Ride, Red, Ride” p150: (to: Feb/March-58) The young Davern, Lacy and trumpeter Dick Schwartz were listening to the music at Minton's Club, when, to their amazement, Red made a bold entry into this bastion of jazz experimentation. The trio on the bandstand were an avant-garde threesome, with the pianist performing with his head only four inches away from the keyboard. Red jumped up onto the small stage, slammed down his alligator-skin case, pulled his trumpet out and began playing 'Rosetta'. The trio changed step and began backing Red, who followed his trumpet solo with an exuberant vocal chorus. The place erupted, everybody cheered and yelled, Red smiled, put his trumpet away and marched out. It was, as Kenny Davern said: 'A Red Allen happening'. (conversation with John Chilton) 3/8/58 NYC., Cafe Metropole, AFRS-END-585, Bandstand USA - METROPOLE ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v) Vic Dickenson (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p,organ) Eugene Ramey (b) poss. Freddy Bonito (d) 5:30 INDIANA (J.F.Hanley) AFRS-END-585/RA-CD-17/ --/ --- / 3:53 YELLOW DOG BLUES (Handy-Pace) 5:07 MARIE and encore -feat.Hopkins --/ --- / (0:42) RIDE! RED! RIDE! (Millinder-Allen) --/ --- / /transcription cut after a very fast intro by Dickenson around 1958 commercials for “Ballentine Ale” – JERRY JEROME (speech,v,ts) & Red Allen (vocal-only) 0:08 intro J.J.-speech ARBORS-AR(2)CD-19168/RA-CD-16/ 2:35 JINGLES “BALLENTINE ALE”-3 items in medley - vRA, ts&v JJ --/ --/ ARBORS: Like his New Orleans compatriot Louis Armstrong, Red Allen was both a great trumpet player and a great entertainer. Jerry had jammed with him frequently at Kelly's Stables and knew that Red's irrepressible personality made him perfect choice to sing these blues-based commercials for Ballentine Ale. Jerry's booting tenor work would have fit in perfectly with that jump band Red led in the 1940s that included J.C.Higginbotham and Don Stovall. 3/17/58, NYC., “THE WEARY BLUES"- poetry-with-Jazz recital by LANGSTON HUGHES (reader) & ALL STAR SEXTET : Red Allen (t) Vic Dickinson (tb) Sam Taylor (c1,ts) Al Williams (p,arr) Milt Hinton (b) Osie Johnson (d) Leonard Feather (comp., arr., cond.) L.Hughes toured w.Red Allen´s A.St. incl.C.Hawkins in summer & they played at Stratford Ontario 7/23 text: music (in medleys): 3:11 BLUES MONTAGE -part-1 6:50 7:40 -part-2 -part-3 OFENING BLUES excerpted clip 3:49f rom THE WEARY BLUES was uploaded BLUES MONTAGE compiled with info, labelscan, film-fragments on RA-DVD-5 COMMERCIAL THEATRE MORNING AFTER COULD BE TESTAMENT side-1: MGM E-3697/VSP-S-36/Verve 841660-2/RA-CD-19/ 5:50 TESTAMENT 3/18/58 side two by: LANGSTON HUGHES (reader) & HORACE PARLAN QUINTET: Jimmy Knepper (tb) Shafi Hadi (ts) HoMGM E-3697/VSP-S-36/Verve 841660-2/ race Parlan (p) Charles Mingus (b, arr., comp., cond.) Kenny Dennis (d) side-2: text: Consider Me : music: The Stranger - Midnight Stroll - Backstage Dream Montage: Weird Night Mare - Double C Train - Jump Monk DownBeat 8/7/58p37.: M-G-M's just recorded Lp of Langston Hughes reading poetry to Henry Red Allen's jazz will be released in conjunction with the opening of the 1958 event at Stratford ... (see 7/23/58 Toronto) LEONARD FEATHER covernotes on VSPS-36: The conjunction of jazz and poetry represents a concept that goes back to the mid-1950's. Possibly there were earlier examples, but it was not until then that pure jazz, belatedly accepted by the intelligentsia as a legitimate art form, was recognized in turn by the poets. Though Vachel Linday in the 1920's wrote "jazz poetry," some of which is said to have been read to a pseudo-jazz background, the movement got under way in earnest a generation later in San Francisco, where Laurence Ferlinghetti, Kenneth Rexroth, Kenneth Patchen and others read their works to an in-group audience, accompanied by a jazz combo, at a club called The Cellar. Ken Nordine tried some experiments in Chicago; the Half Note and the Five Spot held poetry nights in Greenwich Village. This was all around 1957. For at least a year, while this trend assumed fad proportions, nobody approached the one poet for whom an alliance with jazz was perfectly logical: Langston Hughes. Born Feb. 1, 1902 in Joplin, Mo., Hughes went to high school in Cleveland and later attended Columbia U. and Lincoln U., though it has been said that his best school has been the world. He has had homes in Mexico City, Topeka, Colorado Springs, Buffalo, Paris and Kansas City, but for decades he has kept an apartment in Harlem. In his formative years he was surrounded by jazz-the apocalyptic jazz of Louis Armstrong, Fletcher Henderson and Duke Ellington; and of course the blues of Bessie Smith. The social conditions that were part of the birth struggle of jazz were also the forces that helped to shape much of Langston's poetry. Some of his poems, as this album illustrates, were even structured on the 12-bar blues pattern. The Weary Blues, the title poem of this album, won first prize in a contest held in 1925 by a magazine called Opportunity. Opportunities for a Negro poet during the Jazz Age were not exactly limitless. Curiously enough it was Vachel Lindsay who was responsible for bringing Langston Hughes to national attention. During a lecture in Washington he read three Hughes poems. A year later, in 1927, Hughes received the Palms Intercollegiate Poetry Award. His career from that point on was a mosaic of every conceivable type of writing, poetry and prose, fiction and nonfiction, light and heavy, plays and radio scripts, and musical shows; and in whatever spare time remained, he gave speeches and lectures by the hundreds. Throughout his adult life, Hughes has been fascinated by jazz and the men and women who have made it. In 1955 he wrote a short, basic work for children called The First Book of Jazz. Written from the viewpoint of an interested layman with a great love for his subject, it concluded with the words: "... people all over the world are enjoying it. Jazz, America's music, is fun." When we began selecting and sequencing material for this album, it became clear to Hughes and to me that some of his poems called for a background reflecting this "jazz-is-fun" spirit, while others required a more sophisticated setting. Most of the blues-directed material and all the gospel-related poems were assigned to a traditional-style group, for which I wrote a few 12, 16 and 8-bar blues themes or patterns, a couple of gospel-type numbers for Testament, and coordinated solos by the sidemen. For the second side, Charles Mingus wrote or improvised suitable material, always with a sensitive ear to the content and meaning of Hughes' statements and questions. For contractual reasons Mingus's pianist, Horace Parlan, was made nominal leader of the quintet, - 45 though the personnel was exactly that of the group Mingus was then leading at the Village Vanguard. Mingus's genius for controlling a group of men was never clearer than on this session, as he set changes of mood , tempo and theme, often quite spontaneously. Some of Hughes' poems evoke Zeitgeist of another age, but many are as timely today as when they were written. As recently as the summer of 1966 I heard Commercial Theatre and a couple of other poems from this album used at a Los Angeles poetry-with-jazz recital by Jayne Cortez (Mrs.Ornette Coleman). She had selected them with no knowledge of this record. In the Dream Montage can be found a line that provided the title for a celebrated play and movie: "What happens to a dream deferred? Does it dry up, like a raisin in the sun?" says, "when I am dead." Since he read his works in a New York studio in March 1958, the Civil Rights revolution has drastically altered the state of our society. Those who would defer Langston Hughes's dream are encountering more and more opposition. It cannot be deferred too much longer. The reasons are implicit in many of the words he speaks so eloquently here. Many of the 33 poems read by him on this LP were reproduced in The Langston Hughes Reader (Geo.Braziller Inc.), an anthology of Mr. Hughes's short stories, poems, song lyrics, novels, humorous fiction, plays, autobiography, articles and speeches. This record has been engineered and manufactured in accordance with standards developed by the Record Indus-try Association of America, Inc., a non-profit organization dedicited to she betterment of recorded music and literature.. In this album, in the often gentle but sometimes urgent manner that reflects the soulful, kindly yet always-committed personality of this gifted and generous man, Langston Hughes tells it like it was and still is. Four decades after he wrote The Weary Blues, his dream is still deferred. "I do not want my freedom," he ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------New Album Features Hughes' Poetry, Jazz Background. NYA-8/20/58p23: If there are any squares around who have The fact that this has been done is not Hughes has often brought to his writing failed to recognize the dominant position onlya tribute to the well-established ta- of the troubles of the Negro, his sorrows, of Langston Hughes as the “people's lents of the lyricist but also to the directi- his exuberances, his religion, his love poet,” it is to be recommended that they pick onal genius of Leornard Feather,MGM and work. But there is a wide base of up a copy of MGM's “The Weary Blues” executive who conceived the idea of the concept and understanding of all album on which Hughes reads his poetry waxing Hughes with the collaboration human beings and what makes them with some superbly blended jazzground and of such artists as trumpeter Red Allen, tick underlying all the work. accompaniment by some fine and sensitive … All these musicians are featured on Hughes–with similar music background Side A of “Weary Blues” which is a – has done night club stints (PC-8/2: musicians. blues montage assembled from many like Village Vanguard, downtown, and Mr.Hughes as recorded some of his Hughes' volumes, notably Brankers, uptown) projecting this same interesting work before but mainly on from his published recent important Langston kind of performance. His recorded work labels which appeal to folk already com- Hughes Reader (George Braziller,Inc.). on this area should meet healthy popular mitted to a live interest in poetry. On this The “B” side, equally as fascinating as acceptance and increase the audience album, however, he proves without a doubt its companion is illuminated by … for all poets. that poetry is for people and can be so Mingus and Feather did arrangements Negro people, hearing this album will projected that the most prosaic individual – and conducting. be able to affiliate, to be proud, to even those whose prejudice against or lack Because his deep roots are in the tradi- agree, to say “Yes, Lord, that's right.” of appreciation for this art form – can get a tion of the Negro, there is much of the But all people with any humor or any tremendous bang out of it. incisive, deftly humorous touch which memories should enjoy it tremendously. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------BAA:9/27/58p15: Hughes jazz LP lauded by critics; (ANP) – and the instrumentation are blues oriented.” CASH BOX, The entrance of Langston Hughes into the ranks of jazz with another top trade magazine, called the LP “a formidable issue poetry recording artists with his album entitled “The Weary for the jazz-poetry following,” white Variety admired the Blues” on MGM LP E3697, has met with immediate critical album's musical and poetie honesty saying, “There's nothing enthusiasm in leading music trade publications. In a review self-consciously precious about it; it hits straight from the describing the album as “ a bright and very palatable fusion of shoulder.” “The Weary Blues” features on one side, such jazz and poetry readings,” Billboard pointed out that “what veteran jazzmen as RedAllen,… with music composed by makes it come off well is that both elements have a common Leonard Feather. The other side features the H.Parlan Quintet denominator-the blues; that is, both Langston Hughes' lyrics … and music composed and conducted by Charles Mingus. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PC-8/2/58p22 with another longer review about this session. the reproduction is of poor quality and it does not include further informations and opinions. (reprinted in JAZZ AD Vol.3p1005) NYA-9/6/58p35: Langston Hughes, MGM Lp"The Weary Blues"-the jazz with poetry recordings-is on its way to top sales. DB 4/17/58-announcement: Stratford, Ontario Music Festival, July 23. Red Allen, Buster Bailey, Coleman Hawkins, Cozy Cole, J.C.Higginbotham, Claude Hopkins and Langston Hughes reading poetry. (see also 7/23/58 session) Douglas Hague,J.J.4-58: Wild Bill Davison have joined the mob at Cafe Metropole with Vic Dickenson replacing J.C.Higginbotham in the "Red"Allen band. Bassist Henry Turner replacing "Little Bennie" Moten with the Wilbur DeParis combo still et Jimmy Ryan's. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Dan Morgenstern, Jazz Journal 5-58: The Metropole recently(April) celebrated its arrangement of Jelly Roll's SWEET Perhaps the best proof of the Metropole's fourth anniversary. The club continues to SUBSTITUDE. Recent guest artists have musical eminence is the number of present the most virile, free-swinging jazz included Budd Johnson, Charlie Ventura, musicians who drop in to listen on their in New York, in spite of noise, acoustical Hal Singer, and Sammy Margolis on night off. In the past few months Miles short comings, and occasional tenor; Wild Bill Davison, Rudy Powell Davis, Ben Webster, Lucky Thompson, concessions to musically infantile custo- and clarinettists Tony Scott and Rolf Harry Edison, Don Redman, Snooky mers. A list of musicians who have Kühn. One memorable night had Dizzy Young, Gigi Gryce, Earl Bostic, Joe played there would cover pages and Gillespie substituting for Charlie Wilder, Lucky Millinder and even Dinah include many of the greatest names in Shavers. Playing with Hawk and Tony Shore have dropped in to lend an ear. jazz. Although the silly "Dixieland" label Parenti, Dizzy cut loose on a twenty- "Down Beat" and "Metronome", remains, the musical fare is more likely to minute ride on Royal Garden Blues however, find the Metro-pole slightly consist of Cottontail, Yacht Club Swing, which, had it been recorded, would have vulgar ... perhaps it is, but so were Bernie's Tune, or Red Allen's pretty ranked with his greatest performances. Chicago and 52nd street. - 46 4/2/58, 11 a.m. NYC., W.C.Handy Wednesday-funeral services, by congressman Adam Clayton Powell jr., Cootie Williams played “The holy City”, Lonnie Satin sang “Lord´s Prayer, Margaret Tynes, Porgy & Bess star, sang “They That Sow In Tears Shall reap In Joy”; including thousand people including top show business personalities, composers, writers, entertainers - Red Allen was present among others: John Hammond, Noble Sissle, Eubie Blake, Spencer Williams, Wilbur Sweatman, Clarence Williams, Langston Hughes, Count Basie, Ed Smalls, Oscar Hamerstein II, Frank Schiffman, Fritz Pollard, Billy Butler, Walter Bishop, Perry Bradford, Walter Richardson, Charles Lucky Roberts, Buster Bailey, Don Redman, Cab Calloway, Claude Hopkins, Donald Hayward, etc. (articles by NYAN:4/5/58p1&9 and BAA:4/12/58p1&2 CD:4/12/58p15 in Vol.6 p826). reprinted in JAZZ AD.Vol.3 p995; 4/6/58, Easter Sunday, 3-7 p.m. NYC., MAX-The Mayor ´s Place – Red Allen & All Stars 7-11:30 p.m. Conrad Janis; advertised VV:4/2/58p16 4/21/58, Mo., NYC., Keitt's Bar - Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest (NYAN-4/26/58p31) 4/30/58, NYC. CBS-TV TIMEX SHOW No.2 (without Red Allen, who was announced and replaced by Ruby Braff in Jack Teagarden's Orch.); “JAZZ GREATS ON TV SPEC.” BAA:3/29/58p7: N.Y.- A heavy of jazz stars will participate in a huge television spectacular on the CBS-network April 30. Included in the assortment are Louis Armstrong, Lionel Hampton, Erroll Garner, Red Allen, Cozy Cole,Gene Krupa, Gerry Mulligan and the Dukes of Dixieland. The show will be emceed by Garry Moore, and the times slot is 10 p.m. NYAN 4/12/58p12: CBS-TV, not to be out done is presenting another “Timex Show” on Wed.4/30. Erroll Garner, previously announced for this show has been forced to with draw because of a conflicting commitment. He is been replaced by George Lewis & his Quintet which will join host Garry Moore, Louis Armstrong, Lionel Hampton Orch., Chet Baker, Jack Teagarden's Jazz Band with Red Allen, Tony Parenti, Marty Napoleon, Chubby Jackson, Cozy Cole, and Gene Krupa. The BAA-5/3/58p8 brings a photo from the rehearsal session, still including Red Allen on the program: Host and Drummer Garry Moore(center) joins Gerry Mulligan (left) and Lionel Hampton(right) in rehearsal for the Timex All Star Jazz Show, presented on CBS-TV Wednesday. During the special hour-long program, Moore introduces fourteen of the World's top jazz stars, including, in addition to Mulligan and Hampton, Louis Armstrong, Jaye P.Morgan, Gene Krupa, George Shearing, Jack Teagarden,Chet Baker, Cozy Cole, Marty Napoleon, Henry (Red) Allen, Tony Parenti, Chubby Jackson and the Dukes of Dixieland. 1958 several ”ART FORD & HIS JAZZ PARTIES” on WNTA-TV/FM-stereo (now WNET) The most sessions, directed by Don Luftig, featured one band with single guest performers. In late 1958 different groups and guests appeared. Not all sessions with Red Allen are known. Cozy Cole confirmed two sessions with him and Zutty Singleton but possibly this was in 1957 when Art Ford made fore-runner TV-shows similar to WNTA. I know only one video tape with Red Allen of the 6/26/58 date. Jazz Music May-Jun 58/ Vol. 9/3 : Air Mail from N.Y.: Engaged nightly at the Metropole Cafe are Red Allen (as always), Tony Parenti, Marty Napoleon, Vic Dickenson, Sol Yaged, Buster Bailey, Roy Eldridge, Cozy Cole, Claude Hopkins, Charlie Shavers, Coleman Hawkins. Russell Moore, Zutty Singleton and Pee Wee Erwin, who generally split into three combos and blow loud and clear out into the crowded Times Square area ... 6/2/58, Mo., NYC., Palm Cafe - Camp Fund session with Red Allen, Lionel Hampton, Oscar Dennard, Ruth Brown, Curley Hamner, Ted Smith.... THE JAZZ MASTERS was guest of Honor – Lionel Hampton and some members of his band along with other top entertainers were present at our Monday Night Camp Fund affair last Monday at the Palm Café: Lionel Hampton, Ruth Brown, Curley Hamner. Back row: Red Allen and Ted Smith. NYAN:6/7/58p15 - 47 6/12/58, Newark, N.J., Thurs. WNTA-TV/FM – ART FORD´s JAZZ PARTY: Charlie Shavers (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Pee Wee Russell (cl) Hal Singer (ts) Marty Napoleon (p) Harry Sheppard (vib) Ham Jackson (e-g) Vinnie Burke (b) Panama Francis (d) Beulah Bryant, Ham Jackson (v) added * Bill Graham (as) (The tape was lost after the death of Jean Claude Lefevre(F) perhaps anybody can find another copy) Basin Street Blues Indiana Blues -vBB You´ve Changed -Shavers Limehouse Blues Fascinatin´Rhythm -Sheppard Nobody Knows You … -vHJ Cottontail -Singer Please Don´t Talk About Me -Napoleon Stompin´At The Savoy I Would Do Anything For You -Russell St. Louis Blues -vBB When You´re Smiling -Higginbotham What A Difference A Day Made * -Graham I´ve Found A New Baby * Theme: Basin Street Blues VV:7/9/58p4 6/19/58 Thurs., WNTA-TV channel-1 3, stereo-bc-Westinghouse -ART FORD' S FAMOUS JAZZ PARTY: Red Allen (t,v) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Peanuts Hucko (cl) Georgie Auld (ts) Marty Napoleon (p) Harry Shepherd (vib) Dick Thompson (g) unknown (b) Cliff Leeman,or *Jackie Cooper (d) Big Miller (d) 83 min.tape *Art Ford talks between the items on music by Marty Napoleon or Dick Thompson. *0:41 3:30 BASIN STREET BLUES (Williams) RA-CD-30/ -Higgy in ens intro-Allen'in ens-Auld-Higgy-Allen brd-Hucko-Allen & Hucko*1:00 6:02 LOVE IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER (I.Robin-L.Gensler) --- / *1:09 *1:10 *0:23 2:31 2:27 4:01 -rhythm intro-Allen in ens-Napoleon-Higgy-Allen-Hucko-Allen in ens-ens-Shepherd-ensAutumn Leaves (Joseph Cosma) feat.-Hucko (Napoleon & Rhythm)BIG MILLER BLUES (B.Miller) feat. -vBM (ens-Auld-Higgy-ens)- ------- / / / ST. JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (J.Primrose) --- / INDIANA --- / BILL BAILEY. WON'T YOU PLEASE COME HOME (Cannon) ----------- / / / / / theme: BASIN STREET BLUES (Williams) --- / BUGLE CALL RAG (Pettis-Meyer-Schoebel) -Allen intro-Allen & Higgy-Higgy brk-Hucko & Allen-Auld brks-ens-Shepherd-ens-Thompson-Napoleon-Allen in ens, Leeman brk- *1:33 2:54 *1:25 *0:49 *0:57 -Napoleon intro-Allen-vRA (rhythm-Hucko-ens)-Allen in ens2:57 *This Can't Be Love (R.Rodgers) -Napoleon & rhythm RA-CD-32/ 3:48 I COVER THE WATERFRONT (J.Green-E.Heyman) -Napoleon intro-Auld (rhythm-ens)RA-CD-30/ 3:51 WHAT LOVE MEANS (....……….) -rhythm intro-vBM(ens)-Allen in ens-v8M(ens)--- / 9:14 *0:45 2:22 *0:25 4:26 *0:42 4:04 *1:08 4:00 *0:54 11:52 (J.F.Henley) -Cooper intro-Allen in ens-Shepherd~Hucko-Allen-Higgy-Allen-Higgy-Allen in ens-Cooper-ensHIGGY'S BLUES (Higginbotham) -Napoleon intro-Higgy(rhythm-weak ens) AFTER YOU'VE GONE (H.Creamer-L.Layton) _-Dick Thompson(rhythm-weak ens)HELLO, LITTLE GIRL -vBM -(ens)-Allen in ens-vBM(ens)-v8M(Allen)-vBM(ens)- Where Or When (…....……) -Shepherd-ens coda- -Allen intro-Allen in ens-Shepherd-Hucko-Hucko in ens-Higgy-Allen muted-Thompson & Napoleon-Allen muted-Higgy-Allen in ens-Cooper-ens 0:55 Art Ford an ens leave out 6/26/58 Thurs., Newark, WNTA-TV/FM - ART FORD & HIS FAMOUS JAZZ PARTY: Red Allen (t,v) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey (c1) Hal Singer (ts) Willie”The Lion” Smith (p) Chuck Wayne(g) Harry Sheppard (vib) Vinnie Burke (b) Cliff Leeman (d) Anthony Di Girolamo (vln) Connee Boswell (v) & * members of a studio band that was present duze to demand of the musician union Buddy Iannone(t)(a Newark-trumpeter); Frank Higgins & unknown (tb) 0:39 2:39 Art Ford intro – BASIN STREET BLUES –v CB (Cl.Williams) RA-CD-31/RA-DVD-1/ -Smith intro-vCB (Allen & ens-Smith-Girolamo&ens-Bailey-Allen & ens)-ens coda4:20 0:55 4:40 THEM THERE EYES (M.Pinkard) --- / --- / -Allen in ens-Bailey & Smith-Orland-Higginbotham-Allen-Singer-Allen in ens-..d..-Allen ST.LOUIS BLUES (W.C.Handy) --- / --- / AIN´T MISBEHAVIN´ –vCB (Waller-Brooks-Razaf) --- / --- / --- / --- / -Bailey intro-Bailey & Allen in ens-Bailey(vRA-rhythm-Allen in ens-rhythm)-Bailey & Allen- 1:00 4:22 -vCB(ens-Bailey & Allen-Girolamo)-Singer-Allen-Higgy-Bailey-vCB(ens-Allen & Bailey)0:30 7:30 THAT´S A PLENTY (Gilbert-Pollack) -Allen in ens-Bailey-Allen in ens-Allen-Singer-Allen in ens-Higginbotham-Girolamo-ens-Allen-Allen in ens-..d..-ens coda2:00 3:30 ECHOES OF SPRING (W.Smith) -feat Smith acc.by Thompson-Allen&Bailey coda0:30 2:10 WHEN YOU'RE SMILIN´ (Fisher-Goodwin-Shay) ----- / / ----- / / 0:25 4:30 STARDUST -vCB --- / --- / 0:30 3:40 --- / --- / --- / ------- / / / --- / -Smith intro-Higginbotham (Girolamo in ens with some very weak Allen work) 0:25 8:00 3:04 0:37 3:49 0:36 4:51 0:35 9:40 1:40 (H.Carmichael-M.Parish) -rhythm-vCB (Girolamo-ens)-Higginbotham & Allen-Higginbotham-Higginbotham & AllenHAL SINGER STOMP (H.Singer) -Allen & Singer in ens-Singer-Singer in ens-Allen & Singer in ensROSETTA (E.Hines-H.Wood) -ens intro-Allen in ens-Smith-Thompson--/ -..b..-Girolamo-Orland-Allen-Singer-Allen in ens-Bailey-Allen in ensI SURRENDER DEAR -feat.Girolamo --/ SAY IT ISN'T SO -vCB acc.by ens --/ ALL OF ME -vRA (Simon-Park) -feat.Red Allen (t,v) --/ WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN…(trad.) -..d..-Allen & Higgy in ens-Smith-Higginbotham-Bailey-Allen-Singer-Higginbotham-Girolamo-Allen in ens-..d..brk-ens codatheme- BASIN STREET BLUES (Williams) --/ -Allen & Higginbotham in ens-leave out ann.Art Ford(ens)-Allen & Girolamo in ens- - 48 NYAN-6/28/58p16: Red Allen and J.C.Higginbotham on Art Ford's Show on WNTA-TV (the best) last week 7/3/58 Thu.. WNTA-TV/FM ART FORD - Charlie Shavers (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey(c1) Sam Most (cl,fl) Hal Singer (ts) Marty Napoleon (p) except Wynton Kelly on (4,7,12); Harry Shepherd (vib) Dick Thompson(g) Vinnie Burke(b) Jackie Cooper (d) Tony Rongo (d on 15) Dinah Washington (v) 78:09 all on Jazz Connoisseur-Cassette AF13-DP 4:22 3:52 5:44 3:42 3:57 6:15 2:22 2:34 6:10 5:57 5:05 4:22 6:35 6:46 9:55 0:24 intro: Basin Street Blues -Higgy intro-full group, Art Ford speech between all items unidentified tune feat. Buster Bailey(c1) ensemble parts I´ll Remember April “ Sam Most (fl) with rhythm only Me And My Gin “ D.Washington & W.Kelly & ensemble parts Crazy Rhythm “ Marty Napoleon (p) ensemble parts Moonlight in Vermont “ Harry Shepherd (vib) with rhythm only If You Is Or Is You Ain´t My Baby D.Washington & W.Kelly & ensemble parts Running Wild Indiana Cottontail unidentified tune Backwater Blues J.C.Higginbotham (tb) & full group Jackie Cooper (d) & full group “ Charlie Shavers (t) & full group “ Hal Singer (ts) & full group “ D.Washington & W.Kelly & full group I Want To Be Happy Blues In The Closet “ “ Limehouse Blues theme: Basin Street Blues “ “ “ B.Bailey & Sam Most (c1) ensemble parts Dick Thompson(g) Vinnie Burke(b) ensemble parts full group & guest: Tony Rongo (d) full group to leave out by Art Ford JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 JCH-CD-7 Amst.News 7/12/58p15: Art Ford continues to have most relaxed jazz show on WNTA each Thursday night. Last week's show had J.C.Higginbotham (he seems to have found a home there), Sam Most, Dinah Washington, Marty Napoleon, Harry Sheppard, Jackie Cooper, Hal Singer, Charlie Shavers, Dick Thompson, and Vinnie Burke. 7/3-6/58 Newport Jazz Festival – in contrast to 1957 & '59 & '60, it seems that Red Allen was not present at 7/5/58 Sat.morning Dr.Marshall Stearns delivered a lecture on “The Jazz Dance” presenting the dancteam Leon James & Al Minns with huge success. It was a fine job and made a New York Times bravo the next day. Their music accompaniment was not menti-oned; but obviuosly this was the basic for the folowing note: NYAN-7/26/58p13: Claude Hopkins is to do an album with Panama Francis, Milt Hinton, Buster Bailey and T.Glenn...(of course this is those undated session with Red Allen & Charlie Shavers --- August-58). 7/7/58, Mo., NYC., Spot Lite Bar - Camp Fund session with Red Allen, Orlando Robinson,..(NYAN-7/12/58p17) 7/?../58, Wallingford, Connecticutt – July Festival with Billie Holiday, Red Allen Group, Buck Clayton Band; DB 9/4/58 7/13/58 Sun., Stony Brook Festival – Coleman Hawkins, Charlie Shavers, Ben Webster, Marty Napoleon, Benny Moten, Mickey Sheen; Rex Stewart & his Dixielanders with J.C.Higginbotham, Bobby Haggart, Lou Stein, Cliff Leeman, only a short note in NYAN-7/19/58p13 Panama Francis, Jimmy Rushing 7/18/58 Hackensack-studio, N.J., "CALLING THE BLUES"-TINY GRIMES (g) & J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Eddie Davis (ts) Ray Bryant (p) Wendell Marshall (b) Osie Johnson (d) 1551 11:22 Grimes- Times Prest.7144/JCH-CD-9 --- /JCH-CD-9 1552 7:33 Airmail Special 1553 8:41 Callin´ The Blues --- /JCH-CD-9 --- /JCH-CD-9 1554 11:34 Blue Tiny 7/19/58 WOR-bc, “Long John” Nebel program, “The Party Line” – Langston Hughes reading his poetry “Weary Blues” and will play his new recording of same with jazz accompaniment which includes Red Allen…. NYAN-7/19/58p13: (see JAZZ AD p1005 &PC8/2/58p22 similar thing to the Lp 7/21/58 Mo., NYC., Mike Hedley's - Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest; EveryoneHas Been So Grand – We salute this gratefull group for outstanding work in helping to combat juvenil delinquency here. They helped make the Monday Night Camp Fund the success it was. In front l-r: Mike Hedley; Virginia Covington, Modern Age, S.C. and Harry Brown. Standing l-r: Gladys Bryant, Gloria Burton, Red Allen NYAN-7/26/58p15 and Ann Austin. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------The Following were Donors to the closing session of the Camp Fund last Monday night at the Spot Lite Bar. The amount taken in was $69.50, making the grand total in the camp fund $3,775.24. DONORS Eda. Lloyd, Camp Minisink; Eardlie John, Christian Bros.; Marvin Riley, Children's Aid Society; Mairi Colston, Linda Reed Coleman, Toots Shor; Gloria Burton; Counsellor T. J. Meacham Jr., Clarke Palmer, E. H. Cusberth, Major Liquors; Mary Archer, Obera Miles, Evelyn Davis, Wahnetta San, Keitt's Lounge; Henry Jenkins, Mary McAdoo, Gladys Bryant, Mike Hedley's Bar. Rex Dumoret, L. Bar & Grill; John Young, Ike Smalls, Dots Place; Henry Red Allen, Ann Austin, O. Glover, Henry Brown, LaModernage; S. C. Johnny Andrews, Orlando Robinson, Joe Carr Assoc.; Lucille Keitt, Keitt'a Lounge; Juanita Boisseau. NYAN:7/12/58p17 - 49 7/23/58 Can., Ontario, CBC-TV/-bc "Stratford Shakespeare Festival" Langston Hughes (reading) to Red Allen (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) Cozy Cole was present instead of the announced Ed Bourne(d) Coleman Hawkins was announced but stayed in NYC.; Cozy Cole wrote that they were broadcasted but Dan W.C. Allen found only Canadian bands on the CBS-bc; possibly other broaadcasts exist ?; Toronto Globe and Mail, Sat.7/29/58p16: Jazz Scene …. festivals will be covered on CBS- Radio but not TV – next Sat. 8/5/58 will be the Stratford broadcast, but with an all-Canadian cast (i.e. not with Allen, but this was on some other time) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------DownBeat 8/7/58p37.: M-G-M's just recorded Lp of Langston Hughes reading poetry to Henry Red Allen's jazz will be------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------released in conjunction with the opening of the 1958 event at Stratford ... CD-6/7/58p14: ZIG & ZAG with Joe'Ziggy'Johnson; long festival. then on Aug.9 Wilbur DeParis, Aug.13 Carmen Stratford, Ont. – The annual Stratford Music Festival gets McRae in a co-starring role; Aug.15 Dizzy Gillespie. There a off with a band 7/16 with the famous “little Carib Company,” number of other Sepia greats(Josh White,Maynard Ferguson, a West Indian dance group. The festival will present a sort of Moe Koffman, Billy Taylor) due here for the festival. Certainly friends and admirers of such artists as Gillespie, Harlem-to-Broadway to Canada on 7/23 when Henry”Red” Allen and his allstars plus Langston Hughes will be featured Erroll Garner, “Red”Allen and other will ge anxious to wit-ness on the program. their idols in a concert scene of the Festival's magnitude. There will be several folk music concerts on the summer ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Toronto Star 7/24/58p16: “Festival Review: poems to jazz rhythm prove simple, touching,” by Hugh Thompson : Stratford, 7/24 – Langston Hughes, first cycle of poems, his spiritual wonder, effortless style. Claude Hopkins was on the US-negro poet whose works earlier humility and aspirations in the second. piano, another jazzman of the effortless this months were branded as 'Blasphe- Far from being blasphemous, they were persuation and in the line of Teddy mous' and 'garbage' in the Canadian simple and touching, for the most part, Wilson. J.C.Higginbotham played tromSenate made his debut here last night at and Allen and his jazz cohorts admirably bone, a thoroughly knowing improviser, the Shakespeare Festival, reading supported the folk post. who can't be bothered resorting to Basic honesty poems with the jazz combo called showmanship antics to win a gallery. Hughes and his fellow artists on stage 'Henry (Red) Allen and his All-Stars.' Drum virtuoso He began by reading poems to Dixie- had one thing in common. All were Cozy Cole was the superlative land and the blues, then when the jazz technically trained in their respective drummer who took some virtuoso group struck up the old hymn tune arts, but all displayed a basic simplicity solos but when he was playing 'Rock of Ages' he swung into gospel and honesty that made for a refreshingly ensemble didn't drown the partners poems of his own devising. At first different entertainment. as is so often the way of drummers blush, the thought of a fellow reading Allen, of course, plays trumpet and is in jam sessions. String-bass was poetry to jazz suggests some unintel- the cheerleader of the group, 'talking it manned by Lloyd Trotman, another ligible verses spouted in 'progres-sive up' like the coach of a ball team all du- secure rhythm-section man without jazz.' Nothing proved further from the ring the play, and even urging the audien- showy effects. case. Allen and his All-Stars eschew ce to cheer on his soloists to greater The redoubtable tenor sax man, Coleprogressive jazz, preferring the traditi- heights of brilliance and excitement. In man Hawkins, was to be with these Allonal style, and Hughes' poetry was fact, this cheerleading of the audience Stars, but something happened to him wasa disadvantage because many of the between original planning and eventual thoroughly in keeping. His verses would better be described solos were lost in the applause generated. festival engagement. (rest of the article as ballads of the simple Negro, his secu- A heavy favorite was clarinetist Buster on folk-music part of the festival). lar joys and trials being expressed in the Bailey, with a fluent technique and ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Free Press, 7/24/58, Thurs., “Red Allen All Stars win festival friends,” by Lenore Crawford. London Ontario: Stratford, 7/23 - Seven men of varying Senator Quinn, of the Maritimes, called There was much more impish wit than ages from the 30s to when no one dares to his poetry “garbage” and declared the bitterness and his simple, direct lines were guess as to a man's age, came on stage at Canada Council money should not be issued often with religious fervor. There was no sign that Langston Hughes was the Avon Theatre tonight. They were spent by the festival on such rubbish. dressed in differed colored suits and non Thespotlight definitely was on Hughes presenting the solution to the problem of of the suits were smart. But the oldish before the concert started and he war- the mystery of life, of poverty and riches, man put the intrument to his mouth, said ranted the warm welcome he received of good and bad. Read well from a smallish but enthusiastic audie“wow” and the audience started yelling. nce. But something was lacking about His reading was concise and incisive; his Solid Sending the performance with the lack to put voice was clear and well modulated. He The jazz festival in connection with knows how to read to jazz, that was evident. hisstint in top category. the Stratford Shakespearean Festival But nevertheless, it was the clarinet of Imagination lacking was on its way and already sending. The man with the trumpet whose face Personally the fault to me lay in the Buster Bailey – the thrills, the beautifful looked like a new born infant, all wrink- music that went with the poetry. There melodic line, the breathtaking length of led like a soft red blanket, was Henry was not enough inventiveness and ima- tones that seemed effortless for the play-er ”Red”Allen and the other non-descriptly gination, enough of the satire and the which impressed. Top display pieces were dresse performers were his All-Stars. inference that went into the music of “Ride, Red, Ride” and “Memphis Blues”. Sometimes Allen screamed and was a numbers played by the band when it was Red Allen is a trumpeter to warrant all bad, bad man, and then he was sweet – on its own without Hughes. The poetry the yells he got, and pianist Claude but pretty lowdown. All that shattered the was left to speak for itself, which it was Hopkins is a man to match the beauty of nerves and he neverlet his audience rest a well able to do if it had been left strictly tone and the subtlety of Bailey, Jay C. minute. If he wasn't blowing the trumpet alone to do that. But when there was Higginbotham on trombone and Cozy he was blowing his horn about the supposed to be contribution from the Cole on drums are no squares – particuwonders of the “Giants” he called his music and the sounds came with no larly Cozy who starred in “Basin Street.” contribution, the lack was all too evident. The seventh man was Lloyd Trotman on players and the audience agreed. But one man stole the show. That was Hughes has dry humor and he can pack a bass who had to be reckoned with time Buster Bailey playing clarinet, who wallop with rhythm and between-the-lines andagain, but hedid not rate the shouts topped the headliner of the opening meaning. He can be biting and tender, that went to the others. concert, Langston Hughes, who writes simple and complex in his implications. The whole program was jazz in a rather poetry and recites it to jazz. Hughes He ranged over a field of fun and serious- old-fashioned manner. It was a perfect start gained further recognition about a week ness, showing how near in the Negro for the season that will bring all kinds to ago from the Canadian Senate when temperament are those two basic qualities. the Avon Theatre. - 50 Duke Ellington, Oscar Peterson Tunes Spotlight Canadian Fete by CD-6/14/58p15: Pick Josh White, Langston Hughes And Red Allen For Canadian Fetes by CD-7/5/58p13: Red Allen Allstars To Open Cana-dian Fiesta With Jazzy Program by CD-7/26/58p16: (longer articles announcing Red Allen amongst others , but without deeper informations. (reprinted in Jazz Ad.Vol.6 p831-832) 7/27/58 Su., East Islip, L.I., Great South Bay – Jazz Festival (7/26-8/3); Willie The Lion Smith Septet probably with or vs. Red Allen another possibility is that Red Allen & band backed Al Minns & Leon James at 7/26, (see the below NYAN-note of the 7/26) Jazz Music Sept/Oct. 1958, Vol. 9, No.5, p7 - Air Mail from New York: The summer jazz festivals, led by the monmouth event at Newport that drew 55'000 people, are being held each weekend somewhere in the greater metropolitan area. The one at Great South Bay, L.I. drew nicely on two consecutive week-ends featuring the Duke Ellington orch., Chris Conners and two dixieland groups, one led by Red Allen. . Red Allen is not mentioned in other sources, neither on the advertisement of the whole week´s program nor in reviews. Chris Connor & trio played at Su.7/26 alongside with Gerry Mulligan4; Maxine Sullivan(v) & Willie”The Lion”Smith Septet: Henry Goodwin (t) J.C.Higginbo-tham (tb) Prince Robinson(cl) Cecil Scott(ts) Benny Moten(b) Sonny Greer(d). Probably the other Dixie-land group, the only one mentioned all the days; Duke Ellington & orch. played at 8/3 with Mose Allison trio; Pepper Adams Quintet. NYAN-7/26/58p13: Claude Hopkins is to do an album with Panama Francis, Milt Hinton, Buster Bailey and T.Glenn. ... Vic Dickenson returned from his Euopean Tour after Aug.3, (his first concert in Europe dated 7/5); he was present at the “Great Day in Harlem” at 8/12. Around this time this session must be dated. Vic soloed on When You Do The Ragtime Dance and Messin´ Around. The other solos are by Tyree Glenn. - 50a - label scans - 44 - 6/29/54 May-55 3/21/57 LP similar to RCA-EPA1509 Ride Red Ride / World On The String 6/29/54 8/29/55 Aug.58 - 51 prob.Aug.1958, N.Y.C.; CLAUDE HOPKINS ORCH.: Charlie Shavers, Red Allen (t) Tyree Glenn, Vic Dickenson (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Lyle Smith (ts) Claude Hopkins (p) Milt Hinton (b) Panama Francis (d) Julia Steele (v) "MUSIC OF THE EARLY JAZZ DANCES”(a similary program was featured at NPT 1958 without this band, danced by Al Minns & L.James) The date must be shortly after Vic Dickenson returned from Europe at 8/3/58 Side-1 is devoted to the jazz dances associated with minstrelsy: 20 th Cent./ 2:27 THE ALABAMA WALKAROUND (Monroe H.Rosenfeld 1891) a light and airy tune, Fox 3009/RA-CD-19/ was the basis for a comic version of the Walk Around which preceded the Cakewalk. 2:56 MEDLEY: THE HONOLULU DANCE (Max Hoffmann 1899) --- /RA-CD-19/ suggests how far the Cakewalk and Ragtime had traveled by 1899. When You Do THE RAGTIME DANCE (Harry von Tilzer 1897) is one of the --- /RA-CD-19/ very earliest compositions by one of the bright stars of a later era of popular music. 2:22 SCRATCHIN´ THE GRAVEL -vJS (Jack Yellin-P.Bradford 1917) --- /RA-CD-19/ a title which all but describes the dance, was introduced by the famous Dolly Sisters in 1917. l:58 MEDLEY: WHEN I DO THE, HOOCHY COOCHY IN THE SKY (G.L.Davis 1896) --- /RA-CD-19/ shows that outrageous titles are no recent innovation in popular music. EVERYBODY OUT TONIGHT (Will Marion Cock 1898) a Cakewalk which --- /RA-CD-19/ was heard in a production called "Clorindy, or The Origin of the Cakewalk." SCUFFLING PETE (Edwin F.Kendall 1899) is a Cakewalk variation --- /RA-CD-19/ --- /RA-CD-19/ 2:51 WALKIN´ THE DOG -vJS (Shelton Brooks 1916) he also wrote "Some Of These Days” and "Darktown Strutters BalI". Its instructive-lyrics relay some of the hip vernacular of that year: "It's there – it´s a bear !" 2:26 THE PIGEONWING (Tony Stanford 1896) --- /RA-CD-19/ was one of the variations developed from the cakewalk. It was a buck and this version was introduced with great success by John Lorenze, a very popular dancer, in 1896. Side-2 focuses on early examples of the modern jazz dance: 2:28 RULES AND REGULATIONS -vJS (Perry Bradford 1911) --- /RA-CD-19/ is one of many pieces written for jazz dancers by P.Bradford. This includes in Julia Steele´s vocal an impressive listing of some of the strikingly named dances (Bull Frog Hop, Georgia Bo Bo) which -followed in the wake of the Cakewalk and its variants. 2:03 CAUGHT IN THE FENCE (Charles B.Brown 1900) despite the ludicrous picture that --- /RA-CD-19/ the title conveys, is an unusually lovely melody written as the accompaniment for a stop buck. --- /RA-CD-19/& -12 2:36 MEDLEY: LEVEE REVELS (Wm. Christopher O´Hare 1898) MISSISSIPPI SIDESTEP (Leo E.Berliner 1899) --- /RA-CD-19/& -12 BOOM-E-"RAG" (Warner Crosby 1898) provided the setting for yet --- /RA-CD-19/& -12 another outgrowth of the Cakewalk-the Afro-American Cane Hop. 2:50 MESSIN´ AROUND -vJS (Perry Bradford 1912) was first introduced by Ethel --- /RA-CD-19/& -12 Waters. As in most songs of this period which were inspired by jazz dances, the lyrics give specific instructions for performing the dance. Best do some setting-up exercises first, though. 2:14 WIGGLE-DEE-WOW ! (Perry Bradford 1914) is a rhythmic dance which was --- /RA-CD-19/ featured in vaudeville in 1914 by the team of Bradford and Jeanette. --- /RA-CD-19/ 2:39 ORIGINAL BLACK BOTTOM DANCE -vJS (P.Bradford) was written almost a decade before this hip-swinging dance was transferred to the Broadway Stage in Georgia White´s “Scandals”. from cover 20th Cent.3009: During its four day gala in the summer of 1958, the Newport Jazz Festival trotted out a dazzling parade of jazz musicians of great repute. Yet, in the opinion of most of the reviewers who covered the Festival, its most interesting moments were provided by a pair of dancers, Albert Minns and Leon James. "Dancers" you may exclaim. “At a jazz festival” - The answer to both questions is undeniably "yes". Variety called their presentation "the best of the Festival" and probably its most concrete contribution to the art of jazz" while the New York Times reported that Minns and James "stole the spotlight from the major programs of the Festival with an unusual and memorable survey of the development of jazz dances." To a certain extent, their success could be attributed to the fact that the history of jazz dancing has been almost completely neglected. As a result, they were able to open their audiences eyes and ears to something that was, when presented in this form, fresh and new even though most of those who saw the dancers found that the steps were familiar. the Big Apple, the Lindy, the Charleston-familiar, to be sure, but not seen in perspective before. Most of the dances that Minns and James performed were of relatively recent vintage-from the Twenties, the Thirties, the Forties and even the Fifties. But the jazz dance goes much farther back than that. Its development has paralleled the development of jazz itself and, like jazz, its origins can be seen quite plainly in the days before there was such a thing as jazz or jazz dances. (continues next page) - 52 The jazz dance can trace a direct line to Congo Square in New Orleans in the early 19th Century where the slaves danced the fierce African-derived Bamboula and the even fiercer Congo as well as the relatively mild Calinda, Chacta, Babouille and Counjaille. Meanwhile in the more circumspect surroundings of the plantations, the slaves were also accustomed to doing a happy dance to banjo music. "On Sunday, when there was little work to do, the slaves both young and old would dress up in hand-me-down finery to do a high-kicking, praneing walk-around," Shephard N. Edmonds, who was prominent in the Negro entertainment world at the turn of the century, has told Rudi Blesh (in THEY ALL PIAYED RAGTIME). "They did a take-off on the high manners of the white folks in the 'big house,' but their masters, who gathered around to watch the fun, missed the point. It's supposed to be that the custom of a prize started with the master giving a cake to the couple that did the proudest movement." This was the Cakewalk which moved from the plantation to the minstrel stage and became so popular toward the end of the 19th Century that a Cakewalk Jubilee Spectacle was staged at Madison Square Garden in New York for three days in April, 1892. The Walk Around or Cakewalk was for years the standard finale of minstrel shows. Before 1890 minstrel casts were made up entirely of men but in that year Sam T. Jack's Creole Company included women for the first time and their presence inspired all sorts of improvisations within the traditional Cakewalk-side steps, cane hops, pigeon wings, bucks and stop bucks. The popularity of the Cakewalk lasted until l910, paralleling very closely the popularity of ragtime. Then, as ragtime began to decline, the Cakewalk also gave way to the modern dances, many of which had originated in honky tonks, dance halls and along the levees. These were highly rhythmic and physically complicated dances, predecessors in a direct line which includes such more recent favorites as Truckin', the Shag, the Shim Sham, the Shorty George and, most recently, the Stroll. On this record the authentic music of the early jazz dances has been assembled for the first time. It has been drawn from the celebrated archives of the Colored Performing Rights Society of America, a treasure trove of manuscripts which has been combed assiduously by Barney Young and Perry Bradford for this presentation. The music is played by a group of musicians who have had long experience with and deep understanding for jazz dancing. 8/6/58 NYC., TONY SCOTT AND THE ALL STARS: Joe Thomas (t) Wilbur DeParis, J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Pee Wee Russell, Tony Scott (cl) Sonny White (p)*AI Casey (g) Oscar Pettiford (b) Denzil Best (d) 105428 10:55 *Blues For The Street Cor.CRL 57239/LVA 9109/JCH-CD-5 --/ --/JCH-CD-5 105431 4:03 Love Is Just Around The Corner - "SWEET MOODS OF JAZZ"-.COLEMAN HAWKINS' ALL STARS: Red Allen (t) Earl Warren (cl,as) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Marty Napoleon (p) Chubby Jackson (b) George Wettling (d) 4.02 STORMY WEATHER (H.Arlen) Jazz Groove 002/Jazz-10/Stash JCD-2/RA-CD-c10/ 3:55 MEAN TO ME (Fred Ahlert) --/ --- / --/ --/ 5:57 LONESOME ROAD (G.Austin-N.Shilkret) --/ --- / --/ --/ (Lorenzo-Whiting) --/ --- / --/ --/ 4:34 SLEEPY TIME GAL 5:04 SUMMERTIME (Du Bose Heyward-G.Gershwin) --/ --- / --/ --/ (Simon-Mark) Meritt-26/ --- / --/ --/ 3:19 ALL OF ME 2:42 TEA FOR TWO (Youmans) --/ --- / --/ --/ 8/7/58 NYC.. Reeves Soundcraft Albert McCarthy - "Jazz Impressions USA"- THE METROPOLE - in Jazz Monthly 4 59 (cont.): … I do not think he has been well served by records in indeed. The numbers played are of the type of MEAN the past few years, with the exception of one or two TO ME, SUMMERTIME and LONESOME ROAD and tracks on the RCA LP of a couple years ago. In the the supporting musicians include Coleman Hawkins and spring of last year he made a tape for Soundcraft titled George Wettling. It would make a very welcome release "SWEET MOODS OF JAZZ", and this is very fine in this country. (complete review look 4/59). -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Howard Melton and Ralph G. Ferguson cover-notes on run. Warren comes next and Chubby Jackson gets his second solo of the date, backed by Napoleon's Basieish Jass-CD-2) Addition by the same on covernotes Jass-11: Marty Napoleon's piano introduces Hawkins, who states the fingers. Allen comes back to flutter around the edge of melody of ALL OF ME backed by the rhythm section, there-by the theme, leaving it to the bouncing Bean and then the setting the mood for both the track and the album. After Hawkins, full band to bring it home. (cont.) Allen performs an artful paraphrase which he caps with a perfect Armstrongian ending and is followed by a brief turn from Jackson and the ensemble. A muted Allen opens TEA FOR TWO, but instead of playing the well-known melody, it's a variation all the way, his muted and tight tone bringing to mind Charlie Shavers playing UNDECIDED. Warren and Hawkins solo next, with Hawk tearing in a chord-based diatribe with his buzzy, embryonic tone. Napoleon, in contrast to his usual two handed style, plays deliberately sparsely here as if to summon up an original distillation of Count Basie and John Lewis.The ensemble doesn't show up until the out-chorus and again they don't play the tune as such but a written-out version of Allen's opening paraphrase. Napoleon makes the 'head' statement on MEAN TO ME, preceeding Earl Warren. Allen follows with an improvisation that starts out light and dancing but gets progressively more intense as he continues. Hawkins begins right at the point where Allen finishes, starting to break up the mood but never going too far out of line. Allen winds up the piece first by himself, and then accompanied by a series of well chosen riffs from Hawk and Earl. The piano prefaces SLEEPY TIME GAL, a tune best performed instrumentally today as its sextist lyric might offend anyone this side of Jerry Falwell, with the last four bars of the main theme. Napoleon returns after Allen's solo, again with a very light, almost one- fingered solo that works up to a natty little boppish cover from 7/18/58 session on page 48 - 53 Allen opens STORMY WEATHER with a dramatic open- themselves weren't able to interject. Napoleon backs into the horned cadenza, vaguely reminiscent of Louis's "West End intro, and after Allen, Warren, and a further eight bars of Blues" or Bunny's "I Can't Get Started" but with an angrier, Allen, plays a short solo of his own. But all this activity more hostile sound typical of '50s and '60s Red Allen. His avails them not as Hawkins immediately proceeds to steal the statement of the melody is certainly one of the more intense show, swooping down on the harmony with a genuinely renditions of Arlen's oft-performed piece that I've ever heard, hawk-ish (but never mawkish) fury. Allen and Warren then as is Hawkins' searing solo. Napoleon's piano inter-lude up the next chorus, with Red gettin the three 'A' scions and comes along as a welcome respite to all this passion, which Earl settling for the 'B' release and a sublime Jackson taking one more before the horns top it off. returns when Allen and the ensemble take it out. Allen's exposition of SUMMERTIME reveals his kinship When Larry Clinton put together the arrangements and with fellow New Orleanians Sidney Bechet, as he finds in musicians for this album, he must have experienced somethis Gershwin standard a folk-blues drive which made it the thing similar to what the producers of The Sound of jazz went one completely successful number in all of Porgy and Bess. through: total surprise that so many of the greatest musicians Warren supposedly leapt at the chance to do a whole date on in jazz history were not only all available on the same date, clarinet to show what he could do on the instrument - he had but really needed the work. Today, we treasure every little sat next to Lester Young in the Basie band for so long he scrap of music that Coleman Hawkins, Red Allen and their figured Prez's subtone clarinet must have rubbed off on him. colleagues have left us, in spite of the gatekeepers to the Lester's clarinet solos reminded Milt Gabler and John major media who still prefer to think that they never existed Hammond of Pee Wee Russell, and the echoes of both Prez and that their modern day equivalents should be similarly and Pee Wee come through on Warren's clarinet work here. ignored. Even if the contemporaneous generation of jazz Hawkins and Napoleon each contribute vital statements as lovers was cheated out of the chance to hear this beautiful music, it belongs to us and to the future. – H.Melton; well. The LONESOME ROAD is one of those songs that so many Special Thanks to Franz Hoffmann, of Berlin, W.Germany people assume is a folk piece or a spiritual, when in reality and J.-Fr. Villetard of France, whose Henry "Red" Allen two of the unfolkiest men in history, Nat Shilkret and Gene Discography and Coleman Hawkins: A Documentary are Austin, authored it. Allen again plays it in such a way as to essential sources of information on these two giants of stress an on-the-level authenticity which the com-posers American music. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------review from MAX JONES Melody Maker 1/3/81 to Jazz Groove 002 -- later on page-70 for lack of place here --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------and his work here confirms that he was the tenor saxophonist. EDDIE LAMBERT covernotes Jazz Groove 002: It is ironic that it has taken over twenty years for these Earle Warren appears in the role of a high-class clarinet recordings, which Henry 'Red' Allen regarded as his finest, to soloist and his contribution will surprise those who think of be issued on disc. In conversation at the Manchester Sports him as a good craftsman but a creative lightweight. The Guild in 1963 he was emphatic that the music from the date rhythm section consists of pianist Marty Napoleon, an allwhich produced the first side of this LP plus its title track was rounder who had worked with bands as diverse as Charlie his favourite from his many recording sessions. It was a Barnet's big band and Louis Armstrong's All Stars; Chubby session of high-class ballad playing and like the slightly Jackson, a bassist often associated with the more frenetic earlier recordings also heard here, it enjoyed only a limited aspects of forties jazz; and drummer George Wettling, famed circulation on tape. Henry Allen's delicate phrasing, his for his playing with Eddie Condon and associates. Despite mercurial imagination and his melodic sensitivity - the their differing backgrounds these three men blend into a hallmarks of his very best work - are all present in abundance superb team, with Jackson proving himself to be one of the here. It is doubtful if Allen was ever captured in such brilliant great jazz bassists and one of the few who can play form in the recording studios and few listeners will doubt that meaningful solos on the instrument. The personnels of these two sessions are packed with great he was right in his assesment of this music. For all the excellence of Henry Allen's contribution these names. Yet even in this company the work of Henry Allen performances, like most of the best jazz, are team achieve- and Coleman Hawkins is outstanding. And the music is ments. And the team on the 1958 recordings is a brilliant dominated by Henry Allen's warm, joyous personality; the one. The association between Henry Allen and Coleman emphasis on the sensitive side of his artistry on the 1958 date Hawkins goes back to the early thirties and it is clear that is unusual, but it results in one of the greatest sessions which they were a highly compatible combination. The late fifties even he ever recorded. yielded a rich crop of Coleman Hawkins recorded classics -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Der Jazzfreund-106, June-82 (Germany) about Jazz Groove-002: Aufgenommen wurden sie 1957 (Seite-B) und 1958 im Beinah wäre ich beim Abhören dieser Platte nicht über den Studio in zwei Besetzungen, in denen naturgemäß sowohl ersten Titel (Mean To Me) hinausgekommen, denn der ist bereits Allen wie auch Hawkins dominieren. Beide reißen jedoch so fesselnd, dass ich ihn wieder und wieder hörte. Wie hier die übrigen Musiker zu Höchstleistungen mit. Diese Platte nacheinander die Musiker “ins Spiel“ kommen, ist großartig. ist ein Muß. Nun die anderen Titel sind von gleicher Qualität. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------8/12/58 NYC., “A GREAT DAY IN HARLEM” – Esquire photo set with 57 jazz greats; WNR 2055, 60 min. color, stereo video Documentary based on Art Kane's photo; Milt Hinton's 8 mm home movies and stills; interviews, jazz film clips; Marian McPartland & R.Altschuler speech about “Red” on screen 1957 WILD MAN BLUES; The video includes following clips: One o'Clock Jump; Open All Night; Carolina Shout; Nothin'; Echoes Of Spring; Blue Monk; The Lady Who Swings The Band; The Man I Love; Wild Man Blues; Twelfth Street Rag; Easy Does It; Fine And Mellow; Some Of These Days; I left My Baby; Dickie's Dream; Rosetta; Every Day(I Have The Blues); Low Down Dog; Stardust; Sweet Lorraine; 8:24 shortened clips-montage about the photo-arrangements and the passage about Red Allen on RA-DVD-1a --------------------------------------------------------------------------undated photo of the late 50s shows: Freddie Moore, Sonny Greer (who played with Red at the 9/4/58 Art Ford session), Louis Armstrong and Red Allen - 54 - / - 55 – photos A great Day In Harlem 8/12/58 NYC., “A GREAT DAY IN HARLEM” – Esquire photo set with 57 jazz greats; WNR 2055, 60 min. color, stereo video Documentary based on Art Kane's photo; Milt Hinton's 8 mm home movies and stills; interviews, jazz film clips; Marian McPartland & Robert Altschuler speech about “Red” on screen 1957 WILD MAN BLUES; - 56 mid.Aug.58 , Wallingford, Conn., Oakdale Musical Theatre – 2nd annual Wallingford Jazz Festival, Billie Holiday, Red Allen & His Dixieland All Stars, Buck Clayton & His Count Basie Alumni; CD-8/16/58p15: RED ALLEN, CLAYTON ON ALLSTAR HIT – Wallingford – More than 3,000 jammed the Oaksdale Musical Theatre for the second annual Wallingford Jazz Festival. The tented 2,200-seater was filled, with overflow on the grounds outside. Headliners were … (I am not sure whether this source descibed rather late the July Festival at the same place, reported by DownBeat 9/4/58 – see page-48; in fact there is a further session at 9/26/58 Fr. of a three days jazz Festival with Billie Holiday backed by The Buck Clayton Trio; Buck Clayton All Star Orch., sponsored by Ben Segal, Bob Hall, narr. by Leonard Feather.) 9/4/58 Thurs., NYC., WNTA-TV/FM stereo, ART FORD-S FAMOUS JAZZ PARTY: Red Allen (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Ed Hall (cl) King Curtis (ts) Stan Freed (p) Dick Thompson (g) Vinnie Burke (b) Joe Tarto (bb on (10)) Sonny Greer (d) Teddy Charles (vib) Chris Connors (v) *Art Ford(narr) 75 min.tape /RA-CD-32/ 1 1:39 intro: WARM UP into OLE MISS into BUGLE CALL RAG -Curtis-Allen in ens-Greer-Freed & rhythm-Allen in ens-– intro narration (0:27) 2 6:39 SWEET GEORGIA BROWN (M.Pinkard-B.Bernie-Casey) Enigma-302/RA-CD-32 -Freed-Allen & Hall in ens-Higgy-Curtis-Allen-Hall-Thompson-Freed-Tarto & Thompson-Greer brd-Allen in ens-Hall-Greer-Allen in ens3 5:05 (0:48) I Won't Cry Anymore (Fred Wise, Al Frisch) -feat.C.Connors(Freed&Thompson)- (0:38) narr to /RA-CD-32 4 3:01 BASIN STREET BLUES (Williams) -Higgy intro-Higgy & Allen in ensEnigma-302/RA-CD-32 -Allen & Hall-Hall-Higgy-Allen in ens-Higgy in ens-Higgy & Greer-ens5 3:14 (0:24) 6 7 8 9 10 5:01 (1:00) 4:58 (0:34) 3:40 (1:00) 4:40 (0:32) 8:59 (0:10) I AIN'T GOT NOBODY (Graham-Williams) -Allen in ens-Greer-Allen in ens-Greer-Allen in ens-Greer-ens Night In Tunesia (Gillespie-Paparelli) -feat T.Charles (rhythm)Sweet & Lovely (…………………..) -feat.K.Curtis (rhythm)Hallelujah, I Love You So (Ray Charles) -feat.C.Connor; -Freed&rhythm-vCC (rhythm)You Can't Depend On Me (…………) -feat.-Freed&rhythm-Tarto-Freed&rhythmI FOUND A NEW BABY (Sp.Williams-J.Palmer) -Freed intro-Allen in ens-Hall in ens~Allen-Curtis in ens-Higgy-Curtis-Allen-Allen muted-Charles-Greer-ens-Thompson & Greer- - S'WONDERFUL (G.& I.Gershwin) 12 5:16 (1:47) ROSETTA -vRA (Earl Hines-H.Wood) RA-CD-32 -Freed intro-Allen-vRA (Curtis-Hall)-Hall-Allen & Hall-Allen in ens13 3:08 (1:24) CHINATOWN MY CHINATOWN -vCC (played very fast) (W.Jerome, J.Schwartz) -Freed-vCC (rhythm-weak ens)-Allen & rhythm-Higgy-vCC (weak eans)-ens coda~ 14 3:14 (0:23) Lullaby In Rhythm (……………..) -Freed-Dick Thompson (rhythm)- 16 0:43 RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 -Tarto & Greer Allen in ens / cut several bars /-Allen-Greer brks-Greer-Tarto bb-ens-Greer-ensthe speech Art Ford with Ed Hall RA-CD-32 -Freed intro-Hall (rhythm)-Allen (rhythm)-Allen & Hall-Hall-Hall in ens- 11 5:16 (1:57) 15 10:21(0:42) RA-CD-32 BALLIN' THE JACK (Smith-Burris) -Freed-Allen in ens-Hall in ens-rhythm~Allen-Curtis-ens-Higgy-Freed & Thompson-Tarto-Charles-ens-Thompson-Allen in ens-Art Ford on ens-Greer-enstheme: BUGLE CALL RAG (NORK) -Allen intro-Allen in ens, two Allen brks-Allen /cut RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 RA-CD-32 J.J.88p32-33, Martin Richards about WNTA-Art Ford sessions on J.Connoisseur.cas. AFJP-1-9: Sweet Georgia Brown and Basin Street are by a Red Allen group and are very satisfying, with some rousing Higgy on the latter, as well as the acrid Ed Hall. summer-58, New Orleans, One of Red's long journeys in summer of 1958 was a drive to New Orleans to visit his mother, who was then 75 years old. (John Chilton: “Ride, Red, Ride” p158): details are not known and will be welcomed 9/13/58 Sat. two shows 8:00 and 11:00 p.m., NYC: Town Hall - All Star Jazz Show "Farewell Party To Billie Holiday"prior to European Tour: Eddie Condon; Joe Jones Trio; J.C.Higginbotham; Buck Clayton, Hal Singer, Conrad Janis, Max Kaminsky, Freddie Moore; Bobby Hackett; Freddy Price & l0 Piece J.B. NYAN-9/6/58p13/VV-9/3/58p7 John Wilson in the New York Times describes the evening show with Billie's appearance backed by Buck Clayton & Jo Jones; work of the All Star Show with Clayton, Max Kaminsky and Bobby Hacket, but without any words about J.C.Higginbotham. NYAN-9/6/58p13 VV-9/10/58p5 advertisement for an undated Program For Carlton Sinclair's All Star Jazz Show with Buck Clayton, J.C.Higginbotham, Freddie Moore, Max Kaminski Tony Parenti, Hal Singer, Dick Wellstood in one band; Billie Holiday; Jo Jones, Eddie Condon; Freddie Price and a 10-piece jazz band with some words about the bands and single performers. This is in fact the above Billie Holiday Farewell Party. (the large advert is included in JAZZ AD.Vol.3 p 1006) - 57 prob.mid Sept.58; Rendezvous-Red Allen Band with Claude Hopkins, Sonny Greer (unknown source) (out of Red Allen´s scrapbook) 9/20/58 N.Y., Carnegie Hall - MARY LOU WILLIAMS CONCERT for the Bel Canto Foundation Down Beat l0/2/58p12: MUSIC NEWS - MARY LOU ROLLS 'EM Working virtually single-handed, Mary Lou Williams built a staggering roster of talent for her Carnegie Hall concert Sept.20.... Mary Lou … will be featured pianist with the 90-piece Xavier symphony orchestra, under direction of Vincent La Selva. Also slated to appear were : Maxine Sullivan, Sugar Ray Robinson, the Mose Alllison trio, Henry (Red) Allen, Roy Eldridge, Reunald Jones (Sn. & Jr.), new singer Ron Jefferson, Dave Lambert, John Hendricks, Les Jazz Modes, Stella Brooks, Marion Bruce, Ernie Furtado, Gene Ramey, Roy Haynes, Thelonious Monk, Space Powell, Lester Young, Chuck Wayne, Jimmy Jones, Eddie (Lockjaw) Davis, George Russell, Jerome Richardson, Ray Copeland, Allan Eager, Charlie Persip, Osie Johnson, Walter Bishop, Marian & Jimmy McPartland and prob.before & around Wed. 9/17/58 many, many more. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------NYAN-9/20p15: Sat.Jazz Concert Will Aid Musicians … Facilities of all kinds will be provided for musicians who for Bel Canto Foundation has been set up to provide a future reasons of spiritual depression, or, lack of inspiration, will seek home and place for recuperation of indigent jazz help there. Absent from the jazz scene for the past four years, musicians. Although the locale has not been designated, Miss Williams has avowed all her time to making this pilot Mary Lou Williams, its founder, hopes that it will be project a success, and later will go all over the country giving within a hundred mile radius of Manhattan. concerts which will benefit Bel Canto. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------PC-8/23/58p19: (announced similar stuff, but added:) The supporters are Lena Horne, King Cole, Sammy Davis, Bob Sylvester, Duke Ellington, Billy Strayhorn, Mel Helmer, Father O'Connor, Father woods and Father Crowley. On the committee are John Hammond, Elaine Lorrilard and Willis Conover. PC:8/30/58p24: “Bel Canto Foundation's Benefit Concert Sep.20” with a long article give no further information 9/25/58 Thu., WNTA-TV/FM -ART FORD´S JAZZ PARTY (COLEMAN HAWKINS & FRIENDS AT A FAMOUS JAZZ PARTY: Charlie Shavers (t,v) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Pee Wee Russell (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Lester Young (*ts) Willie"The Lion"Smith (p) Harry Shepherd (vib) Dick Thompson (g) Vinnie Burke (b) Sonny Greer (d) Mae Barnes (v) George Wettling (d added on -15), (Art Ford speech were cut between the items) 1 6:10 *When I Grow Too Old To Dream -full group /JC-AF26/ 2 2:58 St.James Infirmary -v Ch.Shavers & full group /JC-AF26&27/ 3 2:02 Sweet Georgia Brown -vMae Barnes & Ch.Shavers & full group /JC-AF27/ 4 7:36 Runnig Wild -piano & full group /JC-AF27/ 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 4:08 2:37 4:03 2:17 7:32 3:25 3:59 1:10 3:39 8:25 Indian Summer I May Be Wrong Undecided Somebody´s Wrong Avalon I Can´t Get Started St.Louis Blues Indiana *Mean To Me *Jumpin´ With -C.Hawkins & ens.parts Enigma-301/J.Anth. 30JA-5217/Queen /BEAN-1-21/JC-AF4/JC-AFJP-6/ -PW.Russell & ens.parts /video/ -D.Thompson & H.Sheppard & ens.parts /video/ -vM.Barnes & ens.parts /video/ -full group Phoenix-21/ /Queen /BEAN-1-21/video/JC-AFJP-6/ -Ch.Shavers & ens.parts Enigma-301/J.Anth. 30JA-5217/ JC-AF4/JC-AFJP-6/ -W.L.Smith & ens.parts -v Mae Barnes& ens.parts - L.Young & ens.parts Symphony Sid -full group #/ #/ #/ #/ #/ /JC-AF27/ /JC-AF27/ Enigma-301/J.Anth. 30JA-5217/ JC-AF4/JC-AFJP-6/ # --- / --/ Queen /BEAN-1-21/JC-AF4/JC-AFJP-6/ # all 14 items on JCH-CD-8 / #video on RA-DVD-1b/ in Oct.58 J.C.Higginbotham visited Europe with Sammy Price and a group consisting of Doc Cheatham (tpt); Elmer Crumbley (tbn), Eddie Barefield (alt,clt); Jimmy Lewis (bs) and J.C.Heard (dm). After a promising start the tour was cancelled: Eddie Barefield notes that two factors contributing to the cancellation were the death of Pope Pius XII and the riots which had taken place at the Bill Hailey concerts that year. (JJ-5-59); see: JJ-4-70: Higginbotham-article on p180 of this book; 10/12/58 Su., Concertgebouw, 22 titles were recorded privately by Lou van Rees, now in the possession of the Netherlands Jazz Archive. 10/13 Hertogenbosch (= also Den Bosch) in the 'Brabant Hal' / Oct. ?: concert in Utrecht / 10/16 club in Scheveningen / 10/18 and other dates in Sheherazade club in Amsterdam / (source Bulletin of the Archive #13 and 15 (Sept. 1994 and March 1995 58/Oct,, Anvers, France, SAMMY PRICE ORCH.: Doc Cheatham (t) J.C.Higginbotham, Elmer Crumbley (tb) Eddie Bare- field (cl,as) Sammy Price (p) Jimmy Lewis (b) J.C.Heard (d) 33´ tape, but only 2 items are of interest 1:47 Bugle Call Rag - full band (band played at Olympia, Paris 10/11) JCH-CD-8 4:09 Beale Street Blues - featuring J.C.Higginbotham JCH-CD-8 10/25/58 Enschede, (NL), on 16mm telerec.for VPRO-TV in 1959, Basin Street Blues / Harlem Nocturne / St. Louis Blues / wanted 6:56 One o´clock Jump JCH-CD-12/RA-DVD-1b/ - 58 10/5/58 Sun., NYC., Savoy Ballroom, CBS-TV - Bill Leonard´s “EYE ON NEW YORK”: Cab Calloway, Count Basie, Charles Buchanan (speech); music: METROPOLE ALL STARS: Red Allen (t) Buster Bailey (cl) Claude Hopkins (p) Lloyd Trotman (b) Sonny Greer (d) 1 hour ………………………………. details & tape wanted ………………………………… ………………………………… it was the historical closing date of the Savoy Ballroom; All our tries to find a tape have been without success Bill Leonard's “Eye On New York” gave a touching Farewell to the Savoy Ballroom last Sun-day Morning on CBS-TV with Cab Calloway, Count Basie and Charles Buchanan there to reminisce about the Home of Happy Feet and a band composed of Henry "Red"Allen, Claude Hopkins, Buster Bailey, Sonny Greer and Lloyd Trotman to supply the music of days gone by. Naturally, everyone agreed Harlem needs another Savoy. NYAN-l0/11/58p15: NYC., Commodore Music Shop Farewell Session Dan Morgenstern J.Journal Dec58: The Commodore Music Shop died quietly in October. Red Allen and Johnny Windhurst played Taps, and Eddie Condon was on hand to deliver a funeral oration. ("Man, this is the end of an era"). The Commodore started as a collector's shop, the very first, in 1931 ... Oct.58, There was an alternate photo in Red Allen´s scrapbook – look page 62 NYAN-lo/18/58p17:. JAZZ PARTY-Place Pigalle was the setting for fabulous TONDALEYO, dancing and singing star, the Dickie Thompson trio stars of Art Ford's Jazz Party. This intimate spot is fast becoming one of the area's favorite dining spots. Red Allen was guest at Place Pigalle several weeks earlier before this photo was brought. Dick Thompson played with Red on several sessions at Art Ford-TV as 6/19&26 and 9/4/58 and with Higginbotham at 7/3 & 9/25: Albert McCarthy in Down Beat 11/27/58: ...I have also been unfashionable enough to spent quite a lot of time at the despised Metropole. Everything that has been written about the discomforts involved in spending much time at the Metropole is certainly correct, but the fact remains that there is some very good music to be heard there if one has the patience to wait for it. One night Ben Webster sat in with the band led by Coleman Hawkins, and the music that followed was amongst the finest I have heard while I have been in the states (over five weeks with stays in N.Y.C., San Francisco, Monterey, and Chicago). In spite of the showcasing I have heard a good deal more music there that was excellent and have been impressed with Hal Singer, Al Williams and Gene Ramey in the Cozy Cole group, and with Henry Red Allen, Buster Bailey, Johnny Lettman, Coleman Hawkins and Roy Eldridge at various times. ... DownBeat 11/27/58p52: ... Roy Eldridge and Coleman Hawkins head combos at the Metropo1e Monday and Tuesday nights. Cozy Cole and Henry Red Allen share the wall the rest of the week. - 59 11/6/58, NYC., WNTA-TV/FM-stereo - ART FORD-S JAZZ PARTY: Red Allen (t,v) Dicky Wells (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Coleman Hawkins (ts) Willie"The Lion"Smith (p,v) Danny Barker (g,bj,v) Vinnie Burke (b) Sonny Greer (d,v) Mae Barnes (v) & *four young modern performers: Buddy Iannone (t) Don Sines (tb) Joe Dean(bars) Rudy DeLuca (d) 75 min. speech 1:17 *intro: FASCINATING RHYTHM with announcing the stars by Art Ford (Smith-Burris) times 5:48 BALLIN´ THE JACK -Smith intro-Allen in ens-Wells-Bailey-Allen-Smith-Barker-Hawkins-Burke-Allen&ens,Greer brd- 0:26 0:36 3:08 0:40 0:37 0:46 0:55 1:43 NOBODY´S SWFETHEART –vMB & weak ens obbl. (Kahn-Erdman-Meyers-Schoebel) 0:55 TIN ROOF BLUES (NORK) incomplete 2:54 RUNNING WILD (Gibbs-Grey-Wood) -Bailey-Bailey in ensEnigma302/AFJP-8/ 3:09 STOMPIN´AT THE SAVOY (Goodman-Webb-Sampson) -Hawkins-Hawkins in ensJazzAnth.5217/ --- / --- /+ -p&v Smith-Allen in ens-p&v Smith-ens coda/ --- / 2:41 I LOVE YOU (Smith) / --- / 4:21 TRUE BLUE LOVE (Coslow-Robin-Whiting)) -vMB(Smith&Greer)-Allen-vMB (Allen-ens)2:17 SOMEBODY LOVES YOU (Gershwin) -Wells(muted-tb-Wells(open-tb) in ens/ --- / --- / -Allen-vRA-Allen-vRA&ch-Allen in ens/ --- / --- / 4:16 ST.JAMES INFIRMARY (Primrose) 3:55 CHARLESTON (Johnson-Mark) -Greer intro-Allen in ens-Greer-band/ --- / 2:47 CHINA BOY (D.Winfree-P.Boutelje) -bjDB-Barker & Allen-Hawkins & ens-Barker-Allen & ens/ --- / --- / -played by the modern group / --- / 6:14 *I Can't Give You Anything But Love 2:52 Ain´t Misbehavin´ (Waller-Brooks-Razaf) -piano solo & vocal W.L.Smith-ens coda -piano solo & vocal W.L.Smith-ens coda 1:39 Mule Walk (J.P.Johnson) 2:28 MEMPHIS BLUES (Handy) -Smith intro-Allen/ --- / --- / -Smith-Hawkins & Smith-Hawkins(ens)-ens coda/ --- / --- /+ 4:11 SOLITUDE (DeLange-Mills-Ellington) / ---/ --- / 9:45 *LOVE IS JUST AROUND THE CORNER (I.Robin-L.Gensler) -Greer & Smith intro-Allen(Bailey)-Bailey-Iannone-Sines-Dean-Wells-Allen-Wells-Barker-Burke & Smith-Greer & Smith-Hawkins-Hawkins & ens-ens,Hawkins brd-Allen- fade out + on JazzBand EBCD 2117-2/ AFJP-8 on Jazz Connoisseur Cassette / complete on RA-CD-33 J.J.88p32-33, Martin Richards about WNTA-Art Ford sessions on J.Connoisseur.cas. AFJP-1-9- here Vol.8: this time Harlem 1928-1938, and a return to Red Allen, joined by some of his colleagues from the Metropole, where he was playing at the time. This set sounds a little disorganised and I'm not certain that Wilie The Lion Smith fits in too well with the rest of the guys, although his solo items are great. But there is a tremendous vitality and a wonderfully happyatmosphere, with nice spots from Hawk and Buster. J.J. 3-96 – review about C.Hawkins”High School Hawk” on Jazz Band EBCD 2117-2 incl. Stompin' At The Savoy / Solitude 11/20/58 Newark, NJ., WNTA-TV - AT FORD´S JAZZ PARTY: Rex Stewart (c) J.C.Higginbotham (tb,v) Tyree Glenn (tb) Bob Brookmeyer (vtb) Pee Wee Russell (cl) Paul Quinchette (ts) Nat Pierce (p) Vinnie Burke (b) Elvin Jones (d) 4:42 Jumpin´At The Woodside -full band JCH-CD-9 5:55 I´ve Found A New Baby -full band JCH-CD-9 2:11 When You´re Smiling -feat.Higginbotham JCH-CD-9 -vR.St & JCH; feat Stewart & Higginbotham & rhythm only JCH-CD-9 4:41 Rockin´Chair (2:46) Swing That Music /cut -full band JCH-CD-9 DB-2/5/59 brings a longer article by Dom Cerulli about Art Ford Shows from Oct.- Nov.58 but without exact details. Down Beat 2/19/59: "chords"-(Robt.L.Solomon): ALL FOR FORD...I think that it's about time, that DownBeat acknowledged the amazing success of ART FORD'S JAZZ PARTY. I think the New York television show is doing a wonderful job in bringing jazz to the apprehensive public. After seeing those depressing Timex shows, I appreciate it even more ... I think this show is something to be proud of. (Croton-on-Hudson, N.Y.) (Ed.Note: ...However, recent reports, which should sadden reader Solomon and other Ford fans, indicate that the show will go off the air soon.) 12/15/58 Mo., NYC., Ebony Lounge Camp Fund session with Red Allen, Willie Lewis, Baldy, Pompey Bobson, (NYAN-12/20p19) RED ALLEN THRILLS 'EM AT EBONY Red Allen, that musical man, was our star attraction at our Camp Fund Affair last Mo. at Ebony Lounge and he received tumultuous ovation throughout the evening for his fine performance, likable, easy-going and a gentleman. Among other guest was Charlie Beal, Count Basie, …(more in Jazz Ad.Vol.3 p1011) FOUR IN TUNE-Red Allen, 2nd from left, dropped into the Ebony last Monday night and highlighted the glittering Monday Night Camp Fund seeking patrons with his sizzling music. L.to r. Baldy at the organ, Red Allen, Willie Lewis of international fame on sax and Pompey Bobson, drums. NYAN-12/20p19 - 60 late Dec.58; ART FORD benefit concert for Riverdale House: Jimmy Drew's Trio, with Elvin Jones and Tommy Potter; Willie The Lion Smith, Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham, Vinnie Burke, Dec.late l958 or.early Jan.'59 J.C.Higginbotham may rejoin Henry "Red"Allen at the Metropole; NYA-12/13/58p26 J.C.Higginbotham went back with Red Allen's group at the Metropole. His doctor gave an okay! Downbeat 2/5/59 Jazz Bulletin Oct. 1959: J.C. Higginbotham über seine Mitwirkung im "Hot-Fan Tempel", Metropole, in New York: Während-50 Wochen arbeitete ich dort, nachher war ich ein Nervenbündel. Man kann nicht immer in einer solchen Lärmerei spielen. Spielt man leise, so glauben die Zuhörer, man sei "verrückt". Ich musste aufgeben. Jan.59; Sammy Price is now on piano (and wonderful organ) with Red Allen & Co. Claude Hopkins now takes the bench with Sol Yaged, currently assisted by Benny Moten and Hal Singer. J.C.Higginbotham has rejoined Red but, he swears, for two weeks only. (D.Morgenstern J.J.2-59) Jan-59 until spring-59: Sammy Price with Red Allen's band at Metropole (Bul.H.C.F.-2/59) spring-59, Ray Bryant(p) Rufus Jones(d) replaced Price & Bonito RED RIDES AGAIN ! by George Hoefer, in Down Beat 1/8/59: “It's just giving out ... doing what "I was travelling down to New the area. They played for all the funcyou've put there to do," Red Allen said Orleans in my car last month, and when tions in Algiers and sometimes took with a gesture. It was his explanation of I got into Knoxville, I passed a guy in a the ferry over to Canal St. and compewhat he thinks about the music that has car on a street. This cat passed me and ted with the best brass in Orleans. Henry made him sort of Mr. Jazz to many waved. When we were side by side at a senior played cornet and was a contempersons in the last decade and a half. stop light, he hollered over, 'Aren't you porary of the fabled Buddy Bolden. Allen now plays at the Metropole on Red Allen?' He said when I passed him, "My father had me in his band as Seventh Ave. in New York City - on the he saw my New York license plates and early as 1916," Red said. "He gave me platform that holds the greatest side put two and two together. It turned out a peck horn and carried me around show in jazz. That platform is known by he used to listen to me a lot at Joe with the band. He'd stand me on a the musicians themselves as the race Sherman's Down Beat room in Chicago street corner, and I'd play. The people track, where, afternoon and night, there during the war. He teaches at the applauded, so I guess I was doing what is continuous hard blowing by a University of Tenessee down there. I was supposed to do. Or else the constantly changing roster of such Man, I didn't remember him, but it, was people were getting a kick out of that names as Cole-man Hawkins, Roy sure nice seeing him." perk horn. It was a trick mellophone Eldridge. Charlie Shavers, Jimmy Another reason for Allen's long, unin- with the bell sticking straight, up." McPartland, Parenti, Claude Hopkins, terrupted engagements is his ability to Allen joined King Olivers Jazz band Cozy Cole, in fact, almost anyone who get on friendly terms with the operator- in 1927 while the King was in St. Louis. for the moment hasn't anything better to boss. He had been playing on the Island do. He has an especially kind feeling for Queen riverboat with Fate Marable and There is usually an alternating Dixie ex-pug Joe Sherman, for whom he decided he would like to travel around and swing group, hut rarely, if ever. will worked from 1942 to 1945. in a dark on dry land for awhile. Oliver was on a modern unit be found there: they just basement on Randolph St. in Chicago. the road at the time. don't play loud enough to suit the When the Down Beat room wasn't "Many old jazz fans seem to think I packed tight, Joe would station himself joined Oliver in Chicago because Olivet owners. Proof that Red Allen gives out is his at the street door and literally pull in played so long at the Royal Gardens, four-year tenure as a leader of both customers by the arm until even the Lincoln Gardens, and Plantation," Allen breathing space was filled. said. "Man, I never saw Chicago until I Dixie and swing groups. Of the band Allen had at the Down went there with Fletcher Henderson in Allen said he never has signed a contract for more than two weeks, with a Beat, trombonist J. C. Higginbotham 1933." At this point an extraneous thought two-week option, during his career as a and bassist Benny Moten still play with leader. Yet, he invariably has found him occasionally at the Metropole. came to Red: "Hell, I've never been out himself spending years at. a time in a Altoist Don Stovall is around New York of the United States, except for Canada. given spot and has become a landmark but out of the business as a regular. With all the cats that are going to Europe in jazz for young persons in New York, When asked about the other member of these days, everyone thinks I'm a world Chicago, Sari Francisco, Boston, and the group, pianist General Morgan, Red traveller." remarked, "Sad news . . . Just the other By the time Oliver decided to go to Los Angeles. The youngsters who come to see him day Stovall phoned to tell me .. . the New York City, trumpeter Allen was too lonesome and wanted to go back to New seldom are the kind who follow jazz to General drowned in Lake Michigan." Many illustrious single acts worked Orleans. He couldn't resist the urge and the last note of an esoteric alto in an obscure corner. Red's followers usually with Allen during the Down Beat days. went back to join Walter (Fats) Pichon's bring a date, and Red is usually as far as "There were Billie Holiday, Alberta band at the Pelican dance hall. Even thought Red didn't go to New they go, or want to go, in the jazz Hunter, and tenor man Ben Webster, York, his reputation did, and some of among others. picture. Red recalled, "I kept telling Joe his friends saw to it that his name was Perhaps the key to Allen's success is that he plays a stirring New Orleans (Sherman) the lady wash room attendant mentioned when a horn man was needed horn and can make the listener feel it's could sing real good. I called her in a band. Soon after returning to the delta being played directly to him. And his Dinahmite, and one night we had her personality never lets down. His friends sing for Lionel Hampton. Wasn't long country, Allen received offers from are greeted as soon as they arc seen by, before she didn't show up for work. She Duke Ellington and his old friend from "My Man," and if he feels especially was over at the Sherman hotel, in the home, pianist Luis Russell, to go to New warm, this will be followed by a Panther room, featured as Dinah York. Asked why he didn't join Washington, vocalist with Lionel Ellington, he replied, "In those days "whamp whamp" or "good deal!" Duke wasn't so great, and besides I Red said of his fans, "Sure, they write Hampton's band." knew more cats in the Russell band." Allen was born in West New to me all the time. Even send me Allen soon was well established in pictures of their wives and babies … tell Orleans, better known as Algiers, La., New York: When Oliver, who had been me what they are doing. Some of 'em I across the Mississippi from the having a tough time in the big city, wasn't remember. Of course, I'm bound to Crescent City, on Jan. 7, 1909. His father, Henry Allen Sr., led one able to play trumpet on his own record, forget a lot of them. But lots of 'em I do of the most esteemed brass bands in because of dental trouble, Red remember. - 61 stepped in and played some fine choru- engagement in New York was at Cafe of red beans. "Man. I bring back as many as I can ses on the Oliver Victors in 1929-1930. Society Downtown. On the west coast, Allen also made records under his own his longest stay was at the Hangover in get in the back of my car," he said. "But San Francisco, where he put in four years. they don't taste the same when I get 'em name for Victor and teamed up with Hawkins for the Allen-Hawkins Vocalion Allen said he still gets lonesome for up here ... It's the salt water down there, I guess, makes 'em taste right." New Orleans. sides. On the subject of the young jazz "Down there, you're kin for a long This period in the early 1930s found him playing with such big groups as time - you've got fourth, little and even musicians, Allen has mixed feelings. Hen-derson's, Teddy Hill's, and the sixth cousins," he observed. "Lip here, He admires the techniques and ideas of Mills Blue Rhythm band. The arrangers you're lucky to be a grandfather. I am a the good ones, but finds a great many for the latter group put together the grandfather. My son, Henry Allen is who make it by learning a 12-bar blues famous riff tune Ride, Red, Ride, married and lives here in New York and and blasting away on a single note. "Those cats play what they want, expressly as an Allen feature. He also works on the police force. He's got a 4was a regular in the Russell band year old daughter named Alcornette. good or bad, and they tell guys like She's sort of named after my wife, Coleman Hawkins off," Red said. fronted by Louis Armstrong. Beginning about 1940. Red started whose name is Alcorn, and my cornet - "Some of them would sound better if they lay on their backs and played leading his own small units on 52nd St. good deal." Red makes regular trips back to Algiers with their toes." January 8, 1959 and spent two years at the Onyx and a year at Kelly's Stables. Another long to see his cousins and to pick up a load ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------J.C.HIGGINBOTHAM - 'I Make Records And Forgot About Them'; Cross Section in Down Beat 1/8/59 At 52, Jack (J. C.) Higginbotham has had a career in jazz Los ANGELES: "I played there, and how. The first time surpassed by very few musicians on the scene today. Born in was with Louis (Armstrong) at the Vogue. I remember that Atlanta, Ga., J. C. was raised in Cincinnati, where his sister we had to open an umbrella in an automobile to keep the rain Eutris bought him his first trombone, an instrument he had to off us. We stayed out there three months, but I prefer the cast. have after trying a few tentative notes on one belonging to his It's like another world out there." older brother. CIGARS: "Not for me. Chesterfields only." The lean, soft-spoken jazzman has toured the country and COLEMAN HAWKINS: "Nobody can outplay him. He's overseas with scores of bands and groups, including Luis my man. One time on the Fletcher Henderson band, he took Russell, Chick Webb, Fletcher Henderson, Lucky Millinder, on everybody. Five brass and three rhythm couldn't drown Louis Armstrong, and Henry (Red) Allen. jazz. poll results in him out. He stood up, turned around and faced us, and the '40s attested to his influence on the trombone, which he nobody could outplay him." PARIS: "Well, if you can't say something good. You might helped make a brash, gutty. forceful jazz instrument. Until recently, Higgy had been working with Allen at the as well keep still. It was something new and exciting, though. Metropole in New York, but left after 50 weeks on orders But I loved Amsterdam. It was so quiet, and everybody was from his physician. He lives in Manhattan, where he works cool." weekend club dates, is available for record sessions, makes MUTES: "Don't believe in them. Don't hide no notes, let regular appearances on the Art Ford TV Jazz Party, and them come out bad, if they're going to. I never use them." relaxes by watching TV and giving pointers to many young THE METROPOLE: "I worked there for 50 weeks, and I was a nervous wreck. My doctor told me I'd better quit. You're trombonists. His recollections and comments to a variety-of subjects for not supposed to always play that loud. If you play soft, they think you're ritzy. But you can do a lot of pretty things, and this Cross Section follow: Boston: "I went up there to play two weeks, and I stayed five play better when you play soft. I had to quit; it was too much." years. It's a good city, but it's kind of drowsy. Everything is DRUMMERS: "I think the three best drummers I ever quiet. I had money and I wanted to leave many times, but I played with were Sid Catlett, Chick Webb, and Mickey just didn't do it. Finally, I played up at Dartmouth college, and Sheen. Mickey is quite a drummer; he doesn't lose a beat. said I was going to leave afterwards. I called. Jack Crystal In Catlett and Webb .. they were just great, that's all." find out about working in New York, and I came home. TV: "It's fun to do, especially with Art Ford. You don't have There's no place like New York." to worry about rehearsals and going against time. If you've WHEN THE SAINTS Go Marching In: "That was the first got good musicians, you don't need rehearsals. He just gets us record featuring me on it. I made it with Louis Russell in 1930 together, and we pick out the tunes and play them. It's playing or '32. I still play it today. You've got to play it!" and relaxation." STEREOPHINIC SOUND: "I don't buy records. I make LUIS RUSSELL: ''One of the greatest bandleaders anyone them and forget about them. I don t like to hear them. They could have. He paid me more money than he got himself. " don't sound good. They don't have that real sound." LOUIS ARMSTRONG: "Oh, boy/ I remember we were THE VALVE TROMBONE: "I played it in the Cotton Club, having a rehearsal this Saturday afternoon, and Louis Metcalf during the show, Jeepers Creepers, with Louis Armstrong took a piece of pasteboard and made a crown. He put it on his and Maxine Sullivan We had three trombone players in the head and said he was the king of trumpeters in New York. band, Wilbur de Paris, George Washington, and myself. On Then Louis Armstrong played, and Metcalf jumped off the Wilbur's night off, I'd play his valve trombone. I liked it okay, stand. We didn't see him for a while. Armstrong is the greatest but it doesn't sound like the real trombone. It's an easy way to trumpet player, and the greatest guy to get along with." work, though." ..January 8, 1959 p13 -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THE EARLY CAREER OF J.C.HIGGINBOTHAM by George Hoefer, in Down Beat 1/30/64 (with a short disco); THE ORIENTATION Of pre-bop trom- "If a man has technical ability and setting with such natives as trumpeter bone took a wide range of development, understands harmony (whether through Red Allen, clarinetist Albert Nicholas, from the percussive tailgate of Kid Ory formal training or sheer intuition), he pianist Russell, bassist Pops Foster, and to the smooth, melodic playing of should be able to express himself. But drummer Paul Barbarin; and his perforLawrence Brown. Between these two the result still depends on what is going mances fit well into the scheme of extremes evolved playing styles based on in his mind." things. His solos at fast tempos were on the personal creativity of such men as Higginhotham's most exciting and characterized by his terrific drive, hot Georg Brunis, Jimmy Harrison, Miff productive period came when he was a brassy tone, and fierce vibrato; and even Mole, Tricky Sam Nanton, Jack Tea- leading soloist with the late Luis on slow numbers he still played in a garden, and J. C. Higginbotham„ Russell's Saratoga Club Orchestra shout style. To quote Higginbotham again, he has Higginbotham, who has acknowledged between 1928 and '30. He was a blues the influence of Harrison, once wrote, player established in a New Orleans written, "The important things about a - 62 jazz musician are how he is thinking, He was enrolled at a boarding school, Jimmy Harris. Then he went to New the emotions that compel him to play, connected with Morris Brown, and York City in September, 1928, and his attitude toward music, musicians, managed to sneak out three nights a joined Luis Russell's band at the Club and people in general." week (he was. forced to climb a gate to Harlem on Lenox Ave. For the next two In his playing. Higginbotham has illu- get hack in) to play on a hotel roof years. the peak period of the Russell strated many of his personal characteris- garden in Atlanta with the Neal Montgo- crew, they played regularly at the Savoy tics, but his slap-bang, devil may-care mery Orchestra. The band had two girl Ballroom, the Roseland Ball room on facade serves to hide from view his deep musicians, pianist Marion Hamilton and Broadway, the Sunday night sessions at of whom the Next Club uptown, and toured the and sincere personal attitudes. While he drummer Mae Bates, one could arrive in New Orleans in 1947 for wanted to marry the, 15-year-old circuit from New York to Washington, an Esquire concert with two cases - one trombone player. When the girl tried to D.C., to Baltimore, Md., to holding his trombone, the other contai- make up his mind for him by poking a Philadelphia, Pa. Finally; they settled ning nine bottles of whiskey - and wind pistol at his stomach, he decided to down at the Saratoga Club, and though up playing seated on the floor, he could forfeit the sum of $9 that he had been today Higginbotham says, "It was the write, at the same time, in a national making for the three nights of playing. swingingest hand I ever played with," he A short time later, he was sent to began to get restless. magazine, an article entitled Some of My . Best Friends Are Enemies , illustrating a Cincinnati to study the tailoring busiOne of Higginhotham's favorite bands sensitive and keen judgment of the racial ness at the Cincinnati Colored Training of all time was the Chick Webb situation as applying to the Negro School. After finishing the short course, aggregation, and when trombonist musicians. . he returned to Atlanta to finish up his Jimmy Harrison's last illness took him Jack (JAY C.) HIGGINBOTHAM was education at Morris Brown, but he had out of the band, bassist Elmer James born in Atlanta, Ga., on May 11, 1906. taken to the Ohio city, and it wasn't long recommended Higginbotham to the His family owned a restaurant and was before he returned to work as a drummer-leader as a replacement. fairly well-to-do. He had an older brother, mechanic at the Cincinnati plant of After several months with Webb, the Garnet, who played trombone and was General Motors. Nights he spent Georgia. trombonist switched to the the coach of the football team at Morris gigging with Wesley Helvey's band, a Fletcher Henderson Orchestra and Brown University. He also had a sister local territory outfit that later featured remained until 1933. When Lucky Millindcr took over the leadership of the who was interested in his musical incli- trumpeter Jonah Jones. nations and bought him his first tromboThe young trombonist became a Mills Blue Rhythm Band in 1934, ne. The other musical Higginbothams regular member of the Helvey band Higginbotham, with his pal from the included, in later years, his niece, song- during 1924-25 and recalls the stars of early Russell days, Red Allen, went with writer Irene, now married and living in the group were trumpeters Theodore Millinder for several years. Then, in Brooklyn. (Wingie) Carpenter and Steve Dunn. 1937, they both rejoined Russell, whose Young Higginhotham's first instrument The three brass men hung around band at the time was fronted by Louis was a bugle he picked up for a dollar together and frequently visited with the Armstrong. Allen and Higginbotham finally left and with which he learned to play well- members of the Zack Whyte Orchestra Russell for good in 1940 and organized known tunes by ear when 13. On Sundays when the latter was hi town. he played the Poet and Peasant Overture One-armed Wingie Carpenter was the a small jazz group. During most of the on his bugle in the shape of his church. first to go farther north, and in 1916 he 1940s, some of the '50s (Higginbotham A couple of years later his sister put sent for Higginbotham to come on up worked with his own group for long $11 down on an old, caseless trombone and join the Gene Primus Band then periods in both. Cleveland and Boston), she found in a shop in Decatur, Ga. He playing at the Paradise Ballroom in and occasionally today the brass team of Allen and Higginbotham has been was now on his way, and the first tune Buffalo, N. Y. he learned to play on his new horn was A short time later Higginbotham went together more often than not. My Old Kentucky Home. with another Buffalo band led by pianist ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Al Nicholas played w. Red Allen in 1959 (look another photo p-86a (Red Allen´s scrapbook) due to p-58: Oct.58 Commodore Music Shop Farewell; Red Allen, Johnny Windhurst, Eddie Condon CD-1/17/59p31: “Red” Allen, one of nation's great orksters will come to Chicago´s Roberts Show Lounge - 63 CD-1/17/59p31: Chicago Nightery Hints'Name'Ork Parade - New Plan Would End Floor Show Policy At Café (about Roberts Show Lounge, reprint in Jazz Ad.Vol.6) photo on p.-62 : “Red” Allen, one of nation's great orkesters, out of Chicago for several seasons will likely be seen at Roberts Show Lounge in the new policy management is suggesting for its patrons 1/26/59 Mo., NYC., Spot Lite Bar - Camp Fund session with Red Allen as guest (NYAN-l/31/59p17) UNANIMOUS – A picture of all-around attentiveness as Red Allen elaborates on one of his after dinner jokes. This was the scene at the Monday Night Camp Fund affair held in the Spot Lite Bar. From left: Red Allen, Jean Anthony, Frank Lezama, Mary Archer, and Frank Correia, White Horse Scotch Represemntative. NYA-2/21/59p17: RED ALLEN AT THE METROPOLE Where ever Henry”Red”Allen appears an atmosphere of festivy prevails. The trumpet master was reminiscing , Friday night, in between shows at the Metropole, the Broadway jazz spot. There was a time, when he said you did not see an integrated combo, band or orchestra. There was a time when musicians, unlike the keys on the piano, refused to mix. There were exceptions to the rule, however. Back in the early '20's Jelly Roll Morton sat in with the New Orleans Rhythm Kings, an all white group. His name did not appear on a number of records he recorded with the group, but he was there. “Mixed groups,”Allen went on “became common in jazz groups in the late '20s and early '30s, but a large number of records they waxed together were shipped to Europe for distribution. The Chicago Rhythm Kings invited me to sit in with them several times and there were others.” “Fats Waller sat in with the Eddie Condon group” he said “but the man who may be responsible for making the public accept Negro and white bands is Benny Goodman. Benny hired tan musicians and enlisted the aid of Negro arrangers. Teddy Wilson, Lionel Hampton, Gene Krupa and Ben-ny Goodmanplayed together in Cali-fornia and the guests watched in awe.” Stanley Dance-J.J.-3/59: The Red Allen set mostly consisted of warhorses, but Sammy Price plays his sturdy, enduring, bluesy piano, and Buster Bailey added bass clarinet to excellent effect. March-59, one Sunday-afternoon a gig at the Glen in Bloomfield, N.J. – Red Allen A.St.; Jazz Music March-Apr 59/ Vol. 10/2 : Air Mail from N.Y.:........ At the Metropole, a group incl. Red Allen, J.C. Higginbotham,. Buster Bailey., Claude Hopkins and Sonny Greer plays evenings with the Tony Parenti trio. Weekends they're joined by Coleman Hawkins, J.C. Heard, Roy Eldridge and a pianist for afternoons and evenings. The Allen group does a gig Sunday afernoons at the Glen in Bloomfield N.J too........... Henry Red Allen and his missus celebrated their 29th anniversary on March 11 and he presented her with a mink stole. Red's still romping at the Metropole on Broadway, along with Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham and Sam Price. those are "natural giants." NYAN-4/4/59p16: 4/6/59 Mo.,NYC., Wells Music Bar Camp Fund Session with Red Allen (not on picture) & Dottie Dudley Organ Trio, Herb Flemning; Red Allen is mentioned as guest artist and prize winner of a bottle of Scotch; (NYAN-4/11/59p15) “CAUGHT IN THE ACT”-The Dottie Dudley Organ Trio, appearing at Well's Music Bar, was caught in one of its house stirring renditions at the Monday Night Camp Fund Affair last Monday night and the house guest literally turned out the place. Left to right are Dorothy Dudley, on the organ; Map Dudley, trumpetmellophone and fluggelhorn; George Edmonds, drums, and guest artist Herb Flemming on the trombone. Albert J. McCarthy - 64 JAZZ IMPRESSIONS U.S.A. – PART-2 The Metropole The Metropole Cafe on Seventh Avenue is the only place in New York City where one can hear mainstream jazz seven days a week. Officially, the musicy advertised is "Dixieland", but while the Red Allen band pla s numbers like the Saints all too often. both for their own pleasure and this listener's. the music as a whole is what we would call mainstream in this country. The area in which the Metropole is situated is fascinating in a horrible sort of way. It is at 48th Street. and a short walk downtown leads one to Times Square, the rough equivalent of Piccadilly in London. One passes a six foot waterfall advertising some product, while next to it puffs of smoke appear from a giant mouth under which the virtues of a certain brand of cigarette are catalogued. The seeker after the bizarre can enter a gallery of "curiosities", where torture instruments are displayed as a warning, the notice tells us, of "man's inhumanity to man." The notices outside show scantily glad young ladies in the image of Marilyn Monroe, all writhing in agony in the torture chairs. Inside, a number of those absorbing the warning seemed disappointed that this aid to realism was omitted. Then there are the novelty shops. These shops were a never failing source of wonder to me, and one speculates as to how they maintain a sufficient turnover to remain in business. "Surprise your friends" proclaimed one notice, and the surprise took the form of artificial excrement which "is sure to cause merriment at a party". Another notice advertised a girdle and brassiere set for five year olds—"just like mother's." The seeker after the unusual could certainly find much to amuse him, here, although what Mr. Khruschev would make of it all is best left to the imagination! From Times Square there are streets which have more cinemas than I have ever seen in one area before. Brightly lit, most of them proclaim the merits of dubious continental films (Brigitte Bardot seems to be enjoying a great vogue in New York City these days) or of horror epics. One placard tried to entice the reader inside by inviting him or her to "see a man eaten alive by a monster spider." This area is really the centre of commercial hucksterism and Piccadilly seems dull after it! One night Ruby Braff drove me around the area and gave an entertaining running commentary into the bargain. He pointed out a cinema that was, if anything, more garishly lit than the rest. and claimed that rats ran over one's feet inside! Whether the story was apocryphal or not I lacked the braveness to put to the test. However, this is departing somewhat from the Metro-pole. and it may be as well to get back to that subject. John Postgate has described the interior of the Metropole in a previous article, but it is simply a long bar with mirrors down the whole length of each wall. There is seating for those who want to eat or drink in more comfort than can be gained from hanging over the bar, but as this costs another fifty cents I preferred to stand most of the time. The musicians are on a raised platform behind the bar and spend their playing periods facing their own images in the mirrors on the opposite walls. Since I left I understand that the mirrors have been dispensed with and that the sound has improved considerably as a result. In his article John Postgate mentioned that the pianists spend a great deal of time craning their necks looking out of the door, and Claude Hopkins volunteered the explanation. He said that the drummers often play so loudly that it hurts his eardrums and that he adopts a sideways position to avoid getting the benefit of the full volume. American bars which feature some sort of entertainment are not places where clients are looked on with favour if they linger over their drinks, and the bartenders soon come along rattling one's glass ominously if hesitation is shown in drinking at the prescribed rate. The visitor, used to the more casual ways of British bars, is at first intimidated by this. but after a while finds himself caught between an uneasy awareness of the burliness of the bartenders and the knowledge that penury may be just around the corner. A whisky at the Metropole is 7/- a shot and a beer is 5/-. When I became known I was no longer bothered and was even, on two historic occasions, given a free drink (on one of these nights the bartender was himself drunk and had thrown caution to the winds). A musician passing when I was officially given a free drink was Jazz Monthly April-1959 p28 heard to mutter "it must be Christmas". In fairness to the bartenders it must be said that when one gets to know them they are both friendly and helpful, but their job is not one in which generosity is one of the virtues extolled by their employers. One should also add that the cost of maintaining four bands must be considerable. The musicians, needless to say. do not drink on the job, but go across the road to the "Copper N1‘ Rail" where the prices are about half that of the Metropole. comment that American beer is extremely weak may be taken as a sign of chauvinism. but such is the case. was actually extremely glad that this is so on many occasions, but ultimately Vic Dickenson showed me how to mix beers to get an approximation to a strong English brew. What I had heard about the Metropole from some American critics caused me to believe that I was going to enter some sort of musical hades, but quite where they get this impression cannot say. It is a fairly reasonable generalisation that most bars and clubs are hardly pleasant places to be in and the Metropole seems no worse than many others I saw. yThe gloom of Birdland is hardly any more agreeable and ver often the music there fits aptly with the surroundings. Whether the American critics have convinced themselves that the Metropole is as bad as some of them say it is I do not know. but they are certainly not in evidence there. Frank Driggs, Dan Morgenstern and Olivier Keller are the only people who are around regularly, although Nat Hentoff does get along when rigid work schedules permit. In all the time I was present I never saw any other critic on hand ("They only come down to see us when they want some information for their latest book" one disgruntled musician once told me). I am certainly not suggesting that it would be pleasant to spend a great deal of one's life at the Metropole, but it is certainly not as bad as some reports would have one believe. Music starts on weekdays at 1.30 in the afternoon. There are two groups working from this time until 7.30 in half hour sets. Tony Parenti leads the first and his trio is made up of himself. Charlie Queener on piano, and Freddie Stocks on drums. Parenti is at his best on ragtime numbers but the job gives him little opportunity for playing them. Freddie Stocks is an excellent drummer, somewhat in the Jo Jones tradition, and should be better known. The other trio has Louis Metcalfe on trumpet, Fred Washington on piano, and Zutty Singleton on drums. Metcalfe can still play well, but understandably enough does not stretch out much on this job. Washington is good on blues and ragtime numbers, while Zutty remains one of the finest drummers in jazz. The audiences in the afternoon are not very concerned with the music and these men must find the work extremely unrewarding on the whole. --------------------------******-----------------------The two bands that take over in the evening are led by Henry “Red” Allen and Cozy Cole and Sol Yaged. There have been changes since I was in the States, but the basic lineups are unaltered. These bands play from 7.30 to 3 a.m. (4 a.m. on Fridays), again alternating for half hour sets. Three times a night there is a jam session when both groups unite and bedlam is let loose. Each band has a night off on Monday and Tuesday respectively, and is replaced by the Coleman Hawkins-Roy Eldridge quintet. Henry Allen’s band has himself on trumpet, Herb Fleming on trombone, Buster Bailey on clarinet, Claude Hopkins on piano and Freddy Bonita on drums. They do, in fact, play many Dixieland numbers and a certain percentage of novelty themes, and one is never quite sure what one will hear from them. Allen himself is a natural showman and is extremely adept at handling audiences. His trumpet playing is extraordinarily powerful and he is something of an enigma-tic musician. Very often he plays down to the crowd – and who can blame him for this! – but now and then he will drop the showcasing and one hears some rewarding music. I must admit that I had never realised just how brilliantly he can play at present until I caught him in one or two good sets. His handling of ballads like I COVER THE WATER-FRONT, SUMMERTIME and SWEET LORRAINE is exem-plary, and his control of dynamics exceptional. He is also a very fine blues player and features numbers like WEST END BLUES and WILD MAN BLUES quite regulary. I do not think he has been well served by - 65 records in the past few years, with the exception of one or two tracks on the RCA LP of a couple years ago. In the spring of last year he made a tape for Soundcraft titled “SWEET MOODS OF JAZZ”, and this is very fine indeed. The numbers played are of the type of SUMMERTIME,MEAN TO ME and LONESOME ROAD and the supporting musicians include Coleman Hawkins and George Wettling. It would make a very welcome release in this country. Mr.Allen told me that he would enjoy the opportunity of playing in this country, and if he did come over there would be many critics who would be forced to re-evaluate their opinions on his playing. It is really shameful that with so many mediocre trumpeters getting one LP after another, a company does not give Henry Allen the opportu-nity of making one without dictating musical policy to him. Aside from his playing I found Mr.Allen a good source of information on New Orleans musicians, and it is to be hoped that it may be possible to get a book out of him one day. Until I had talked with him I had no idea just how much he had been around, and he has the advantage oft a very orderly mind when recollecting past experienced. One unsuspected item of information mentioned was that he had recorded with the Rev.J.M.Gates for Victor! And I am now getting full details of the session. The Metropole job is not one that will encourage any musician to play of his beet night after night, but given the right opportunity Henry Allen is one of the most sensitive and exciting trumpet players around. My stay in New York was made a great deal pleasanter by many kindness and courtesies that Mr.Allen extended to me. Buster Bailey remains one of the most brilliant technicians on the clarinet. A musician of his merit should be getting studio and recording work frequently, but the situation is such that good musicians are often overlooked for the safe-ly competent in these fields. Mr.Bailey features MEMPHIS BLUES, much as recorded on Stanley Dance’s Felsted LP, quite often, and, when the spirit moves him, is still an out-standing clarinetist. He also happens to be a very forthright person and I hope on my next visit to get him to agree to give an interview on many aspects of the music scene. One night I heard him playing bass clarinet on the job and he handles this rather clumsy instrument very well indeed. One would like to hear him record on this sometime. I shall refer to him again when dealing with the two recording sessions I was able to supervise. The quiet-spoken Claude Hopkins is obviously not in his element at the Metropole, but he plays solos on THREE LITTLE WORDS, MARIE, and other numbers associated with him over the years, that are excellent. I did have the opportunity of interviewing him for this magazine and the article will be published in a month or two. Mr.Hopkins has recorded for the United label in the past six months and when an outlet is available in this country readers will have the opportunity of hearing the LPs. When I was pre-paring one of my record dates Mr.Hopkins was extremely helpful over one matter, and he is yet another musician who helped to make my visit an enjoyable one. Incidentally, his hobby is woodwork, and his accomplishments in this sphere are impressive. … --------------------------******-----------------------The other band varied somewhat while I was in New York but the basic personnel was Sol Yaged on clarinet. Hal Singer on tenor, Al Williams on piano, Gene Ramey on bass and Cozy Cole (replaced by Oliver Jackson when he went on a tour following the success of Topsy) on drums. I hear that Claude Hopkins is now appearing with this group and that Sammy Price is with Allen. but these changes took place after I left. The two outstanding soloists were unquestionably Hal Singer and AI Williams. In the January issue Hal Singer's story was printed and there is little to add to that, but throughout all the time that I listened to him I was considerably impressed with Hal's excellent tone in the Hawkins-Byas tradition, his good ideas, and, above all, the manner in which he always swung. The group, particularly under Yaged's leadership, features a rather high proportion of Goodman numbers, but when there was an opportunity to play a ballad Hal took full advantage of it. His arrangement of Satin Doll was also very pleasant. Al Williams, despite two decades of playing. is not as well known in this country as he should be. He is a very good two- handed pianist who is versatile enough to cope with a boogie number without it sounding synthetic, and alternatively is quite at home in a modernish setting. He has had many jobs in his time and has recorded with groups as varied as Sonny Stitt's and rock 'n' roll units. The first impression one has of his playing is that of immense power allied to great swing. At a time when two-handed pianists are becoming increasingly rare it was very refreshing to hear him. He took part in the Vic Dickenson session which I supervised, but as I intend printing a full story on him I will leave other details of his career for another month. The third impressive member of the band was bassist Gene Ramey. Ramey is another musician who has had an extraordinarily varied career and for many years he played with modernist groups. Hey has a fine tone, makes a powerful contribution to any rh thm section. and is one of the few bass players who can take interesting solos. Frank Driggs is at present writing a feature article on Ramey which will appear in this magazine in due course, but British collectors should, if all goes well, have the opportunity of hearing Ramey when he comes across with Buck Clayton's band later this year. On Sunday afternoons and Monday and Tuesday evenings a relief band takes over and this was led by Coleman Hawkins and Roy Eldridge. The rhythm section consisted of Joe Knight on piano. Jimmy Lewis or Francesco Skeets on bass, and J. C. Heard on drums. Knight is an excellent pianist whose unobtrusive work is apt to be overlooked at first hearing. Both Lewis and Skeets are very good bass players (the number of outstanding bass players in the States is astounding). while Heard is an ideal forceful drummer for the group…. One evening at the Metropole Ben Webster came in when the Hawkins group was playing, and sat in. Eldridge was away at the time on tour with Ella Fitzgerald. and Charlie Shavers was on trumpet. The jam session that followed featured Shavers, Webster, Hawkins. Al Williams. Gene Ramey and Cozy Cole, and it was memorable. On a blues number Shavers played better than I have ever heard him on record. Another musician who deputised for Eldridge was Johnny Letman. Letman has had a varied career for two decades. appearing with Count Basie and Earl Hines at different times, and is a very good trumpeter. His tone reflects his admiration for Eldridge. but he can also play very good growl trumpet somewhat in the manner of the late Hot Lips Page. It is a sad commentary that such a versatile musician should be virtually unknown to the public at large, but collectors will have the opportunity of hearing him on one of the sessions made for Atlantic in October 1958. Finally a word of praise for Oliver Jackson, Cole's deputy for some months. Best known as a modernist drummer (he is on the Yusef Lateef Esquire LP), Jackson can also fit well into a mainstream group and swings unobtrusively and without fuss in such company. He is a young musician who could develop into a first-rate drummer in the next year or two. Summing up, it can he said that a great deal of the music at the Metropole is mediocre, with noisy drum solos and exhibitionist tricks much in evidence. However, despite the fact that playing such long hours before completely unsympathetic audiences (sometimes 1 felt that if they left the drummers banging away the crowd would hardly nonce the difference) might well kill am creativity the musicians have, the fact is that sometimes music of an exceptional quality can be heard there. The best time is the early hours of the morning, and it is as well to avoid week-end nights. Eldridge and Hawkins phi' consistent! brilliantly, and the regulars are excellent when the spirit moles them. If they coast along as a rule and sometimes showmanship takes precedence over musicianship. I can hardly see that anyone is in a position to castigate them. Playing before audiences who are normally totally unaware whether the music is good or bath' the only amazing thing is that the musicians can still play so well when they feel inclined to do so. Whatever one may privately feel about certain aspects of the Metropole, the fact is : that without it there would he nowhere left for these musicians tot earn a regular living. That they can rise above the circumstances to sometimes produce very tine music is a tribute to their integrity and talent. - 66 unknown dateApril/May-59; NYC., 5th Anniversary Red Allen & His All Stars at the Metropole, (Mamiyaflex pic by J.Lee) THE NATIONAL FOTO NEWS Vol.V, NO.28; 5/23/59 Sat., 920 Collingwood Blvd., Toledo 2, Ohio;Jerry Lee, NYC., A CAKE FOR A KING … A cake baked by Copper Rail Employees that weighed about 100 lbs. is held up by one of the finests guys in the music business, Henry “Red” Allen. National Foto-News puts him in No.I position for all laurels he has done for many patrons and lovely and great musicians, who perform nightly at New York's No.I amusement center, The Metropole All the world loves The Big man of the Trumpet, often called the New Satchmo Metropole All Stars 1959/69 : Sammy Price - Red Allen - Rufus“Speedy”Jones - Buster Bailey - Herb Flemming They played together at Newport 1959 but J.C. Higginbotham on trombone, look recorded session on p68 - 67 - - 68 6/14/59 Sun. NYC., Carnegie Hall: “Sidney Bechet Memorial Concert” with Edith Piaf; Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Red Allen, J.C. Higginbotham, Buster Bailey, Coleman Hawkins, Claude Hopkins, Zutty Singleton; Charlie Shavers Vic Dickenson, Sol Yaged, Cecil Scott; Willie”The Lion”Smith, Speedy Jones, Bob Wilbur, Teddy Wilson Trio; J.C. Heard, Panama Francis, Count Basie, Jo Jones; Charles Delauney guest of honor; tape was made BAA-6/20/59p15: JAZZ BASH FOR SIDNEY BECHET – N.Y.- More than 75 jazz musicians appeared Sunday at Carnegie Hall in a gigantic memorial jazz concert to Sidney Bechet, noted sax player who died of cancer last month in Paris. Proceeds will go to establish a memorial cancer fund in Bechet's name. French chanteuse Edith Piaf was guest of honor. Among the musicians were Louis Armstrong, Count Basie, Dizzy Gillespie, Coleman Hawkins, Zutty Singleton, Sol Yaged, Henry (Red) Allen, Willie The Lion Smith, Buster Bailey and Jo Jones. Down Beat 6/25/59: IN MEMORIAM: It was to be something unusual in the way of memorial jazz concerts in New York. For one thing, when pianist Sam-my Price finished organizing it, some-thing like 50 jazz musicians had agreed to play the Sidney Bechet benefit. Among the names Coleman Hawkins, Vic Dickenson, Henry (Red) Allen, Wilbur deParis and his band, Noble Sissle - one of the few leaders who ever had Bechet as a sideman - and Teddy Wilson. But proceeds of the concert will not go to Bechet’s family, as is usually the case considerable sum of money and two villas in France. They have no need of the with benefits for dead musicians, who too concert’s proceeds. Instead, the money will be turned over to the Cancer Control League of France…. often die broke. Bechet left his family a mid June until 6/30/59 New Orleans - Red Allen vacation; NYAN-6/13/59p14: RED ALLEN & HIS NATURAL GIANTS finally took a vacation from the Metropole, he going to New Orleans until June 30. Illinois Jacquet replaces Red while he's away... 7/5/59 Sun., NPT. Jazz Festival, CBS-bc/TV - "RED"ALLEN ALL STARS: Red Allen (t,v) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Sammy Price (p) Kenny Burrell (g) Lloyd Trottman (b) Rufus Jones (d) added: *JACK TEAGARDEN (tb,v) *Dan Goldie (t) (look photo on p-66 but there with Herb Flemming(tb)) according the press nine sides were taped; details wanted 0:29 introduction from Newport Jazz Festival AVID(UK-2CD)AMSC1049/RA-CD-20a/ 7:28 BALLIN’ THE JACK (Smith-Burris) --/ --/ 10:48 YELLOW DOG BLUES (Handy-Pace) --/ --/ 7:38 THE PRICE IS RIGHT (Sammy Price) --/ --/ RA-CD-12/ --/(look youtube – <hoffmannjazz>) 7:53 *I FOUND A NEW BABY (Sp.Williams-J.Palmer) --/ 4:03 *BUGLE CALL RAG -vRA to leave out (Pettis-Meyers-Schoebel) RA-CD-13/ BAA:8/1/59p15: 63.000 FANS, 900 SCRIBES AT NEWPORT ON FRIDAY night's program, Johnny Dankworth, of London, and his full orchestra opened the session. Louis Armstrong's associates over the years such old time greats as Jack Teagarden, Bobby Hackett, Red Allen and J.C.Higginbotham, Buster Bailey, and Claude Hopkins, took over the spot allotted to Armstrong on the Sunday night program. Jack Teagarden's playing of “High Society,” and then Henry ”Red”Allen, Higginbotham Buster Bailey and Claude Hopkins brought down the house as they all played Louis' old favorite “Yellow Dog Blues ” CD-6/13/59p19 (nearly the same 4/7/59p14) : orchestra; Duke Ellington and orchestra: Days Brubeck Quartet, featuring Paul Dermond; Dizzy Gillespie Quintet; Stan Kenton and orchestra; The Modern Jazz Quartet; Dakota Staton; Jimmy Rushing; Erroll Garner. Also, The Kingston Trio; the Johnny Dankworth Orchestra from London, England, The Fur Freshmen; George Shearing; Ahmed Jamal Trio; Lambert, Hendricks and Ross; Buck Clayton, Pee Wee Russell and Bud Freeman; Oscar Peterson Trio; Stab Getz; Phil Napoleon, and the: Newport Youth Band, under the direction of Marshall Brown, composing the best teen-age musicians from the Greater New York area. (The complete long review about the whole Festival is reprinted in JAZZ AD. Vol.3 p1022); an interesting addition is to be read in the Higginbotham-article J.J.Jan.68 on page 180 of this book; ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Count Basie And Duke To Be Aired Over CBS From Newport Festival For the second consecutive year, the CBS Radio Network will broadcast exclusively four major jazz concerts from Newport Jazz Festival in Rhode Island on July 2,3,4 and 5 at 8:05-9:00 PM; WBBM is the Chicago outlet. Mitch Miller will serve as host for these programs which will emanate directly from Freabody Park, scene of the Festival. The broadcasts will present climatic performances of the following orchestras, instrumentalists, singers and combinations: Louis Armstrong All-Start; Count Basie and - 69 undated 1959, NYC.; ......-TV-show: Red Allen (t) J.C.Higginbotham (tb) Pee Wee Russell (c1) Willie"The Lion"Srnith (p) Irv Manning (b) George Wettling (d) the book of Milt Hinton-David Berger-Holly Maxson: "Over time; the jazz photographs of Milt Hinton,"1991 shows a photograph of this TV-studio band without details ................... ................... details wanted Irv Manning – George Wettling – Willie The Lion Smith – Pee Wee Russell -Red Allen – J.C.Higginbotham - 70 George Melly "In my opinion" J.J.-7/59 about "HOW DO THEY DO...": One of the great dangers in absolute jazz criticism is the part nostalgia plays with the critical faculties. One can not judge sounds as one does a steak-this one is better than that. Nostalgia always enters into it. That Red Allen record, no one playing very well and that extraordinary vocal chorus; so terribly period. It has the charm of the "Boy Friend", where one is quite seduced by the cloche hats, or Mr. Baldwin's bowler and anything that happened around that time. One can't really judge it as music at all-it is merely a part of life at that time. The whole era brings up nostalgia. I have already got to feel that way about early bop. I hated it when I first heard it, but somehow one now feels a certain nostalgia for it. It's a sort of comic disease. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------UK-alto saxophonist Bruce Turner "In My Opinion" J.J.9-59 about "MAKE A COUNTRY BIRD..": Well, I must admit there's a lot of nostalgia in that for me - which will certainly influence my appreciation. It just brings back the old days - it's one of the first jazz sounds I heard. I think that this was about the first time you had a mature 'band sound' as distinct formgoing back to 1926 - people like Louis and Bix being surrounded by people not nearly as good as they were. This Henry Allen-Luis Russell contingent was a 'complete' band-everyone in it was good. The rhythm section too, for that type of jazz, is ideal. You couldn't get a better bass player than Pops Foster for that type of music, and I refuse to say that he's dated. It's a special sort of rhythm and you've got to adjust yourself to that very gutty bass rhythm. A closing thing I'd like to say is that in my opinion Henry Allen is about the second best trumpeter of all time. Of course, one gets carried away with enthusiasm and starts raving about things, but I honestly believe that next to Louis you'd have to go a long way to find a more personable end creative trumpet player than Allen at his very best. Finally, listening to Charlie Holmes now is not as pleasurable as listening to Hodges or Bechet-, yet he reminds me of both. He seems to have been the founder of an alto style-a very fine player. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------"HENRY 'RED, ALLEN" by Ken Colyer in Jazz Times 3-12/ Dec.66: I was first introduced to Red Allen outside the 'Metropole' said. "A minor tragedy" I replied, "And two family sized In New York by his nephew Alvin Alcorn. I was touring bitters for me and Ken" calls out Red. with the George Lewis Band at the time. "Ken Colyer!" he Always overshadowed by Louis Armstrong, as were many said, and without thinking I replied, "You don't know me other fine trumpet players, some of whom succumbed, forsurely". With no more ado he went back into the Metropole got about their own styles and decided that if they were to get and came back with one of my records. "That's you isn't it!" anywhere they would have to play as much like Louis as he enquired, "Fine, fine". possible, all the licks and phrases carefully copied. I had always looked upon Red as one of the giants, some Among these he has retained his own individually. For lyric people would hang a man for making one bad record or warmth and beauty of phrase as portrayed in his solo on the playing one bad session, and most good jazz is a thing of a Luis Russell Orchestra's FEELING DROWSY he can't be moment, is blown into the air and is gone. But Red has put beat. The more one plays this record, the more beautiful it enough down on record to prove that when he is ticking right becomes, and Red's playing endures and will be great for all he is one of the masters. time. This is important because we of our generation are Red is a genial giant with the open, warm hearted friendly- fortunate enough to be living at the end of an era that will ness that is common among all New Orleanians. never be repeated, and we should appreciate men like RedI once asked him why his father's brass band had never been Allen in their own time. recorded - he was buying bitters all round in a pub in Ham- So, if he is around your way anytime look him up, and to mersmith during an interval - " Nobody was interested" he quote Withney Balliett, "Hooray for Red". 7/21/59 Tu. NYC., St.Paul Apostle Roman Catholic Church, Columbus Ave and 59th St. & St.Raymond Cementary, Bronx – Billie Holiday funeral services incl. Benny Goodman, Gene Krupa, Henry Red Allen, Joe Williams, Roy Eldridge, Tony Scott, CharlieShavers, Joe Jones, Teddy Wilson, Juanita Hall, Mary Lou Williams, Mal Waldron, Don Shirley, Buddy Rogers, Frankie Freedom, Leonard Feather, Joe Glaser, her husband Louis McKay, her half-sister, Key Kelly; NYT: 7/22/59: … The influential jazz singer, known as Lady Day, was mourned at a solemn requiem mass, sung by the church's choir of ten voices. About 500 of the mourners, who could not be accommodated inside the packed church, stood on the sidewalks. Six pallbearers carried the body in a heavy bronze coffin into the church. The singer was buried in her favourite pink lace stage gown and pink gloves. More than 10.000 persons had viewed the body at the Universal Funeral Chapel, Lexington Avenue and Fifty-second Street. … PC-8/1/59p24: Billie Holiday Wears Gardenians Into Grave; (two longer articles are reprinted in JAZZ AD.Vol3p1024 week of 8/8/59, N.Y.C., Smalls' Paradise – Bennie Green Group & Red Allen; NYAN-8/15/59p14: … The crowd ate it up last week at Smalls’ when Red Allen sat in with Bennie Green and his group for some exciting sounds.. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------addenda to page 52: MAX JONES – Melody Maker, 1/3/81 (with photo) – DARING ALLEN 20 YEARS LATER - HENRY RED ALLEN, COLEMAN HAWKINS - Jazz Groove 002; (A) 1958"Stormy Weather." & (B) 1957 DIXIE JAMFEST HENRY Red, one of the most important In the later years his playing was often dynamics and the range of his horn, and trumpet players to come up in New described as uneven, exuberant, lacking his originality seem to me just about Orleans after Louis Armstrong, continu- in logical continuity and so forth, but on exemplary." ed to make fine, original-sounding jazz this LP - and especially on the A side - Both sides of this album show these records from time to time until the Sixties. he is heard in relaxed and extremely virtues convincingly, though Red is less He, like Lester Young, produced a good form. subdued on some of the second-side tracks. smaller proportion of outstanding discs From "Mean To Me," with its restrai- The support, from Hawkins, Warren a after the Forties (see last week's Young ned but heated trumpet, and the contem- and company; is particularly sympathetic review), but unlike Lester maintained his plative "Lonesome Road" with most on the first half; and Hawk again blows physical vigour until quite shortly before imaginative Allen passages, to "All Of beefily (but without great inspiration) on his death in 1967, as readers who heard Me" and the muted stuff on "Tea", the the '57 set. Yaged is effective in the him here can confirm. On this LP he trumpet is almost consis-tently gripping. Metropole-stype setting, and both delivers several enchanting choruses and Allen's harmonic approach, always rhythm sections kick the proceedings some moving leads. somewhat daring, still sounds pretty along more than adequately. These two sessions, said to be issued progressive today and his control of tone The final cut, "Stormy Weather," on disc for the first time, go back more was similarly impressive. Hear the returns us to the excellent '58 date and than 20 years to the period when Red opening of "Summertime" to check this. the cloudy-toned Red with the slightly Allen was a fixture at New York's Martin Williams once wrote of Red oblique version of Louis Armstrong's old Metropole, baking lustily if somewhat that "The ease with which Allen handles melodic conception. Certainly this second too impetuously. rhythms, time and space, the way he uses in the Jazz Groove series is worth hearing. - 71 - Intermission chapter : KID ORY with RED ALLEN 1959 7/19/59 Los Ang., KID ORY'S CREOLE JAZZ BAND / RED ALLEN-KID ORY ORCH. : Red Allen(t, v) Kid Ory (tb,v) Bob McCracken (cl) Cedric Haywood (p) Frank Haggerty (g) Charles Olden or *Marty Corb (b) Alton Redd (d.v) 26419-1 26420-1 26421-2 26422-2 26423-2 26424-2 26425-1 26426-3 26427-1 26428-1 26429-1 26430-1 36431-1 26432-2 8:34 5:10 5:43 5:23 5:25 3:38 4:42 5:18 5:02 5:35 5:02 5:41 5:06 4:50 (Williams) *TISHOMIINGO BLUES *I WISH I WAS IN PEORIA (Woods-Rose-Dixon) *KEEP OFF KATIE'S HEAD -vKO (Ory) CHRISTOPHER COLUNBUS (Berry-Razaf) SOME OF THESE DAYS -vAR (S.Brooks) (Razaf-Garland) *IN THE MOOD LAZY RIVER –vAR (Carmichael-Arodin) COME BACK SWEET PAPA (Bauduc-Haggart) SAN (McPhail-Michels) TUXEDO JUNCTION (Dash-Johnson-Hawkins-Feyn) *AIN'T MISBEHAVIN´ -vAR (Waller-Brooks-Razaf) *I GOT RHYTHM (G.& I.Gershwin) (Waller-Razaf) *HONEYSUCKLE ROSE *BLUES FOR JIMMY (Ory) /Verve V/ Verve St/Barclay/Metro(G)/Mosaic189-2/ /St-1018 /-711080 / ……. / 2682000/-CD X 8set/ RA-CD-21/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ -1020 / / -3664 / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ 1018 /-711080 / / --- / --/ --/ 1020 / / -3664 / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ 1018 /-711080 / / --- / --/ --/ 1020 / / -3664 / --- / --/ --/ 1018 /-711080 / / --- / --/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --/ C.H.Garrigues on Verve-1018: ALLEN meets ORY ! …With his searing, poignant, sometimes raucous tone, Allen is precisely the sort of trumpeter with whom Ory likes to work, if only because it leaves him free to express an unusual lyricism on his own horn. Once I asked Ory about his reputation as a cantankerous leader: a man who would sometimes spoil a side-man's prettiest solo with a blast from his trombone. The Kid's face crinkled up into its mass of grinwrinkles. "Oh, no, no, no," he said deprecatingly. "Sometimes the band gets a little dead, I just give them a little boost with my horn." Allen - like Oliver and Armstrong - will never need a "little boost" from Ory's horn. Instead, he frees Ory, and the whole band, to "play pretty," when the time is ripe. Listen for example, to Ory's "BLUES FOR JIMMY" on this date. If Ory ever loved one of his musicians it was Jimmy Noone, his great clarinetist. On the night after Jimmy died in 1944, the Kid sat down and wrote BLUES FOR JIMMY and played it on his next nationwide broadcast-one of the series he was doing for Orson Welles. You may have, heard it many times since but you have never heard it as it is played here. Clarinetist MCracken's solo is a panegyric which Noone himself might have been proud to play; then comes Allen's trumpet softened can be:"We were New Orleans revive what other man have made. Ory in tribute and Ory's trombone , singing its and Allen, and the other men on this men, he and I !" song of sorrow for his friend and giving way Perhaps the point of it all (and the date have always been too busy to go to bassist Morty Corb's bowed dirge. And point of the record) is this: that back and "revive." And that is why then-perhaps the proudest tribute of them allthe music of the past can only Kid Ory's music is as new, as fresh, as a double blast on Ory's trombone which, just become stereotyped or sterile vivid today as it was when King hinting at the memory of the -----traditional when men seek to go back and Oliver joined the band in 1914. "return from cemetery" says as proudly as ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Albert McCarthy about HKV-CLP1329, in Jazz Monthly 5/60: SISTER KATE. Ory is as expected; his solos predictable but As with most Ory releases of the past few years, after the apt in this context. McCracken is a competent performer with opening ensemble theme there are solos by the horn men and a style that owes as much to Benny Goodman as to any pianist, with a chorus or two of ensemble at the close. The traditional clarinettist. The rhythm section is adequate, ensemble playing is generally good, despite the tendency for although Redd's off-beat drumming is totally lacking in a McCracken to be overshadowed, but there is no hiding the variety and at times his tempos are unsteady. Haywood is a fact that the front line men make somewhat illmatched pleasant if unexceptional soloist, while Haggerty's one solo on TISHOMINGO is agreeable. partners. Allen plays under wraps throughout, seldom venturing the Generally this is a pleasant enough LP, although it lacks any imaginative flights, that I heard from him at the Metropole. great impact. Readers interested in traditional jazz should He plays very well despite this and achieves a nice tonal hear it for themselves, but there are superior examples of Ory in the catalogue. balance with Ory in ensemble . His best solo as such is on -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Al McCarthy about HMV CLP1422/CSD1342 "WE'VE GOT RHYTHM",in Jazz Monthly 4/61: The inclusion of Red Allen on an Ory date will obviously first chorus on several tracks - and certainly the whole date affect the character of the music, for although his New swings more. McCracken is not a particularly original Orleans background stands him in good stead for such a clarinetist and is by no means the equal of Howard, but one session, he is, and has been for many years, essentially a must say in fairness that he plays above himself on these swing musician. The numbers selected by Ory here tracks, contributing very agreeable solos to CHRISTOPHER presumably were chosen with this fact in mind ... On this date and I GOT RHYTHM in particular. Ory is his usual extrovert Ory has used riffs more than usual-Haywood's neat, bouncy self and on SAN one realises that his melodic concept, solos are aided by the horn men moving in behind after the although simple, is based on a sound consideration of the - 72 nature of the number being performed. Tony Standish - HMV CSD-1342, in Unfortunately, no such high praise can Haggerty takes a couple of pleasant JazzJournal 3,/61: Although Red Allen be heaped on this rhythm section. They chorded solos, but the truth is that Allen and Kid Ory share a common New do a workmanlike job (Corb is a vast it head and shoulders above the other Orleans background, for almost three improvement on Oden) but one cannot men as a soloist. He plays extremely well decade they have travelled widely diver- help but wonder what kind of job Zutty, throughout, although under wraps on gent paths - Ory out West, in retirement Al Morgan and Johnny St Cyr would several tracks, bursting forth to reveal his for a time and then part of the New Orleans have done. Surely such a front line full range on TUXEDO JUNCTION, "revival", Red in the East, deeply invol- demands an equally talented rhythm ved in the swing era,. with a name for section to do it full justice? SAN and LAZY RIVER. Allen is one of the most imaginative florid and sometimes taste-less playing. The old swing era favourites, "Cristopher trumpeters in jazz and his neglect in the Because of this, a certain musical incom- Columbus" and "Tuxedo" are the best past years is astonishing. A master of patibility might have been expected. In tracks - for the intelligent and meaningful dynamics, he maintains an evenness of fact. nothing is further from the truth. On use of riffs, for really superb solos from tone in all registers, and his varying of this LP, as in person, they sound like men Ory and Allen, and for the coherency of phrase length and his ability to constant- who have been together all their lives. the performances as a whole - if this was ly produce unexpected variations makes Red's playing is again a revelation. The an unrehearsed band it doesn't sound like all his solos unusually rewarding to hear. disciplines of Ory's New Orleans style it, and we can only guess that the session At no point on this LP does he resort to seem to have impressed him. Gone are all was done after their European tour. Each the tricks that can sometimes mar his but a few of his flashy tricks and merely track has mainly similarly rewarding recorded performances (an excessive use decorative phrases, and without them he moments and only three have serious of runs is one of his faults), and because is one of the most expressive and truly flaws: Alton Redd is a good blues he is heard to such advantage the LP is inventive trumpeters playing today. He shouter, but his vocals on the otherwise recommended. If I have dealt with Allen has everything: jazz tone, technique allied excellent "River" and "Some of These at length it is because he is so poorly to a vivid imagination, and a natural Days" can only be called grotesque, represented on record in recent years, but ability to swing. Ory, too. has, these while the closing ensemble on "Rhythm" it should not be forgot-ten that Ory's qualities, though his imagination are rather messy. But these are direction is responsible for so much that manifests itself more today in the placing momentary distractions on a record is good on the record. An enterprising and timing of a set of stock phrases. which pips the "Plays W.C. Handy" record company should now give Allen Together with clarinettist McCracken - a album as the best Ory has made since he the chance to make an LP with musicians sympathetic and tasteful player - these two signed with Granz. But it is still not the veterans make a wellnigh perfect front line. best he could have made. T.S of his own choice. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------H.Panassié about Verve-MGV 1018 in Bul.hcf No.102/11-60 his presentation of the first theme on Christopher Columbus, Kid Ory has once again made an outstanding record. His trom- did you ever hear any musician make more out of these bone playing and even his presence have a magnetic impact on phrases from Christopher Columbus? fellow musicians, which gives them an extraordinary strong Red Allen, as always when he plays with Ory, is at his very foundation to build there playing on. On this record he is best. He is more laid back than usual, and even more tasteful. wonderfully backed by Alton Redd, whose drumming, free of His sound is perfectly recorded (much better than Louis any affects, gives an irresistible swing to the whole band. I Armstrong's is on most of his more recent records). He takes remember people attending the 1960 (sic) Paris concerts and a longer solo on I Got Rhythm, playing three choruses in a remarking about Redd: "He does nothing for me". (because he row. The first one, muted, is simple and easy, Allen then did not do any breaks or flourishes). A typical white reaction, takes the mute out and plays in the trumpet's low register far removed from any "jazz" feeling! "He does nothing for ME" (imitating surprisingly well Kid Ory's sound) on the next ! Always ME! You would never hear a black person speak that eight bars, nicely developing during the next sixteen bars, and way (except those pseudo-intellectuals that ape the whites). then playing exuberantly for the remainder of his solo. It is a What really matters to a black is what the drummer brings to fact that Allen is not gifted with the art of developing his the BAND. If the drummer gives the other musicians the swing ideas as rigorously as great trumpeters like Sidney de Paris, they need, the black listener would be fully satisfied, having Buck or Jonah. Another fact is that he does not swing as thus received all he might wish for. It takes the white's intensely, he is as energetic as can be, but his full sound and misunderstanding, and his obsession to split hairs up to the phrases bring arousing life to the band. level where he will dissociate things which cannot be regarded In a time of underpowered trumpeters, it is quite gratifying to as apart from one another. To bear such judgments when rest one's ears listening to Red Allen. listening to jazz, the black will momentarily forget his own ego The other two soloists, Bob McCracken on clarinet and and make one with the band, whereas the white will not be able even Cedric Haywood on piano, are not great, but Alton to rid himself of his ego, he will quibble, and so necessarily Redd's swinging drumming maintains a constant appeal, not remains on the outside looking in. to mention the little phrases, riffs and punctuations that Red Even more than Alton Redd's drumming, Kid Ory's ensemble Allen and Kid Ory play during the clarinet choruses. This is trombone playing MAKES this record. It's extraordinary the one of the elements that make Ory's playing far superior to way the Kid makes everyone swing by just laying a few notes most of today's pathetic "Jam Sessions": there is an almost or pulling a glissando ( the best trombone player is still several constant collective creation. During Alton Redd's enjoyable thousand miles behind Ory when it comes to making the most vocal chorus on Some of These Days, it is a pleasure to hear out of a glissando). When one thinks of the incurable idiots who the others swinging like mad behind him. Long lives Kid Ory! dare print in "Jazz Hot" (No 170):" Almost everyone agrees that ------------------------------------------------------------------------Kid Ory is the worst trombone player in the history of jazz"!!! It Verve-3664 / Bul.hcf No.116/3-62: Four of these numbers is true that their leader, the intellectually underdeveloped P. Z. have already been issued in France on EPs (See Bulletin No. No.1 once claimed that Ory did not swing, DID NOT SWING! 96), even so I have to point out that this collection with In Louis Armstrong had a ball playing with Kid Ory, it's up to you, The Mood and Peoria rank among the best readings in the series, (Tishomingo Blues, even if it does not lack good you can make your choice between P. Z. or Louis Armstrong? And don't you try and tell us that Ory cannot play solos, listen moments, is not as well rounded). This session benefits with a to his chorus on Some of These Days or on I Got Rhythm, and far better than average recording: Kid Ory's trombone sounds please let me know whatever could be missing in these superb delightful. It is a fact that Ory has a gift to make Henry Allen solos. "Ory sticks too close to the theme, repeats the same phrase play on record as he never did before: In the Mood and too often?" Don't you know what is jazz? If you felt the swing, Peoria may very well be the most swinging and inspired if you were sensitive to Kid Ory's wide, full, deep sound (one of recordings Allen has ever made. Alton Redd's constant back the most beautiful, the most characteristic "Jazz" sounds of all beat (so very displeasing to Masters Critics) do wonders on time), you would just have to hear him play a few notes to be these records. Even Bob McCracken plays his clarinet better satisfied, and be happily unwilling to hear him play any other than he usually does! note. Listen to his first muted chorus on Tuxedo Junction, and This record has been issued in Great Britain on Columbia CLP 132-9, both issues are of the same good quality. - 73 Cheers for Red Allen , Whitney Balliett: Dinosaurus in the Morning (p.188-192) THE PRE-EMINENCE of Louis Armstrong from 1925 to 1935 had one unfortunate effect: it tended to blot out the originality and skill of several contemporary trumpeters who, though they listened to Armstrong, had pretty much gone their own way by 1930. These included among others, Bobby Stark, Joe Smith, Jabbo Smith (no relation), Bill Coleman, and Henry (Red) Allen. Stark and Joe Smith are dead. Jabbo Smith, a scarifying musician, lives in Milwaukee and performs rarely. Coleman, in Europe, still displays much of his grace. But Allen, the most steadfast of the three, and a distinct influence on Roy Eldridge, who taught Dizzy Gillespie, who taught Miles Davis, and so forth, is playing (usually in New York) with inure subtlety and warmth than at any other time in his career. This is abundantly evident in two fairly recent and rather odd releases, "Red Allen meets Kid Ory" and "We've Got Rhythm: Kid Ory and Red Allen" (Verve), in which Allen, lumped with second- and third-class musicians, plays with a beauty and a let's-get-this-on-the-road obstinacy that transform both records into superior material. A tall, comfortably oval-shaped man of fiftyfour, with a deceptively sad basset-hound face, Allen, born in Algiers, Louisiana, has had a spirited career, despite the shadows he has been forced to work in. He played briefly with King Oliver in 1927, and two years later he joined Luis Russell, another Oliver alumnus. Russell's band was possibly the sweetest, hottest and most imaginative group of its time. It was also, thanks to Russell's arrangements and rhythmic innovations and to Allen's already exploratory solos, a considerably advanced one. In 1933, Allen joined Fletcher Henderson, with whom he continued his avant-garde ways, and after a period with the Blue Rhythm Band he came face to face in 1937 with Goliath himself when he become a practically silent member of Louis Armstrong's you-go-your-way, I'll-gomine big band, a group kept afloat by Sid Catlett, J.C. Higginbotham, Charlie Holmes, and the leader. Since 1940, Allen has led a succession of often excellent small groups, which have included Higginbotham, Edmond Hall, Don Stovall (alto saxophone), and Alvin Burroughs. Allen's recording activity has been prolific; he was particularly active during the thirties, when he set down fifty or sixty numbers with small groups, some of which were unabashed attempts to make money ("The Miller's Daughter Marianne," "The Merry-Go-Round Broke Down, " "When My Dream Boat Comes Home") and. some of which were, and are, first rate jazz records ("Why Don't You Practice What You Preach," "There's a House in Harlem for Sale" "Rug Cutter's Swing," "Body and Soul," and "Rosetta"). Lamentably, only two or three of these, along with two classic sides made in 1939 with Lionel Hampton, are now available. Allen's style had just about set by the time he joined Russell. There were traces in it of Oliver and Armstrong, but more apparent were its careless tone, its agility, and a startling tendency to use unprecedentedly long legato phrases and strange notes and chords that jazz musicians hadn't, for the most part, had the technique or courage to use before. Allen's playing also revealed an emotion and a partiality to the blues that often seemed to convert everything he touched into the blues. But his adventurousness and technique weren't always in balance; he hit bad notes, he blared, and he was ostentatious. Once in a while he would start a solo commandingly and then, his mind presumably going blank, would suddenly falter, ending his statement in a totally different mood and tenor, as if he were attempting to glue parts of two unmatchable solos together. By the mid-forties Allen's work had, in fact, turned increasingly hard and showy - he fluttered his valves, used meaningless runs, and affected a stony tone and this peculiar shrillness continued into the fifties. Then, six or so years ago, Allen made a pickup recording with Tony Parenti, the clarinettist, for Jazztone, and, not long after, one for Victor with Higginbotham, Coleman Hawkins, and Cozy Cole, and a remarkable new Allen broke into view. Perhaps sheer middle-aged physical wear - a reluctance to blow so hard, a reluctance to try and prove so much - was the reason. Or perhaps he had been listening to younger and milder trumpeters like Miles Davis and Art Farmer. For his tone has become softer and fuller, he shies away from the upper register (he spends a good deal of time inflating sumptuous balloons in the lowest register), his customarily long figures are even longer, his sensuous, mid-thirties affection for the blues has again become dominant and he often employs harmonies that would please Thelonious Monk. In short he gives the impression not of hammering at his materials from the outside but, in the manner of Lester Young and Pee Wee Russell, of transforming them insistently if imperceptibly from the inside, like a mole working just under the grass. The results, particularly in slower tempos (the old shrillness sometimes recurs in faster speeds), can be unbelievably stirring. An Allen solo in a slow blues may go like this. He will start with a broad, quiet, shushing note, pause, repeat the note, and, using almost no vibrato, fasten two more notes onto it, one slightly higher and one slightly lower, pause again (Allen's frequent use of silences is another new aspect of his work, as is his more expert use of dynamics), repeat and enlarge the second phrase a little way down the scale, and, without a rest, get off a legato phrase, with big intervals, that may shatter into a rapid run and then be reformed into a dissonant blue note, which he will delightfully hold several beats longer than one expects; he then finishes this with a full vibrato and tumbles into a quick, low, almost under-the-breath flourish of half a dozen notes. Such a solo bears constant re-examination; it is restless, oblique, surprising, lyrical, and demanding. It seizes the listener's emotions, recharges them, and sends them fortified on their way. The painting of Allen with the venetable Kid Ory is curious, to say the least. Allen is a modernish swing musician, and Ory is one of the last representatives of genuine New Orleans style. His solos are gruff paraphrases of the melody, while Allen's are intricate temples of sound. Moreover, Allen's leisurely, independent melodic lines are far too spacious to fit within the limitations of the New Orleans ensemble. But perhaps all this is to the good. Ory's sandpaper tone and elementary patterns tend to set off Allen's housetop-tohousetop swoops, and since Allen can't, or won't, adapt himself to the ensemble, he simply solos throughout most of the recordings, which gives us twice as much of him. By and large, the first of the Verve records is the better. Of the seven numbers, all standards, three - "Blues for Jimmy," "Ain't Misbehavin'," and "Tishomingo Blues" present Allen at his peak. In fact, his single-chorus solo in the slow "Blues for Jimmy" is faultless. This is nearly true of his work on the Waller tune, which is full of blue notes and wind-borne figures. (Puzzlingly, neither of the two vocals is by Allen, who, in addition to his other merits, is one of the handful of true jazz singers. His voice is in between Armstrong's and Jelly Roll Morton's, and because of its almost feline, back-of-the-beat phrasing it has long foretold his playing of today.) The second session contains seven more standards, which are notable for Allen's playing in "Some of These Days," in which he tries a few teetering but generally successful auld-langsyne upper register handstands; for, in "Christopher Columbus," his muted chorus, which is followed by an open-horn one that begins in his lowest, or trombone, register; and for his three remarkably sustained choruses in the medium-tempo "Lazy River." The rest of the band stands around and watches, so to speak, and only the drummer, Alton Redd, gets in the way. - 74 John S.Wilson about WE'VE GOT RHYTHM Rating**** (Verve 1020) in Down Beat 9/15/60): This one is rated primarily for the resurgent Allen, who is The rhythm section has that heaviness that is typical of Ory's magnificent all through these pieces. This is the Allen who bands, but it is a rolling, loping kind of heaviness that serves plays with an exciting blend of control and fire and with no to give the band a very emphatic propulsion. suggestion of the flabby excesses of which he has proved The only really weak point in the group (barring Redd's capable in the last 20 years. There is beauty, shading, crisp-ness, singing, which is just dismal) is the piano solo work of sensitivity, and sudden spurts of intense drive in all his work Haywood, which is too light and watery for this lusty group. here, whether he is leading, soloing, or backing. The numbers follow the pattern of the previous Ory-Allen The band with which he works is, shall we say, service-able. album on Verve-the emphasis is on tunes from the swing-era McCracken is a capable and knowledgeable clarinettist, Ory is repertory instead of the battered old traditionals. It works out Ory (and there are moments of strong merit in his deliberately extremely well, particularly with Allen present, because he is a overemphatic way of doing things). big-voiced swinger. No Dixiecat. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Graham Boatfield about HMV CLP-1329(=Verve-1018) in Jazz Journal 4/60: This is not the best Kid Ory recording. It would be idle, even a But Ory's standard is always high, and this record is good by trifle idolatrous, to pretend that the presence of Henry Allen - any measure. Definitely one to buy and to play time and again. flown out by Norman Granz, unused to the band, unpractised Many enthusiasts will get this record for Red Allen's work, they in the idiom of survivalist jazz - could make all that difference. will not be disappointed. It contains some of his best playing Kid Ory has a long history of band leadership. He is (part at for years. Considering the fact that there was no rehearsal, it is least) a Frenchman, and knows the meaning of authority. He a fantastic accomplishment. From the first jaunty impact of "In has put his own firm stamp on every band which has been The Mood" one gets the impression of the jovial and athletic assembled in his name. presence of Allen. Haywood's raggy piano is well in evidence. We can look on this record as a souvenir of the Ory tour of Ory is his usual self, better in the studio than in the flesh. Bob Europe, and England in particular, during the latter months of McCracken is certainly not the best clarinet to play with Ory 1959. Fortunately a dividend has been declared, and it is a since the war - Simeon, Howard, Bigard, Darensbourg, Gomez much better band than the one we heard in person, by reason are all higher in my esteem - but he provides a supple melodic line which adds to the pleasure of the session, and which of changes in the rhythm section. During the British tour there were murmurs about the dullness reminds one of a style of clarinet playing which is seldom of the rhythm, in particular complaints of the heavy handed-nes heard today - a husky flowing jazz which we sometimes of drummer Alton Redd. Cedric Haywood is a pianist who mistakenly - think went out with the Bob Crosby band. belongs more with the front line, and thus the task of covering The one omission is an Allen vocal, but we had the same the weakness of the bass-player, and of providing the whole complaint during the British tour. Whatever one makes of support of the band, was thrust unfairly upon Redd's rather Redd's drumming, he is a brutal singer and we could happily rudimentary drumming. Those of us who recalled his sterling dispense with his mercifully short outburst in "Ain't Misbework on the session of August 1944 were a little disappointed. avin' ". Red Allen's voice could have dealt with that one very On this session, made in July 1959, he fits into his proper well. "Sister Kate" is taken at an easy tempo: it suits place with a real bass player and with the aid of a useful guitar, MeCracken well, Allen provides a typical and attractive and provides an insistent although not over-obtrusive two-beat. chorus, and Ory's wobbly vocal is completely new. "TishoNo, this is not Ory's best band - which group deserves that ingo Blues" is a good track, and in Allen's solo work one can award is a matter of personal preference, although that which hear his impressive range of tonal variety. This record will included Mutt Carey and Barney Bigard would rank very high. feature in many lists of the best records of 1960. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------GIANTS OF JAZZ – HENRY RED ALLEN – 1981 Time Life records ; notes on music by John Chilton: 5. Mx 26430-1 - I Got Rhythm: Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band HenryAllen, trumpet; Kid Ory, trornbone; Bob McCracken, clarinet; Cedrick Heywood, piuno; Frank Hoggerty, guitar; Morty Curb, string bciss; Alton Redd, drums. Rec. for Verve, July 19,1959, Los Angeles. Courtesy of Polygram, Inc. Verve MGC (S6) 1020 At the 1957 Newport Jazz Festival Red Allen shared a set so wide it could be mistaken for the sound of a flugelhorn. The with another New Orleans notable, Edward (Kid) Ory, then second eight bars of this chorus feature a whole string of pretty 70 years old and still going strong. The en-counter led them note patterns, but the increasing stridency of the bridge and a to make several albums together and, a few months later, flurry of alternate fingering give a clue that things are about to get brought about Allen's first trip to Europe, as a guest star hectic. Allen goes on to boot out a tonic note in a way that any with Ory's band. The Gershwin standard, I Got Rhythm, is a tenor saxophonist might envy, and this culminates in the marvelous reminder of the happy musical spirit that Ory's explosively growled flatted fifth announcing the final chorus. The note becomes the central part of the final stages of a solo that has band generated. Allen's lead playing provides a pivot that gives the ensemb- gradually unfolded into an uninhibited romp. le a very relaxed quality, unhampered by the rhythm section, Some jazz listeners rigidly divide Red Allen's work into eras, which, despite an unrelenting use of offbeats, still laid saying that they like his pre-1940 recordings, but abhor everydown a solid, bouncy sound. Allen's innate musicianship thing thereafter. But no one could dislike a solo such as this, with told him that a busy lead would sound absurd alongside its many references to his previous achievements (including the Ory's tailgate style with its rugged, economical use of triple-tongued phrases that start the last eight bars of his improvinotes. He therefore spells out Gershwin's melody in short sations, a resurrection of the startling technica figure that first phrases, allowing Ory and clarinetist Bob McCracken emerged in the second eight bars of Algiers Stomp, rec.in 1936). plenty of time to find spaces for their fillins. McCracken, Allen's solo might easily have been used as the climax of the despite a long career in professional music, had achieved record. Instead, Ory-one of the wiliest bandleaders who ever recognition only late in life; his solo here is both mellow lived-employs the old New Orleans trick of dropping the musical and dexterous. Ory's solo is, typically, an extension of his temperature to prepare the listeners for a final ensemble. After a rocking piano chorus,the front line returns for 16 bars ensemble playing-sparse, but robust and rhythmic. Allen's tightly muted solo is played with the sort of of call-and-answer between Allen and McCracken. Ory plays a simplicity that only a lifetime's experience can achieve. sturdy bridge, then Allen's highly melodic ideas fill out the final Above all it is a fine example of knowing what to leave eight bars of the chorus. In his last two bars he impishly plays an out. When the drum-mer obligingly lowers his volume, we ending that has been overworked for many years by jazz-band are able to follow every nuance of Allen's delicate phrasing, trumpeters all over the world. But Red Allen puts his own stamp including a nonchalantly inserted flatted fifth in the third on the phrase by fractionally delaying the last notes-a fine bar of the bridge. But this elegant chorusis onlythe example of his superb sense of timing. After a sprightly four-bar drum break, Allen energetically blows firstmovement in an extended work. At the end of 30 bars, Allen drops out briefly to remove a coda, finishing with a run up to top C. That brave high note the mute, but he then picks up the solo for another chorus exemplifies the way Allen kept playing to the end of his life, very skillfully, playing low-register open trumpet in a tone never faltering, never losing that exuberant creativity. - 75 - KID ORY - RED ALLEN TOUR IN EUROPE, 9/17- mid Nov.1959, Martin Williams "Henry Red": In the fall of 1959, Red Allen took momentary leave of American engagements to tour Europe with Kid Ory, Red's first trip to the continent. (He had been supposed to go in 1934 with the Henderson band, but as things worked out, Coleman Hawkins went alone.) Ory's style and repertoire are, of course, older than Allen's and European audiences were apparently expecting a tottering old trumpeter in Allen. What the got was an energetic and forceful musician, an individual stylist, and a whose music is still immediate, personal expression, not-as with many jazz-men of Allen's and (not all dates known); subsequent generation - an imitation of glories past. Allen is proud of the strong impression he made in Europe on audiences and on European critics. He was also deeply moved when he walked into Fatty George's club in Vienna and found the wall decorated with his father's picture. (What American jazz club would show that sense of tradition.) He is proud of the letters he still gets from Europe, and unlike some jazzmen who lack his straight forward approach to an audience, he is pleased when a fan or collector wants to talk old, long out-of-print records 9/17/59 Germany start of the KID ORY RED ALLEN TOUR in Europe; 9/19 Kiel; 9/20, afternoon rehearsal; eve-concert at Hamburg-Musik Halle(now: Laiesz Halle); +day off 9/23 Stuttgart; 9/24 Essen, 9/25 München-Deutsches Museum; 9/26 Wuppertal 9/27 Köln; 9/28 Mo. concert & 9/29 private meeting w. Red Allen & Günther Boas in Dortmund; 9/30 Frankfurt; 10/1&2 Wien+day off 9/22/59 afternnoon &evening, Berlin, Sportpalast; rec. AFN-Berlin - KID ORY-S CREOLE JAZZ BAND feat.RED ALLEN (t,v) Kid Ory (tb,v) Bob McCracken (cl) Cedric Haywood (p) Squire Gersh (b) Alton Redd (d.v) (41 shorter min.tape existed) aftern. 7:02 ORIGINAL DIXIELAND ONE-STEP (ODJB) JCCD-3125/ RA-CD-C42 6:29 [I WISH I WAS IN] PEORIA (Woods-Rose-Dixon) --/ --/ 7:22 CARELESS LOVE -vAR (trad.) --/ --/ 5:14 HIGH SOCIETY (Melrose-Steele) --/ --/ 4:59 SAVOY BLUES (Kid Ory) --/ --/ 8:24 TIN ROOF BLUES & REPRISE (N.O.R.K.) --/RA-CD-C43/ 4:48 MUSKRAT RAMBLE -vKO (Ory) --/RA-CD-C42/ 4:58 PANAMA RAG (Tyers) --/RA-CD-C43/ 4:18 WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN -vAR&ch (trad.) --/ --/ even. 5:34 BILL BAILEY -vKO (Cannon) JCCD-3126/ --/ 6:50 ST. JAMES INFIRMARY BLUES -vRA (J.Primrose) --/ --/ 7:26 WOLVERINE BLUES (Spikes-Morton) --/ --/ 7:21 SISTER KATE -vKO (A.Piron) --/ --/ 3:11 SUGARFOOT STOMP (King Oliver-Walter Melrose) --/ --/ 6:09 AUNT HAGAR'S BLUES (W.C.Handy) --/ --/ 3:55 KID ORY'S BOOGIE WOOGIE (Ory) --/ --/ --/ --/ 3:30 AT THE JAZZ BAND BALL (LaRocca-Shields) 7:24 TUXEDO JUNCTION (Dash-Johnson-Hawkins-Feyne) --/ --/ 1:45 German announcer banter 3:28 TIGER RAG (ODJB) 2:21 WITHOUT YOU FOR AN INSPIRATION - sign off by Kid Ory ------- / / / ------- / / / 10/4/59 Paris -Salle Pleyel, 18:00 & 21:00 pm; KID ORY & SON ORCHESTRE NOUVELLE ORLEANS avec RED ALLEN (t,v) Kid Ory(tb,v) Bob McCracken (c1) Cedric Haywood (p) Squire Gersh (b) Alton Redd (d.v): telerec. by ORTF for mixtures with evening clips on TVs late 1959/60; partly issued in mixture on JAZZ AVERTY-E-video; *on NBC(Europe)-SuperChannel ; the afternoon concert on FFB-bc-Berlin 10/10/59; also shown to French army in Berlin Quartier Latin; all on RA-DVD-1a & RA-CD-42+42a /E-video/(*) 01 5:45 DO WHAT ORY SAYS -vKO (Ory) 02 3:48 CLARINET MARMELADE (LaRocca-Shields) 03 7:38 ST.JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (J.Primrose) 04 6:52 I WISH I COULD SHIMMY LIKE MY SISTER KATE -vKO (A.Piron) /E-video/ 05 5:13 PANAMA (Tyers) /E-video/ 06 3:42 ROYAL GARDEN BLUES (CI.&Sp.Williams) 07 4:27 TIGER RAG #1 (ODJB) /E-video/ 08 8:16 DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT MEANS TO MISS NEW ORLEANS -vKO /E-video/(*) 09 5:32 SAVOY BLUES + illustrated french ann.+ encore (Kid Ory) 10 5:14 HIGH SOCIETY #1 (Melrose-Steele) illustrated audio w.2 dr.-solos 11 5:29 BASIN STREET BLUES (Sp.Williams) /E-video/ 12 3:19 WHEN THE SAINTS GO MARCHING IN -vKD&ch (trad.) 13 1:52 WITHOUT YOU FOR AN INSPIRATION DEAR - sign off by Kid Ory (curtain) /E-video/(*) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------14 4:59 [I WISH I WAS IN] PEORIA Woods-Rose-Dixon) 15 4:19 TAILGATE RAMBLE (Wingy Manone+Johnny Mercer) . 01 6:30 TIN ROOF BLUES (NORK) 02 3:42 ORY´s BOOGIE (Ory-Haywood?) 03 4:04 RAMPART STREET PARADE 04 5:54 SHINE -vKO & AR (longer than on Averty) then intermission /E-video/ . 05 6:06 WOLVERINE BLUES (Spikes-Morton) 06 5:26 ORIGINAL DIXIELAND ONE-STEP (ODJB) 07 4:41 MUSKRAT RAMBLE -vKO (Ory) /E-video/ 08 4:58 HIGH SOCIETY #2 (Melrose-Steele) (longer than on Averty) /E-video/(*) 09 6:21 AUNT HAGAR´S BLUES (W.C.Handy) /E-video/(*) 10 4:39 TIGER RAG #2 (ODJB) (curtain) . . 5:02 Ory interview parts-1& 2 with Sim Copens part-1 shortened 2:29 from 2:59 on Averty-E / 10/5/59 Mo., Stockholm Konserthuset, two concerts, 19:00 and 21:15 ; 10/6/59 Tu., Gothenburg Konserthuset 19:00 and 21:15 ; 10/7/59 We., Malmö, - MFF-Stadion, 20:00 / 10/8 Copenhagen, KB Hall, 10/ 9 Odense 10/10 Aarhus; ; 10/11-15 days off; 10/16 Fri. Cambridge, Regal 10/17 London, Kilburn, Gaumont State 10/18 Portsmouth, Guildhall 10/19 Mo.. Birmingham, Town Hall 10/20 Newcastle, City Hall 10/21 Sheffield, City Hall 10/22 Thu. Leicester,DeMontfort Hall 10/23 Brighton, Dome - 76 10/24/59 Sat.afternoon. Manchester-- KID ORY & HIS CREOLE JAZZ BAND: as 9122; 36:20 part of concert both concerts (afternoon & evening) were complete taped by Tony Adkins and will be possibly issued on UK-label-504 5:08 ORIGINAL DIXIELAND ONE STEP (ODJB) Queen(I)-052/RA-CD-c42/ --- / --- / 7:30 I WISH I WAS IN PEORIA (Woods-Rose-Dixon) 7:24 CARELESS LOVE -vAR (trad.) --- / --- / --- / 7:14 WHY WON'T YOU PLEASE COME HOME BILL BAILEY -vKO (Cannon) --- / 7:02 ST.JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (Primrose) --- / --- / 5:01 THAT'S A PLENTY (Gilbert-Pollack) --- / --- / DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT MEANS -vKO not on my tape will be all on UK-labelMARYLAND, MY MARYLAND SAVOY BLUES MUSKRAT RAMBLE -vKO TIGER RAG THEME same date & location, evening-concert ORIGINAL DIXIELAND ONE STEP (ODJB) all will be on UK-labelAUNT HAGAR'S BLUES (W.C.Handy) WHY WON'T YOU PLEASE COME HOME BILL BAILEY -vKO (Cannon) 7:09 6:01 6:48 5:32 6:35 3:07 5:44 2:56 CARELESS LOVE -vAR (trad.) RA-CD-42a/ BOURBON STREET PARADE -vKO (P.Barbarin) --- / ST. JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (Primrose) --- / WOLVERINE BLUES (Spikes-Morton) RA-CD-43/ BASIN STREET BLUES -vAR (S.Williams) --- / MARYLAND, MY MARYLAND (trad.) --- / DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT MEANS TO MISS NEW ORLEANS -vKO (Aller-DeLange) --- / MUSKRAT RAMBLE /cut -vKO (Ory) RA-CD-c42/ THEME 10/25 Sun. Liverpool, Empire *10/26 Glasgow, St.Andrews's Hall 10/27 Bradford, St.Gearge's Hall 10/28-29 off days Red Allen visited the Marque club & Ronnnie's Club London, meetings with Ray Nance, Gene Ramey 10/30 Bristol, Calston Hall 10/31 London, New Victoria,Victoria 11/1 London, Hammersmith, Gaumont; (*Clyde Valley Stompers instead of T.Lightfoot); 11/2 Zürich; 11/3 Tues. Genf; 11/4 day off 11/5 Zürich or Genf 11/6 day off 11/7 Utrecht & Amsterdam two concerts 11/8 Brussels 11/9/59 Basel - Liederhalle, broadcasted concert KID ORY'S CREOLE JAZZ BAND : same as 9/22/59 0:27 7:37 4:18 6:33 5:28 4:32 6:23 5:09 7:34 4:50 3:36 0:27 11/13/59 Fri., 5:20 7:04 6:43 6:18 7:21 4:02 4:33 5:21 3:52 4:41 4:20 2:47 intro ann. I WISH I WAS IN PEORIA (Woods-Rose-Dixon) BASIN STREET BLUES -vKO (S.Williams) ST. JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (J.Primrose) WOLVERINE BLUES (Spikes-J.R.Morton) SAVOY BLUES (Kid Ory) TIN ROOF BLUES (N.O.R.K.) THAT'S A PLENTY (Gilbert-Pollack) AUNT HAGAR'S BLUES (W.C.Handy) PANAMA RAG (Tyers) AT THE JAZZ BAND BALL (LaRocca-Shields) leave ann. private tape 60:35 /RA-CD-43 / Rarities-60/Rhapsody RHA-6034/ --/ --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / --- / --/ --- / only on tape / --- / Copenhagen, KB Hall, KID ORY - RED ALLEN IN DENMARK : same as 9/22/59 (62:22 tape) Storyv.(Dan)/ ORIGINAL DIXIELAND ONE STEP (LaRocca-Shields) STCD-6038/RA-CD-c44/ I WISH I COULD SHIMMY LIKE MY SISTER KATE -vKG (A.Piron) --- / --/ WOLVERINE BLUES (Spikes-J.R.Morton) --- / --/ ST. JAMES INFIRMARY -vRA (Primrose) --- / --/ TIN ROOF BLUES (Brunis-Rappolo) --- / --/ CLARINET MARMELADE (LaRocca-Shields) --- / --/ MUSKRAT RAMBLE -vKO (Kid Ory-Ray Gilbert) --- / --/ DO YOU KNOW WHAT IT MEANS TO MISS N.O. -vKO (Alter-Delange) --- / --/ AT THE JAZZ BAND BALL (LaRocca-Shields) --- / --/ SAVOY BLUES (Kid Ory) --- / --/ INDIANA - SHEIK OF ARABY -vKO (Henley-McDonald)-(Snyder) --- / --/ HIGH SOCIETY (Porter Steele) --- / --/ 10/4/59 Paris -Salle Pleyel, 10/5/59 Stockholm Konserthus - 76a - Addenda unknown German (Hamburg) source, 9/18/59 Friday. p7: “Kid Ory”, der Älteste aus dem alten New Orleans – Eine Freunde für Jazzfreunde! Am Sonntagabend, 20 Uhr spielt Kid Ory´s Creole Jazz Band (Bild) in der Ernst-MeckHalle. Edward Ory (zweiter von links) - der Beinahme „Kid“ wurde ihm von seinen Anhängern gegeben –ist der älteste noch lebende Musiker aus dem alten New Orleans. Mit seinen 73 Jahren spielt er auch heute noch die Posaune so, wie er es vor über 50 Jahren tat: rauh, kräftig, im Zusammenspiel aber betont harmonisch. Henry Red Allen (rechts neben Kid Ory) gehört gleichfalls zu den ganz Alten des New Orleans Jazz. 9/20/59, eve-concert at Hamburg-Musik Halle(now: Laiesz Halle); . (photo - Susanne Schapowalow) “KID ORY & RED ALLEN” John Guy in Footnote 3-5/6.72: … Remember the band that Ory brought to England in 1959! In my innocence I thought that Red Allen’s long sojourn at the Metropole, years of doing his KISS THE BABY routine (not the one politicians indulge in!) would have inde-libly marked the playing of the old Luis Russell stalwart. Not a bit of it ! Here was Henry ‘Red’ Allent upright and craggy, with a stance like a sporting print prize fighter. Dynamically, and Ory has always had a feeling for dynamics, they were a revelation. They could crack it out with gusto but when Ory led the band off-mike on a little hokum strut round the stage, the music carried to the gallery… ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 9/20/59, probably afternoon - rehearsal & jam session at Hamburg-Musik Halle (c.Susanne Schapowalow) Zürich-concert 5/11/59:“Red Allen Special” by Johnny Simmen 1976, in Le Point Du Jazz no-13 : about RCA-Black & White series with 4-Red Allen volumes IN 1959 Red Allen recorded two albums with Kid Ory and also came to Europe (for the first time) on tour. These two Lps (made for Verve) and the concerts made me realize that Red was an even more versatile and adaptable player than I thought. I went to the Zurich concert with them and, in the taxi, Ory said: "That's the best trumpet-player I played with since the old days with King Oliver and Louis Armstrong. Red is one of the few who still can lead a New Orleans jazz ensemble. I know." Mr.Ory sure was the man to know (Red was beaming with joy at Kid Ory's comment since he had tremendous respect for him and considered it an honour to have been invited to make this tour with the great trombonist) and the records are lasting proof of what Ory said! I think in 1959 Red played better lead than on any of the records he made with Jelly-Roll Morton. Don't ask me how he could do it after all these years … He could and that's all that matters. - 77 - Red Allen &“Hot Geyer”K.Michaelis, Frankfurt 9/30 unknown German source - Hamburg - Sept.59: Offensichtlich zu heiß wurde es dem Erz-vater des Jazz, Kid Ory, bei den Proben in der Musikhalle für sein Konzert am heutigen Sonntag in der Ernst-Merck-Halle. So ging er mit seinen Solisten in Alt-Hamburg auf Entdeckungsreise. Sind diese Musiker so sehr mit ihren Instrumen-ten verwachsen, dass sie sie auch dabei nicht missen mochten? Die Kamera traf die Creole Jazz Band jedenfalls im historischen Bäckerbreitengang, wo sie schnell ein sachverständiges Publikum um sich hatte. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- H.Panassiè – 10/4/59 KID ORY à PARIS - Bul.H.C.F.,No.92;Nov.-59 (translated by Louis Iosub in 2011) The Dadaist poet Jean Van Heeckeren once wrote that "Age does not mean anything". Some musicians regarded as "young", are really dodderers (Miles Davis) and others are "yet unborn", as Jo Jones once said about Chet Baker. On the other hand, 73 year old Kid Ory plays the trombone with the same fire, the same sappiness, the same punch as he did in his prime. Some fans, seeing him at the Salle Pleyel, have commented on "How thin he's become. Of course he cannot blow like he did three years ago." They remind me of those others who complained a while back that Velma Middleton had put on weight! How about you, just for once, stop criticizing how an artist looks, and just judge by what you hear? Does the 30 year old bopper that called Ory a fossil ever suspect that it's him that's the senile one, well before he has reached Ory's age? During the two concerts that he gave on October 4th, Kid Ory played the trombone just as marvellously as he did three years ago, and has proved himself to be a bandleader just as punchy and intelligent as before. One of the reasons that his concerts rise above the average jazz concert today, is that one does not have to suffer through an avalanche of "specialties" that force one to unwillingly swallow, among others, those fastidious never ending solos, from the bass player, the drummer, even the flautist or whatever! With Ory you hear an orchestra, not a collection of individuals. Even if they were not of the quality of the 1956 one, Ory's group was excellent. Alton Redd, (Whom you may know through a few recordings he made with Ory in 1944) is a superb drummer, he played a great part in the concert's success: few breaks, no frills, but a strong beat with a whole lot of swing. I heard some complaining about his dreary playing! Come on! Are they now going to request that the drummer of a New Orleans outfit should play a soloist's part, like a bop drummer? You may like Max Roach if you please, but don't go criticizing drummers that play with a real jazz beat! The piano player Cedric Haywood, whom we already heard with Ory back in 1956, was better miked than during the previous tour. Thus we have been able to fully appreciate his talents as an accompanist as well as a soloist, his pairing with Alton Redd made up a perfect whole rhythm section, it did not matter that the bass player, Squire Gersh was average. Henry "Red" Allen, after a weak start, (he did not have his chops during the first part of the matinee concert) had a lot of good moments. Kid Ory has the knack to get the best out of Henry Allen, by surrounding him with a band that makes him play more laid back and with less eccentrically. Furthermore, Henry Allen is one of those musicians that sound better live than on record, his inspiration is still uneven, but when he is hot, one can have a really good time. He was most inspired on Peoria and Aunt Hagar's Blues, but then it must be said, such a dull clarinet player as Bob McCracken unwillingly makes any of his fellow musicians shine! Kid Ory on TV. - Thumbs up to the RTF (French Television Network) for letting us have such a brilliant jazz programme. Unfortunately, on October 31st, the recording was so ill balanced that the trombone solos were almost inaudible (unlike those of Bob McCracken on clarinet) ! We also had to bear with Simon Copans' long and boring commentaries, which annoyingly drowned the music, and they were not that accurate either. Regarding Royal Garden Blues, Copens said that Ory had played at the Royal Gardens in Chicago in 1922-1923 in King Oliver's band, along with Louis Armstrong. Now, as any jazz fan knows, the trombone player in that famous orchestra was Honore Dutray and not Kid Ory. Ory did not play with King Oliver at that time. A later interview that Copans made with Ory that was broadcast later, unveiled Copans' mistake, as Ory stressed the fact that he was playing in California all the time between 1921 and 1925. - 77a - Addenda Floyd Levin on STCD 6038: trombonist in 1927. Over the years, the Hot Five recordings of "Muskrat I knew Kid Ory very well. Fortunately, McCracken worked with Joe Venuti, Ramble" and "Savoy Blues" were never I had the opportunity to spend many Wingy Manone, Frankie Traumbauer, altered over the years. When Ray hours listening to him reminisce about Bud Freeman, and Jimmy Mc Partland. Gilbert added the very appropriate lyrics his long and interesting career. I have He joined Louis Armstrong's All Stars to "Muskrat Ramble" in 1950, Ory used a few of Ory's comments to add his shortly after the Ory-Allen tour. For promptly embraced them as part of his personal views to this foreword. several years prior to his death in 1972, permanent repertoire. Surprisingly, Despite our very warm relationship. McCracken was very popular here in during the Copenhagen concert, he Ory always retained a guarded attitude Southern California. relinquished his famed "Muskrat and distrustingly withheld many details McCracken's playing is noteworthy Ramble" coda to the ensemble. During a fearing that someone would write a book throughout the program. On "High radio interview in 1949 he told me that about him. He was probably right. I am Society", the testing ground for all New "Savoy Blues" was inspired by his tempted to eventually compile the Orleans clarinetist, he rises impressively impression of the famous New York elaborate data I have accumulated into a to the occasion. He soars with majestic ballroom. He recalled his astonishment definitive story about this great jazzman. beauty on "St. James Infirmary". at its size and grandeur when he Without question, Kid Ory was the most The individual members of the power- appeared there with Joe Oliver a few influential trombonist in the history of ful rhythm section had previously month before the Armstrong recordings. jazz. His timber, attack, and nuance mer- worked with Ory in Los Angeles. Ory was a master with mutes. The ged into the sweeping tailgate radiance Squire Gersh was also well-established insinuating buzzing and rasping growls that will always be a vital element in in the San Francisco scene and later heard on "Sister Kate" and "Wolverine Dixieland jazz. For generations, musicians became a member of Louis Armstrong's Blues", were blown with his long and fans have savored his rhythmical All Stars. His fine solos on "Wolverine conical mute "....that I made from an old solos and rousing multi-octave glisses. Blues" and "High Society" fit well biscuit can I found in an alley behind a Few jazzmen share Ory's impressive within the Ed Garland groove. While restau-rant," he admitted. After Ory's background. His characteristic manne- pianist Cedric Haywood always kept the death in 1973, it became my risms are deeply rooted in the recorded rhythm on a solid footing, he emerges responsibility to fulfil his wish and legacy of Louis Armstrong's Hot Five, with striding two-fisted solo thrusts donate his trombone to the Louisiana Jelly Roll Morton's Red Hot Peppers, orchestra, also achieved acclaim as a State Jazz Museum. I have often King Oliver's Dixie Syncopators, and the blues singer. His stunning performance wondered what happened to that New Orleans Wanderers. with this on "Indiana" and "Wolverine battered old mute. This CD was recorded during a live Blues". Drummer Alton Redd, a veteran On "Tin Roof Blues", Kid Ory and Red performance when Ory was 69. The of the Les Hite stellar group left many Allen achieved the pure distillation of tremendous audience response is eviden- fond memories at the various European the blues -as only New Orleans musicice that he had sustained his unique venues they visited. ans can. Ory's rumbling tones express musical perception throughout the years. The accelerated tempos on Ory's doleful levels of despondency. His The name Henry "Red" Allen Jr., like "show-case" tunes, "Original Dixieland tearful "Wa Wa" ending is echoed many extremely talented trumpet players One Step", "Wolverine Blues", and "At cogently by Allen whose interpretation of the Jazz Age, is frequently prefaced The Jazz Band Ball" are examples of his of the blues was extraordinary. The with the phrase "Had there not been a "concertized" conception. Ory abysmal musical story of "St. James Louis Armstrong..." If such an uncons- established a more lilting pace at club dates Infirmary" is amplified by Allen's plaincionable eventuality had occurred, he and dances. He was a consummate tive vocal and Ory's mournfully muted conceivably could have succeeded Joe showman, and always knew how to growls -but, this time, the mood is alte"King" Oliver as the regal personage. please his audiences. red by Bob McCracken's theatrical Although his image was always Apparently Ory felt that European coda. dimmed by the shadow of Armstrong, fans in 1959 were sufficiently "Do You Know What It Means To Miss Allen's prodigious contribution to our sophisticated to accept the original New Orleans?" was introduced in 1947 music still shines very brightly. His tour ribald lyrics to "I Wish I Could Shimmy in the film "New Orleans" in which Ory with Kid Ory in 1959 provided European Like My Sister Kate". During the many appeared with Louis Armstrong, Barney fans with a rare opportunity to hear the years I knew him, to my knowledge, he Bigard, Charlie Beal, Red Callender, two New Orleans giants merging their never sang this shocking version in the Bud Scott, and Zutty Singleton. It considerable talents. On every tune, Red U.S. He often told me that the true title became a standard segment of his Allen's sparkling inventiveness, his trills was "Keep Off Katie's Head". Ory programs for the balance of his career. glissan-dos, and genuine eloquence claimed that Louis Armstrong wrote it It is extremely fortunate that Storyville's corroborate a lofty position among the in New Orleans and sold the song to microphones, by capturing these treasurevered icons of traditional jazz. Clarence Williams for 25 dollars. In red sounds, have preserved several Clarinetist Bob McCracken, possibly 1922, when Williams and his partner wonderful moments of jazz history. being heard for the first time, was one of A.J.Piron published "Sister Kate" with Now, 39 years later, we can share the jazz's many unsung heros. He emerged revised title and lyrics, Piron was excitement generated on that Winter from the same Texas roots as Jack credited as composer. evening at Copenhagen's KB.Hallen. Teagarden and recorded with the great The timeless solos Kid Ory created on ======================================================================================= Kid Ory & Red Allen In Berlin—Jazz Crusade Sets # 1 & 2 JCCD-3125 + JCCD-3126 Notes by Big Bill Bissonnette Colin Bray is a good friend of mine: a Kid Ory. She had an original concert know of the session. very Good friend. It was because of him tape of her father and Red Allen recorNow I record "contemporary" New that we were able to produce our exciting ded professionally and exclusively for Orleans jazz on my Jazz Crusade label JCCD-3032 Wilbur DeParis In Canada the Kid as part of his European tour and I am a trombone player. So when album. He also supplied me with the agreement in 1959. The concert was someone says the magic words "Kid original tapes for our two volume set of recorded in Berlin to a huge and Ory" to me, my eyes light up. Add to Lee Collins radio masters and the tape enthusiastic audience. She approached that the fact that Red Allen was a friend for the 1956 Louis Armstrong Basin Colin to see if he might be interested in of mine and occasionally played with Street radio air-shots. So when Colin purchasing the rights to the concert for my Easy Riders Jazz Band back in the calls with "something you might be his Jazz Oracle record label. The price 1960s, and you can see the temptation to interested in," I listen. This time he was a little steep for Colin and his produce this session became really outdid himself. label's pervue lie in re-issuing obscure overwhelming for me. It seems someone gave his name to bands from the 1920s. So, friend that he I called Babette and introduced myself. Babette Ory, daughter of the legendary is, he promptly called me and let me To my delight I found her to be an extre- - 77a - Addenda mely intelligent and friendly woman. Our sure thou-sands of photos were taken. audience "we're going to slow it down first couple of conversations dwelled a And I do know lots of jazz fans around about 20 miles per hour!" But the musigreat deal on her dad of course because the globe so I sent out an SOS. But we cianship , or should I say " he was one of the few truly great must remember this concert happened jazzmanship" here is phenomenal. Allen jazzmen still alive during my era that I almost a half-century ago. But as good is playing hotter than a pistol and Ory is was never to meet in person. And of luck would have it the help of people in at his growling, swaggering best. The course I idoli-zed him above all other France, Germany and Sweden solved music is at a level as high as during the trombone players save my mentor Big the problem with a couple of nice earlier Good Time Jazz days—which Jim Robinson. I was delighted when photos of the two jazz legends. For their was not always the case with some of Babette told me that Big Jim, in fact, help I'm grateful to Dan Vernette, Franz the later personnel. The sidemen do a was her dad's favourite trombone player Hoffmann, Claes Ringqvist and Christer universally fine job and it s a treat to hear Alton Redd back on drums again and that he considered that great George Fellers. The music you will hear on these two since the long earlier sessions he did Lewis band of the 1950s to be his major competition in the traditional jazz field. discs is very exciting stuff. The one back in the 1940s. As usual the band Babette and I quickly reached slight drawback to jazz concert recor- had a nice mix of black and white agreement for me to purchase the rights dings is that many jazzmen, Ory included musicians which proves a new that in I suspect, are of the feeling that tempi jazz there are not now, and never have to the Berlin concert. Unfortunately Babette couldn't find should be faster for concert performan- been, racial barriers. any photos of the Kid and Red together ces than they normally would when So welcome to Cold War Berlin at the so I started a worldwide hunt for a playing a club or dance. And, therefore, height of tensions between East & West couple to use on the covers of the two we have several numbers done here at just two years before the infamous wall CDs. Of course thousands of jazz fans what Kid Thomas would refer to as went up. It went up to keep East Berlins attended the European concerts "Horserace tempo." Ory even refers to from having the kind of fun you're featuring this marvellous band and I'm this at one point when he tells the listening to right here! ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ORY – ALLEN CONCERT – Red Allen inspiriert Ory ; by Dieter Zimmerle , Jazz Podium 11-59: Es begann mit Kid Ory, dem 73jährigen New Orleans – Kollegen, wie er auf seine Trommel einschlug - jedenfalls hat Posaunisten, der Europa wieder einen Besuch abstattete. Er ihn außer Cedric Haywood niemand darauf aufmerksam kam mit einer neuen Besetzung, bei der man mit einigem gemacht, daß der Gaul mit ihm durchgehe. Erstaunen auch auf den Namen Henry Red Allen stieß. Ein Möglich, daß es bei anderen Konzerten besser war, bedeutender Stilist der 30er Jahre hatte sich also mit einem möglich, daß der eine oder andere Musiker bei dieser oder Repräsentanten des New Orleans-Jazz der 20er Jahre zusam- jener Veranstaltung nicht in der rechten Stimmung war, dafür mengetan. Was war damit zu erwarten? Red Allen ist kein vielleicht am nächsten Tag über sich hinauswuchs - das ist bei lead-Trompeter wie etwa Mutt Carey, .Teddy Buckner oder derartigen Gastspielreisen alles gegeben und zu bedenken. Alvin Alcorn. Man kennt ihn als hervorragenden Chorus- Eines aber dürfte doch wohl sicher sein: ein persönliches Bläser, weiß, welchen Glanz er der Trompetenstimme zu Zusammentreffen mit diesen alten, bewährten Musikanten geben vermag, wird ihn aber von Haus aus nicht als prädes- wird für jeden echten Jazzfreund grundsätzlich ein Erlebnis tinierten Stimmführer im Dreier-Bläserkollektiv traditioneller sein, für das er dankbar ist. Die Wertschätzung dem Jazz Art ansprechen. Nun, er wurde in dieser Hinsicht in der Ory- gegenüber kann nicht Halt machen vor dem Menschen, aus Band nicht sehr beansprucht, denn noch mehr als man es bei dem er kommt, mag dieser bei guter oder schlechter Laune Kid Ory in den letzten Jahren schon erfahren hat, wurden die sein. Gerade daran, daß diese Musiker Stimmungen solistischen Alleingänge in den Vordergrund getragen und das unterworfen sind, ihre Eigenheiten haben und sich fixen traditionelle Kollektivspiel weitgehend reduziert. Tatsächlich Vorstellungen entziehen, sollte man spüren, daß ihre Musik richtete sich das Interesse Allens auch merklich auf die eigene nicht durch die technisch noch so perfektionierte Aufnahme Themenauslegung und dabei konnte er seine Trümpfe ihre letzte Erfüllung erfährt, sondern durch die Permanenz ausspielen. Wenn er sich tonlich auch nicht gerade durch eines Lebensflusses, aus dem heraus sie täglich neu gespeist absolute Treffsicherheit auszeichnet, so ließen seine oft recht wird und dessen Auf- und Niederwogen in Höhen und Tiefen ausgefallenen und überraschenden Phrasierungen, seine Art ihrer Erscheinungsform entspricht. Wie oft wird über einen der Tongebung sowie die Dynamik seines Spiels über diese Musiker der Stab gebrochen, weil er sich nicht als das kleinen technischen Unsauberkeiten hinwegsehen. Götzenbild vorstellt, das man sich von ihm aus Plattenrillen Kid Ory schien sich durch die reizvollen Einfälle seines und Wunschträumen gezimmert hat. Welche Kollegen auf der Trompete veranlaßt zu fühlen, seinerseits verschiedenartige Resonanz folgte auf die diversen Kid Ory nicht allzu üppig ins rauhe Glissando-Horn zu stoßen und er Konzerte! Vielleicht entsprach die eine oder andere dem bemühte sich nicht ohne Erfolg um eine Anpassung an die persönlichen Eindruck, vielleicht keine. Es ist ein Glück — Allen'sche Konzeption. Das konnte man als Gewinn buchen, so oder so. Für den Jazz und überhaupt. Kid Ory und zumal sich audi Klarinettist Bob McCracken von der besten seinesgleichen aber sollen uns stets willkommen sein Seite zeigte und sich eindrucksvoller als seinerzeit bei Armstrong in diese „Hard-Dixie"-Vorträge einschaltete. So wäre trotz der verschiedenen Herkunft dieser drei Bläser doch noch das Moment der Einheitlichkeit in die Musik gekommen, wenn nicht Schlagzeuger Alton Redd in dem Wahn befangen gewesen wäre, sich in einer Powerhouse-Band durchsetzen zu müssen. Er trommelte aus seinem Schlagzeug, was Felle und Becken hergaben und hatte offensichtlich kein Verständnis dafür, daß man von seinen Kollegen gern mehr gehört hätte, als er zuließ. Dabei war sein Großeinsatz in jeder Hinsicht unnötig, zumal er zusammen mit dem trefflich swin-genden Pianisten Cedric Haywood und dem durchaus nicht freudlos marschierenden Baß von Squire Gersh ohne Anstrengung die rechte rhythmische Ergänzung für die ohnehin swingenden Bläser hätte schaffen können.. . Aber wer weiß: vielleicht gefiel es seinen Kid Ory - Squire Gersh – Red Allen - Alton Redd - Bob McCracken (Cr.Fellers) - 78 from the programme "Kid Ory In England" some words for the sidemen by James Asman (jazz-critic): ... Bob McCracken was born in Dallas, Texas. and began a tuba can be beard to very good effect. Now, with the Kid Ory musical career during the 1920's while still in High School. He band and on string bass instead of the weightier tuba, he is formed a part of the Louis Armstrong All-Stars in 1952 and well adapted for the rags. marches and stomps which form toured Europe with the group. He has been featured on clarinet such a prominent feature of the group's repertoire. with the Benny Goodman Orchestra and worked for a period Drummer Alton Redd is a veteran of the fine Crescent recorwith Jack Teagarden. This is his first professional visit to dings in 1945 when the Ory Creole Jazz Band swung more magnificently than in any other session. Redd was born in Britain. Although the pianist, Cedric Haywood. played during his early Baton Rouge, was a childhood friend of Kid Ory. and is now days with various groups on the West Coast, he has been acti- one of the greatest drummers in the New Orleans line-age. vely concerned with Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band for five years During the early 'forties he is reported to have made several now. He acts as an unofficial librarian to the band. Remembe- "Race" records as a Blues singer under the pseudonym of "Big ring all the band's repertoire and communicating this knowledge Red Alton", and, if this is so. his vocal contribution to this to any newcomers. As the Ory band has rarely remained static tour should be particularly interesting. The Kid Ory band. from those far-away days in Laplace when for long, Haywood's position is an essential one. Squire Gersh, who followed Arvell Shaw into the Armstrong Ory played a cigar-box banjo and led a crude "spasm"-styled All-Stars and toured South America with them, is another group of enterprising kids to the present when. at the ripe old musician with an interesting professional history. for he was a age of 72, he is still known as "Kid" Ory. is a vivid flashback founder-member of the Lu Watters' Yerba Buena Jazz Band, in jazz history. playing on tuba under his real name, Girsback. In such early As Louis Armstrong once sang of Ory in the film. "New Watters recordings as Daddy Do, Hot House Rag. Temptation Orleans": "He plays trombone smears a laughin' note No Rag and Cakewalkin' Babies From Home the Squire Girsback human being ever wrote. …." ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Keith Smith covernotes 1979 on Rarities-60: 11/9/59 in. Quite unaware that we were 'jazzers', Red turned, Kid Ory and Red Allen are without doubt two of the very great introduced himself, and proceeded entertain us with some names in jazz. It has always been a joy to me hearing their lovely stories. beautiful tones and unpretentious music. The additional Several years later, while Red was with the Alex Welsh band quality that stood them apart from others, however, was in Europe, we met again. At the same time I was in Europe timing. Kid Ory was able to solo for chorus after chorus when with the "New Orleans All Stars" (Darnell Howard, Jimmy he so cared - simply by bending the timing of the melody, this Archey, "Pops" Foster, Alton Purnell, "Cie" Frazier, Alvin way and that, changing the tone colour constantly. He became Alcorn - Red's in-law and like Red, an ex-Kid Ory man, and the best and also the best known "Tailgate" trombonist as well myself also on trumpet), and during that tour the two bands as writing several numbers which are today jazz standards; did some concerts together. That was a ball! Red hadn't seen Muskrat Ramble, Savoy Blues, Ory's Creole Trombone. His most of those guys in that All Star band for years, so these life in music made him a wealthy man, a comparatively rare concerts were wetter than any army reunion party! During the thing in the jazz world. During the 1960's I got to know him night too - it didn't stop. With a crate of their favourite brew well when I was living in California I used to visit him at his on board, "Newcastle Brown Ale', the coach drove off, and "movie star" home close to Los Angeles, and found him to be within no time the tales were f lowing freely, Red in top form. a kind and gentle man always. By the way, the tune Muskrat Red learnt that, after that tour, I was coming to the States to Ramble started its life as Muscat Ramble named after the live, and, on arrival he took me under his wing, chauffering rambling Muscat grapevines. me from joint to joint in his proudest possession - his always A young musician friend of mine who idolised Ory and sought new Cadillac. You'd be riding round, feeling good, with your the great man's wisdom, plucked up enough courage to ask arm leaning out of the window and taking in the sights, when "Mr. Ory, have you some advice for a young guy starting out suddenly the windows, powered by some demon hydraulic as a trombone player", "Sure," said Kid Ory, "Make as much device, shot up - leaving your arm jammed looking like a money as you can!" chicken leg! Red would then sing, mischieviously too late, I first met 'Enery' as Henry Red Allen affectionately became "Mind your arm, my man!" known, in London when he was touring with Kid Ory's band, He was always the centre of attraction wherever he went. His some twenty years ago. personality seemed so powerful - like his horn. When he So there we were, Pete Dyer and myself, standing in a pub could, he hustled jobs for me, and I adored him. having a few pints (before going on to one of the Ory band As a musician? Well, apart from Louis, he's the greatest concerts in town), amidst a mixed herd of street market traders trumpet player to have emerged from New Orleans. Others reading their damp newspapers and counting up the day's had, and have things going for them. Some were pretty and takings. Then, 'Enery' Red Allen burst in on the dismal scene - had a good tone, others an incredible drive. Many were strutting up to the bar, calling upon the barman in true English wonderful blues players while others possessed great range fashion, "A pint of that bitter beer, my man". After sinking his and technique. Red had all those qualities and more - a happy face into the glass for a first 'taste', he expressed complete musician, a knock-out singer, incredibly versatile satisfaction to all around, who appeared stun-ned by the being at home on stage with Kid Ory or Coleman Hawkins, entrance of this foreigner by exclaiming "Yeah, nice, nice!" George Lewis or Pee Wee Russell, Victoria Spivey or Billie Stunned was not the word for our reaction. We stood, open- Holiday. His exuberant personality mouthed, totally amazed at this entrance, and even more always comes to life in front of the public: - Red Allen was a amazed that this 'idol' of ours had chosen the me pub to drink beautiful person - His music remains beautiful. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------JACK FLORIN in MANCHESTER EVENING NEWS 26th October, 1959. Veterans all,, the musicians of Kid Ory's many ripe and low-down notes - musical even if the intervening years have Creole Jazz Band played with. such vulgarities. But his ensemble playing somewhat dimmed his power and sprightly enthusiasm and obvious enjoy- was superb and he is still the undisputed imagination he is still capable of playing wonderfully inspired jazz. ment that in reviewing their con-cert last master of tailgate style. Saturday one doesn't need to let the usual Clarinetist Bob McCracken, although Not least amongst the delights of a show sentiment for the pathetic parading of the fluent, relaxed and easy on the ear, is that gave us a lot of nostalgic jazz was worn-out talent of old-timers temper clearly not at home with a 'trad' band the excellent presentation of the band with neatly contrived endings to every such as this one. one's criticism. Of course, there were shortcomings in So, of the front-line musicians it was left tune. In a rip-roaring finale, Ory led his the ideas, technique and general musi- to trumpeter Henry 'Red' Allen to musicians into "Muskrat Ramble" and provide the fireworks. Here was a superb marched cock-a-hoop around the stage. cianship of these legendary jazzmen. Scattered through Ory's solos. which showman and a gifted player. In his were lacking in inventiveness, were heyday, he was one of the jazz greats and - 79 KID ORY in England - A Concert Report by Jack Cooke, in Jazz Monthly 12/59: As time passes, the possibility of being able to see and hear natural showmanship which throws into relief his great the musicians of New Orleans. who shaped jazz into the form technique and consummate mastery of the style of trumpet we now recognise grows steadily less and less. George Lewis, playing evolved by the men of the swing era. At the opening with what must now be the only surviving band playing in the concerts Allen was obviously making an effort to restrain his New Orleans tradition, visited this country not long ago, and individuality to conform more nearly to Ory's ensemble style; the latter half of October afforded us the chance of hearing at also the band seemed to be phrasing more on the beat in a first-hand another musician from that early period of jazz, Kid possible effort to restrain Redd's erratic drumming. After a Ory. Ory, however, did not attempt to bring with him a group fortnights touring, however, a considerable change was drawn from the now-thin ranks of his New Orleans discernible. The ensembles had a much looser, even ragged contemporaries, but assembled a band which contained several sound, in which it could be seen that Allen's timing and attack different influences. Ory himself and drummer Alton Redd had become much more adventurous. This was the Red Allen represented the oldest school of jazz musicians; two men were that one might expect from his Metropole reputation, using largely products of the New Orleans revival of the 'forties, almost every device in the jazz trumpeter's repertoire to sustain bassist Squire Gersh and clarinetist Bob McCracken; and the a performance that was overwhelming in its completeness. He group was completed by two musicians who are identified was now the dominating voice in the group, his sweeping with the post New Orleans period, pianist Cedric Haywood imagination taking him out of the confines of the strict New and trumpeter Red Allen. Orleans style, and his tremendous ability to swing freeing him Due in part of these diverse influences, the band never seemed of the deadening force of the bass and drums. The single vocal to possess a great deal of group feeling; a grave fault at any he took, on ST.JAMES INFIRMARY, was delivered wittily, time, and one which can be disastrous in a band attempting the and with a garnishing of topicality. New Orleans ensemble style. This lack of rapport was even The choice of programme presented by the band was taken more marked at the end of the groups-tour than in earlier largely from the numbers associated with and expected of Ory; concerts. The other factor which prevented any great cohesion such warhorses as MUSKRAT RAMBLE, PEORIA and in the group was the great disparity in their musical abilities. MARYLAND, the last completed by a march around the Ory and Allen are jazz musicians of such gigantic stature that stage. Ory sang on several numbers in an almost conthey inevitably overwhelm any but the very finest versational style, including BILL BAILEY and DO YOU accompanists; but even they shows the results of different KNOW WHAT IT MEANS in a manner very reminiscent of influences and environments when working together. Kid Ory Rabon Tarrant. Taken as a whole the performances, though by plays in strict New Orleans ensemble style, and shows no means completely satisfactory, were in many ways relatively little influence from any other source. This is a style enlightening. which awes a certain amount of freedom to the music, yet The Terry Lightfoot band occupied the first part of the keeps him within very strict almost formalised limits; though concert, playing in a manner which was shown by succeeding he is constantly improvising he is dependent upon his front- events to be an utterly lifeless pastiche of New Orleans jazz. line partners. There is no more incongruous sight than that of six young men It is probably due to this factor that many of the New Or-leans strung out in various Dukes of Dixielandish postures before musicians sound today to be playing as well as ever despite the elaborate draperies of some middle-thirties super-cinema; their advanced ages. Once grasped, this style of free yet inter- it seems high time that the politics of promoters or the tastes of pendent improvisation can be constantly polished and audiences ceased to insist on the Roman spectacle of a totally perfected almost without any reference to outside sources. Red inadequate group of musicians being fed to the lions at every Allen is the product of a later tradition, on which arose as a performance result of Louis Armstrong's developing talent and virtuosity. Armstrong increased the importance of the trumpet in jazz, jettisoning the strong yet relatively straight lead of the classic New Orleans ensembles and broadening the style to bring the trumpet part greater prominence, dominating rather than merely leading the ensemble. This was the position in which Ory and Allen found themselves; the ensemble had the traditional weighty trombone part, and the outstanding trumpet lead of later days. In consequence the band had a very fiercy brassy sound which rendered McCracken's clarinet almost inaudible at time. However badly balanced the group was, both Ory and Allen were continually interesting. The same, unfortunately, can hardly be said for the rest of the group. McCracken and Haywood are good musicians, yet side by side with Ory and Red Allen they completely fail to sustain interest. Haywood is disconcertingly eclectic in his playing; Waller, Hines and stride piano following each other in startling profusion, whilst McCracken's playing is reminiscent of no one more than Artie Shaw. The basis,of the rhythm section, Gersh and Redd, is unfortunately the weakest part of the group. Gersh, now playing bass, was originally a tuba player with Lu Watters, a band which never distinguished itself by its ability to swing. Alton Redd is, like Ory, from the genuine New Orleans school. His playing, however, is not possessed of the brilliance and subtlety of drummers such as Baby Dodds and Minor Hall. On both occasions on which I saw the band his drumming was heavy and lumpy, and his timekeeping unsteady. Gersh seems not the man to control Redd and, in addition to swinging hardly at all, was content to follow Redd´s vagaries of tempo at all times. Despite all this the concerts cannot be dismissed lightly. British audiences were given the the opportunity of hearing in Ory one of the founders of the New Orleans style, and in Red Allen one of the finest trumpeters to be found anywhere in the world today. Allen's work throughout each programme I saw was nothing short of magnificent. He has been for many years a bandleader in his own right and has developed an easy, - 80 HENRY ALLEN from New Orleans – Graham For years there has been - in England at any rate - a sort of underground movement in favour of Red Allen. The impact made by the original Luis Russell recordings was so immense and so little supported by reissue in the post-war years - that it left a sort of vacuum. The type of thing which makes people say "Whatever became of so-and-so? Fortunately for some of us the answer was not wholly obscure, and something of a • continuous line had been obvious, linking the Allen of Feeling Drowsy (1929). House In Harlem (1934). Truckin' (1935). Canal Street Blues (1940). The Crawl (1946), and Algiers Bounce (1958). But for some the alleged descent from the early glories was too much and there has been something of an air of disinterest. Thus, when one met a fellow Allen admirer, a spark was apt to glow and a session of mutual exchanges would ensue. Meeting Henry Allen in person gave a feeling of satisfaction rather like that of the cafe conspirators who for years have been deciding the fate of their far-off land. One day they wake up and really find that Max is Minister of Culture, Ernest, Director of Broadcasting, and John. Envoy Plenipotentiary to Paris. In the case of Henry Allen in October 1959. it was a pleasure to find him not only a delightful person – courteous, amusing. and unfailingly dependable – but, as a musician, worthy of the very greatest respect. Even for those who thought they knew a little about it before, his playing with the Kid On• band provided an insight into his jazz career which no mere study of the records (though they run from 1928 to the present day) can supply. For the traditionalist too, here is a man who is genuinely a New Orleans pioneer, who has never gone far from the real jazz, and whose roots go quite as deep as any. So much so that when someone started to quote to him names of men in a current New Orlens band he said at once - almost impatiently - "Yeah. yeah. yeah. I know 'em. That's my home town you know." Henry Allen is a big man. and that in more than a physical sense. No natural beauty, he shows clearly beneath his present hefty form the characteristics of the eager young man of twentyone whose big-lipped face looks out from the picture on the record cover (7EG 8112 or 8136). In action on the stage he shows that relaxed yet thrusting vigour, the New Orleans hokum, and the handsome delight in his own good blowing which is all part of the performances he has recorded under his own name. He is a man who lives in a tradition. The name Henry Allen Junior - which he carried so long, was no mere gesture but a sign of that constantly expressed respect for his father and for his past. "I was one of the obedient guys." he says speaking of his late teens when he had already made a name. That same family tradition carries on. "I love my son.- he said on more than one occasion." and I guess my father loved me. Henry Allen Senior was a foreman longshoreman and a wellknown part-time bandleader for many years (Allen's Brass Band). His brother George Allen was also a musician (he is the seated drummer. labelled "unknown- in the book "Jazzmen- pp. 44/45). Many renowned New Orleans musicians played in Allen's hand. Mrs. Juretta Allen still lives in Algiers (West New Orleans) and her son visits her there each summer. It was on one of these visits - in August, 1951 - that Red recorded the session with George Lewis for Riverside which was issued here on London HBU 1045. He recalls having to borrow a trumpet for the occasion, but had not heard the record (not a very good one in any case) Henry James Allen grew up as one of the boys in Algiers where he says everyone knew him as "Sonny" (later "Son"). Another nickname was "Biffly Bam" which got itself into a well-known record title (for Victor; July. 1929). The name "Red" comes from having a very light complexion in his younger days and the fiery look he took on when blowing hard. Dicky Wells gave him the name "Blondie" when they were together in the Fletcher Henderson band and still uses it. Dicky Wells looked in on him between shows with the Kid Or' hand at Victoria. London on October 31. 1959. It was on this occasion that he outlined his career in his own words, having filled in much of the detail on several other occasions. "I've been around a good while and I think I've played with more musicians around New Orleans - or as many as anybody. My father had a band - Allen's Brass Band - and he probably with King Oliver because we know how that would have come Boatfield in Jazz Journal Feb.1960 off - he was one used every outstanding musician around there. In fact. you don't know if they're outstanding or not until you've tried them out. but most of them turned out to he great." (The trumpet players he particularly mentioned were Joe Oliver, Buddy Petit. Punch Miller. Papa Celestin and Kid Rena.) "And from the age of eight years on up I had the privilege of working with him somewhere - I don't mean I played the same amount of value as they did but still I was there. I started on the alto horn - what we called the peck horny in New Orleans. When I was a very little boy I went with m father in the parades - I was along all the way with him. My father taught me on the peck horn and then I changed to trumpet. " Yes, my father carried me when I was a small boy. because the walk was long. Parades used to be a few miles. He would carry me. and when the band got ready to play then he would put me down and the band would stop on the different corners and would play a little; maybe a number like What A Friend We Have In Jesus or similar other numbers. Who was great in those days? I was just along and didn't pay it no attention —I loved it. I didn't have the least idea I would still be in this profession, for my father and all the others had their jobs - longshoremen. plasterers, slaters, cigar makers, painters. Sure. most ot the guys had other trades - the music was mostly for kicks. They played some of the jobs for benefits such as to get the uniforms for the parades. You've seen some of the pictures which show the leader with leaves around his hat. " My father used three trumpets - himself. Oliver and Papa Celestin. They were all powerful. You'll notice that most of the guys from New Orleans have power because we walked on rugged streets and played and thaty builds up your embouchure. If you didn't have much power ou were nowhere - so most guys who hadn't they gave it up. Carving contests? I'm glad I never met of my idols and he had been a member of my father's band. I had a carving contest once, with Kid Thomas. He was a great player for power and I hear that he still is. He came down to Algiers but it was kind of hard for Kid to win a contest with me in Algiers because all my playmates that grew up with me were there. Well. I won it but one of the policemen came and took the prize from me, so I gave it back to Thomas. Power in a trumpet player plays a big part - you can't tell how anything is if you can't hear it." At a suggestion that some of the early players were corny by present-day standards. Allen snorted derisively. " There was Chris Kelly. If you want to know about him he was just like Cootie Williams, and you don't call him corny." To a question about Guy Kelly (who recorded with Jimmie Noone and Albert Ammons) because of a suggested similarity of styles he said "Guy Kelly was one of those who was along with me " (the same generation). " Luis Russell came from Panama some years ago - during my coming-up days. He was the outstanding pianist around there - a great musician at reading and everything; he could outread most of the guys around there and grew up quickly (in reputation). He left New Orleans to join the King Oliver band. I grew up in later years and joined King Oliver - he sent for me in 1927. I was around 19 then, joined him in St. Louis and went on to New York. I didn't stay long with the band - I went back home, as they said in those days you had to be twenty-one before you were on your own. I was one of the obedient guys - I loved my parents. " Later on - in a couple of years - Luis Russell formed his own band (that was the old King Oliver band) and he sent for me and I joined him. A man named Loran Watson brought me to New York to record and I used the Luis Russell band since I was a member. It was a real happy band and we created a lot of things, I think. We didn't have any manager as other bands did - we just played and got the jobs as Luis Russell found them. All of us were around 21, 22, 23 years of age - Charlie Holmes was younger than anyone in the band. he was around 19 or 20. We had a lot of fire. Everyone was sitting down around New York and playing. We were standing up with a lot of creative ideas. And you can notice in those skeleton arrangements from way back that Luis Russell always loved the trumpet. When I recorded and we were short of numbers we just fixed them up - that's the ones we were co-writers on. - 81 " It was the people over here (in Europe) that really kept us alive in those days - anyway they bought the records and we were able to make a living. Since then I can't say that I've done badly in America because I've always been busy, but you can notice that ifs sometimes a long while between recording sessions. I've got no criticisms. They have all been fine to me in America. But it was most exciting to me when I got here because I was greeted so and not knowing that anybody knew me. Many people have let me know that they knew about me." Like most professional musicians, Allen was very reluctant to express any opinion on other players, although he constantly spoke with great respect of the men from the New Orleans past, and showed a fondness for the men of his own age who had "come up" and worked with him in the Russell hand and other pre-war groups. Like many others, he showed some impatience with any discussion about styles. In the Kid Ory band, he and Cedric Haywood seemed to have something in common, and he agreed when Haywood said " There is no such thing as style to a musician. I play with all sorts of bands - Dixieland, modern, rock 'n' roll". Allen's career would seem to bear this out, for he has played in an astonishing variety of groups, and the difference between his playing at the Metropole in New York and on stage with the Ory band was such as to amaze many listeners. At times one had to listen a long while before hearing any trace of what Leonard Feather calls his "mosquito-like tone". Some musicians are completely indifferent about recordings. once they have been made. Henry Allen has a considerable memory and often Quoted complete personnels from more than 25 years ago, but neither he nor Haywood could recall the titles they recorded in Hollywood with the Ory band recently. He has apparently kept a fairly complete set of recordings over the years, but by now many of these have passed on to his son Henry, a New York City policeman who lives nearby and visits his father often Apart from the Luis Russell sessions. he showed a great liking for the Sidney Bechet 1941 recordings (issued here on HMV) particularly Coal Black Shine and Egyptian Fantasy (excellent record:: and well worthy of reissue). Mention of the name Jellyroll in a tune title brought a spontaneous comment - "I liked Jelly." and some reminiscences. " If Jelly Roll Morton said he had the biggest car in New York who was I to doubt him? He had one about a block and a half long! If he gsaid he had the biggest diamond in the world in his tooth he mi ht have been right. It certainly was big! " Henry Allen went so far as to pick out what he would consider his own perfect band. Assuming his presence as leader. the rest would be: J. C. Higginbotham. trombone. Buster Bailey. clarinet. Coleman Hawkins, tenor. Claude Hopkins or Sam Price, piano. Wellman Braud or Bennie Moten or Alfonso Skeets. bass, Sonny Greer or J. C. Heard or Oliver Jackson or Rufus "Speedy" Jones or Alphonse "Swinging" Steele drums. Allen and Higginbotham have worked together much of the time since they met in the Russell band in 1929. and he said they are often booked together for jobs, in the same way that he and Coleman Hawkins often go together. A final word about Henry Allen's playing with the Ory band. His role has been misinterpreted by some people. Who fail to appreciate that he was the featured soloist, given prominent billing and expected to projects his unique personality. In spite of this, he was very much the bandsman. content to "do what Ory say". Mr. Ory, as Allen said, was the boss and also earned his respect as one of an older generation and as a colleague and contemporary of Henry Allen Senior. To most people Allen was the outstanding individual on the stage. Apart from his showmanship - open-hearted and effective - he displayed in full several of the great gifts which have always marked his records. His control was absolute from one moment to the next his full-toned trumpet would throttle down to a throaty confidential mutter. His tonal control is such that he appears to have little need for a mute. and had not brought one with him. " I love the open horn." he said There is no doubt at all that he was the best rhythm man in the whole band - a great and conspicuous change always came over the group when the trumpet started to speak. This rhythmic dexterity has always been a feature of his playing. Unfortunately his singing was not featured much - in the six shows I saw. St. James infirmary - humorously complete with gestures and local reference - was the only one he did. On the records his vocal work has its own appealing charm examples include Who Stale The Lock, Sweet Sue, Rosetta, Truckin', I Found A Dream, Dinah Lou, Get The Mop, and Kiss The Baby. as well as the classic Patrol Wagon Blues. We were glad to have Henry Allen. and I know that many of the jazz-minded would be very happy to see him back again. perhaps with his own group He was admired just as much, if not more, as a man rather than a musician. He has his own special warmth. He left behind him in England many friends and two special trademarks. "Wamp wamp" is the strange barking cry with which he leads his band into a noisy number it can he heard clearly at the start of The Crawl or Get The Mop. His usual greeting is rather more restrained—just "Hey ma man". We shall he delighted to hear him say it again. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ J.J. 2-1960: Henry Red Allen – Kid Ory – Bob McCracken Red Allen and Gene Ramey, at Airways Manions Hotel, London, 11/59 courtesy Valerie Wilmer - 82 "KID ORY & CO" Tony Standish Jazz Journal Dec.1959: I first heard Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band notes. In the ensembles be seemed aware in San Francisco, in January, 1955. I he of what was going on behind, staying band at that time included Alvin Alcorn, close to the beat and leaving plenty of Phil Gomez, Don Ewell, Minor Hall and space for Ory to do his stuff. Wisely, he Wellman Braud, and I used to think it was waited for his solos to display to the full the last really good band Ory would ever those unique and unpredictable turns of have. Right up till the first choruses at the phrase we have come to expect of him. In first London concert, I still thought so. this respect he has much in common with There were names in the touring band that the reckless Kid Howard of the early I mistrusted. And I figured that Ory 'forties, He also showed a penchant for himself must surely be too old; it was all light and shade, and often cut his solos of five years since I'd heard him, and a clown to a taut whisper, growling man's just not supposed to play the throatily through his horn, just off mike. trombone when he's past seventy. But I Only on a few occasions did he become a was mistaken. The visiting hand proved to trifle careless, a bit sloppy in his choice of be one of the finest I have ever heard. notes; and we did not find it too difficult The music they played at the five to overlook bad habits that must be concerts I attended reaffirmed my expected of one who has worked at the conviction that there is no jazz sound to Metropole for many years. This goes, too, equal the ensemble one of a New Orleans for the showmanship that offended a few hand. In all respects it is a more profound fragile souls. A stance like an opening music, more exciting and more refreshing batsman should hardly embarrass a good to the spirit than anything that has Englishman, and if playing a couple of followed. In the bands of New Orleans notes with one hand is in poor taste then musicians, and a few who have learned there are a few modern pianists whose well from them, it assumes an added work needs reassessing. Red's showmansignificance - an intangible identity that, ship was inoffensive, even funny. He just for all we are told by disenchanted critics, looked as if he might he enjoying himself, has little to do with romantic yearnings for which he was. 1k liked it here - "I figured far away places with strange sounding I was just about finished, but the way you names - not for brothels and B-girls in people talk about me I'm good for another dirty underwear. It is a thing about the four hundred years." And he didn't have to music - about the way it is played - in the conic down to play with Ory. He is proud, inflection or tone, the treatment of the as they all are, of his New Orleans beat, the timing, the feeling of rightness background, and will talk fondly of the (It's Tight Like This, It's Ton Tight, It's early days, of his father, and Chris Kelly, Tight, Jim) in both ensemble and solo. and . . . " Why, I remember the time I first There is an emotional immediacy coupled heard Kid Punch, out at a place called with a careless melodic and rhythmic Raceland. I was only a youngster then." complexity, both of which defy mere Red is content to he returning to the technical analysis. Ory's band had all Metropole, with Buster Bailey, Higgy, these qualities. Perhaps not to the extent Speedy Jones and Sammy Price, but we that the band with Mutt and Buster, or the hops that Norman Granz will let him later group with Alvin and Ewell did, but make more recordings with Ory. It is it had them. My suspicions melted away always good and often rewarding to see like late snow. I had a ball. the New Orleans men together again, and In the first place, I lost all my long-held with Punch and Lee Collins out of action reservations about Henry ("If you're in Red is one of the last trumpet players Algiers just ask for 'Son' ") Allen. Red capable of doing justice to the Ory brand had never seemed the ideal horn for a of jazz - one of the remaining greats from New Orleans ensemble. I had always been a tradition that produced many. Judged by willing to acknowledge him as a fine, his performances in London, Allen is one inventive trumpet player - one of the best, of the hottest horn men in jazz today, and on his day, and particularly good on blues possibly the most inventive. And I feel I and ballads - but could never understand can add that he's one of the most considewhy, with his background, he lacked the rate and kindly men I have ever met. ability to play a simple New Orleans lead. The Kid from New Orleans, Ory that On a couple of occasions, with Paul is, needs no assessing. He was, is, and Banks and with Jelly, he had come close always will he among the greatest jazz to it, but only after hearing him with Ory trombonists. A slim, dapper man, looking did I realise that he knows and, given the like a Polynesian elder and moving with a opportunity, can put it into practice. Creole sweep and elegance, his trombone Maybe Ory helped (remember Andrew playing has the earthy sound of a backBlakeney and Teddy Buckner?) but country blues singer - evidence of the whether he did or not, Red always unique background that New Orleans sounded perfectly logical in what was a gave her musicians. A comparison of consistently well-integrated front line. He Ory's early recordings with his playing led with assurance, with the melody kept today shows that he has modified his well under control. His tone seemed style, yet in changing he has lost little. He thinner than it does on his records, and not has merely turned the tables on time by quite as brazen. The notes are hit clear forging out of the limitations imposed by and hard, and the sound is sizzling hot, the passing years a new and more the vibrato varying from fast most of the elementary style that is equally effective time to non-existent on some of the high in the ensembles and just as expressive in solo. His phrases, mostly good ones tested by time, are immaculately positioned to achieve ultimate effectiveness, filling out the ensembles melodically, rhythmically and tonally. His vocals, like his playing, have a whacky rasp, the epitome of the term "knocked-out". A lightly swinging job on Bill Bailey and a half-spoken version of that sentimental but nevertheless aching song, Do You Know What It Means to bliss New Orleans, punctuated with expressive movements of the hands, were particularly memorable. I don't think anyone expected too mutch of Bob McCracken: he was just "some character who was with Louis for a while." I had dreaded a watery voice, a sort of fourth-rate Goodman who would twitter meaninglessly in the ensembles, climbing all over the trumpet parts. I apologise. Bob is from Texas, a state which seems to instil into its musicians a sympathy with the blues - Jack Teagarden and Herb Ellis, for instance. He belongs to an elite of excellent but unsensational white clarinettists, of whom Rod Cless, Don Murray, Pee Wee Russell and Mezz Mezzrow are but four. Lookine the true Texas, lean and tall, a Wally Fawkes come upon hard times, Bob was quiet but effective in the ensembles and on the blue; he moved like George Lewis, with a tone-. that contained some of the dusty dryness of his home state. The front line was supported by a rhythm section that would have missed a guitar badly had it not been for the triphammer drumming of Alton Redd, from Baton Rouge. Louisiana. Alton has been accused of lacking imagination, but I suspect he was merely doing as Ory said. The Kid knows what is necessary and what is superfluous. Redd's rhythm-andblues off-beat was effective in 1944, when he propelled Get Our Of Here to a roaring climax, and it was equally effective in 1959. He guided the band and at the same time held them together, which as about as much as can be asked of any drummer. But, naturally, we'd have preferred Zutty. Alton also shouted mean vocals on Basin Street and Careless Love. He has a compelling, back-country voice, and should make some more records like those he did for Black & White and Beltone in the 'forties. Alongside Alton. who might have doubled for either Baby Dodds or King Oliver. Squire Gush looked positively cherubic. He has come a long way since the Dawn Club days with Lu Watters not a bad bass player, but I can think of one or two others who might have done a better job. Gene Ramey, for instance, might have been held over to advantage. Finally Cedric Hayward, who remains in the memory as a small, dark figure hunched over the keyboard, long fingers stabbing out sombre sound clusters on St. James Infirmary and Aunt Hagar's Blues. He is an all-style pianist, a Texas swing man who appears to have found a permanent niche in the West Coast trad scene. He will never replace - 82a - Addenda young. Perhaps jazz will not be dead now running to catch up. The tensions Buster Wilson as an ensemble pianist. when the last of the veterans has retired, were breathtaking. Listening to such but he plays the piano with both hands, but for some of us, educated on the music it was easy to understand why considerable imagination, and a minisounds of folk jazz, the pinnacle will the revival crusade began, and why mum of showmanship. have been reached: the golden age will those whose jazz appreciation began The group sound that these men have passed and all that will remain is during the revival have found it difficult achieved was whole and wholesome the style, the memory, and a few thouto accept other forms of jazz which Ory's skidding, deep-throated commas, sand wonderful recordings. We'll know cannot boast those qualities that first McCracken's wispy -warmth, Red's flat what it means to miss New Orleans. aroused their interest. trajectory notes cutting under and In the meantime, let us hope that Ory Today there are less than a dozen across and through, and beneath it all the and his friends will continue, on and groups in the U.S.A. who can make this heavy, pounding rhythm. In the final on, to demonstrate the values of truth sort of noise. Inevitably this number is choruses they displayed control and uncluttered by intellectual pretension. going to dwindle from now on, as the rapport, and in the whispering passages, Let us hope that they are, indeed, "good long years of blowing and scuffling way down low, they swung for another four hundred years." catch up with men who are no longer tremendously, now behind the beat, ====================================================================================== EXTRABLADET Fredag, Oct. 9. 1959 Tekst: Lone Agersted - Foto: Sperling Basin street Blues leveres med hele hjertet af Bob McCracken, Kid Ory, Henry Red Allen og Squire Gersh UNGDOMMEN ÖVERGAV SIG TIL DET ALDRENDE KID ÖRY-BAND I KB HALLEN I AFTES Han er en af de gamle. Men han er en af begejstrede publikum han slog los og fandt, deres hjerter paa sit tromdem, der bedst forstaas af ungdommen. Kid Orys koncerter i KB Hallen i gaar var meskind. Bassisten og pianisten slap fra dundrende sukceser. Det var piftende, tram- koncerten uden at efterlade storre pende, bragende ungdom, der overwaerede indtryk. dem. Men desvaerre var der for mange tomme pladser, - alt for mange. Kid Ory og hans creoler jazzband forstod den svaere kunst at fremkalde stemning. Og de forstod den endnu store kunst at bevare den. 73-aarige Kid Ory forstod tilsyneladen-de ogsaa at hygge om sine folk. Og sammen fik de stemningen til at syde og bruse. Og med mellemrum til at boble og spilkoge. Det var ufortalsket New Orleans, der blev serveret. Det var som om 30erne slet ikke var forbi. Som om der endnu ikke var blevet brug for det superraffi-nerede, det ultramodern, det lidt mindre fattelige. Man behover ikke at vaere gourmet for at kunne forstaa Kid Ory. Og der var fin forstaaelse mellem ham og publikum. Musikerne var i god form og de spillede for en lydhor skare, som ikke lod sig gaa paa af den omstaendi-ghed, at ensemblespillet kunne naerme sig det kaotiske. Eller at det til tider var som om, de enkelte musikere var lidt desorienterede med hensyn til, hvem der skulle folge med hvem. Ungdommelig begejstring Henry Red Allen var vital og i maegtigt humor paa sin trumpet. Og saa er han vist orkestrets storste personlighed. Han eg leddet mellem New Orleans og swing. Ogsaa hans bandfaeller udfoldede al deres aldrende ener-gi, og det blev til larm – og larmende sukces. Alton Redd havde nogle forbavsende trommesoloer. Det var som om det var paa det Der er lidt vemodigt ved et gense - og here en musik, der faktisk ikkeer til mere vemodigtfordi den er saa rigtig og saa oprindelig. Maaske lidt, traettende, men paa den anden side ogsaa opkvik-kende, fordi der ikke er noget at tage fejl af. Kid Ory er aldeles ukompliceret. Hons og New Orleans Selv begyndte han sin karrière paa en hjemmelávet cigaraeskebanjo, men fik i en alder af 10 aar en rigtig banjo af sin far, hvilket animerede ham til tre aar senere at danne sit forste orkester. Og saa gik det slag i slag. I mange aar var hans orkester det bedste i New Orleans. Mange af de store har spillet hos ham, bl. A. King Oliver og Louis Armstrong, der forsvrigt havde sit forste professionelle engagement med Ory. I 1933 syntes tiden ikke mere at have brug for New Orleans. Kid Ory trak sig tilbage til en hensefarm I Californien. Men saa kom 1943 med den traditi-onelle jazz´ renaessance, og aaret efter blev Kid Ory engageret af Orson Welles til at samle et aegte New Orleans band. Og ingen var i tvivl om, at Kid var kommet tilbage. Kun faa var i tvivl om vaerdien af hans come back. Nu har Norman Granz og Richard Stangerup faaet dette stykke auten-tisk New Orleans til Kobenhavn, Den 9, 10 og 11. oktober spiller han i Odense, Aarhus og Aalborg. Og som den kuriositet han er, bar han spille for fulde huse. Veteran i form Efter an koncert med Kid Ory´s veteran-orkaster i Folkoner Centest gik tredivernes store trompetnavn Red Allen paa natclub, hvar yar i dodre form end til koncerten og vakte berydelig starre begejstring - 82b - Addenda Red Allen felplacerad i gubbjazzen Av Arne Domnérus Oct.1959 DEN 73-ÅRIGE levande legenden, trombonisten Kid Ory, och den av honom anförda lilla grupp som i går afton gästade vårt Konserthus visade sig vara en samling veteraner med New Orleans-jazz på repertoaren och en myckenhet av gemyt i scenframträdandet. RENT MUSIKALISKT hände väl inga stordåd, snarare fick man en känsla av s. k. rutinspel. Naturligtvis fullt stilenligt men ganska andefattigt. Den på pappret mest intressante trumpetaren Henry "Red" Allen gav åtminstone denne anmälare intryck av att vara felplacerad. Allen torde säkerligen komma bättre till sin rätt i en liten swinggrupp, exempelvis tillsammans med gamla skivpartnern Coleman Hawkins plus några rytmgubbar. Samarbetet med Ory gav aldrig något av det vi förut genom flerfaldiga inspelningar (unfortunately more of this text was cut) =============================unknown source Oct.59 out of Red Allen´s scrapbook as several othe articles Keith Keller: Meningen med musik Endnu har jeg lidit af varmen i kroppen, varmen ved glæden over at have truffet en gammel ven, varmen ved de gamle minders genopblussen. Jeg haaber. De var en af de alt for faa, der ogsaa var til stede derude i aftes - i det koldeste af kolde steder, i K. B. Hallen, da der blev fyret op i de glade erindringers kamin. Maaske er De under de tredive, og saa husker De vel slet ikke trompetisten og sangeren Henry "Red" Allen, der sang After Last Night With You med sit eget ensemble og blæste paa livet los i Ride, Red,Ride med Mills Blue Rhythm Band. Men saa ung er De vel i hvert fald ikke, at De ikke husker dage, hvor den kolde K. B. Hal blev röd glödende, glöder paa tilhörernes kinder, blister paa hælene at at trampe, snurren i læberne af pift, musikalsk ild paa tribunen. Saaden har det ikke været længe. Saadan blev det i gaar aftes, og det var navnlig Red Allens skyld. Det var basunisten Kid Ory's til Europaturneen sammensatte orkester, der spillede. Man havde ventet sig det værste. New Orleans-musik paa koncerttribuner serveres efterhaaden kun af N.O.riginaler, undveget fra deres alderdomshjem, eller af unge europeiske eftersnakkere, der aldrig har lært at tale. Kid Ory er langt fra ung, han er heller ikke synderlig original - spiller en solid basunstemme - men han og hans folk præsterede det bedste, der længe er hört paa Peter Bangsvej. Ensemblet spillede med inspiration og aldeles uden foragt for et repetoire, der er kommet til verden för orkestrets yngste medlem. Men heller ikke med overdreven respekt. Det kan stadig bygges söde ny husepaa de gamle harmonier, og anvendt rigtigt gaar klunker nu aldrig helt af mode. Ory, der har sin 5-aarige datter Barbara med sig paa rejsen, men overlod pasningen af henne til den belgiske nurse Lia van Leeuwen, har ogsaa sund sans nok til at overlade den indre ledelse af sit orkester til den forholdsmæssigt meget yngre kraft, Red Allen. Dette forliger nok Allen, der kun har afbrudt sit fem aar lange engagement som sit eget bands boss i New Yorks navnkundige Café Metropole, for at faa denne Europarejse med, men stillingen som menig musiker. Det var i aftes Allen, der skubbede, drev, piskede og paa sin egen lidt voldsamme façon charmerede orkestret frem til den helt ideale stemningspræstaton. Det var paa den anden side Allen alene, der skabte musik af den lidt större indsigt i meningen med musik. Bob McCracken, hvis sprog stadig er præget af forældrenes skotske hjemland, slog triller paa sin klarinet og undgik for det meste at slaa over i polka. Cedric Haywwod brugte diskanten af sit flygel til at fylde könt ud i fællesimprovisationernes aabninger. Squire Gersh bassede bravt, og Alton Redd ved trommerne havde heldigvis en aflaaset dör bag sig, ellers var han helt löbet sin vej med tempoet i sin almindelige fryd over foretagendet. Numrene paa programmet var selvfölgelig Muskrat Ramble, Tin Roof Blues, Careless Love, High Society og Bill Bailey, Won't You Plese Get Back In Your Own Back Yard. Det ikke spor selvfölgelige var, at vi denne gang ikke hörte dem med fortrolighedens foragt, men med genhörets fulde glæde. 10/5 Stockholm & 10/6 similar Göteborg - 82c - Addenda at the left-cover Red Allen & Ray Nance, at Airways Manions (UK) His Master´sVoice Hotel, London, Nov.1959 c.Valerie Wilmer ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THIS WORLD OF JAZZ Max Jones, Melody Maker 11/7/1959 p11 Ray Nance here THESE have been active days at Airways Mansions, in the West End, where U.S. jazzmen often reside. On Friday last, while calling on Messrs. Wells, Tate, Ramey and Lovelle (of the Buck Clayton band ), I ran into the unexpected persons of George Duvivier and Ray Nance. … (shortened) Clayton, too, has finished his European tour and is now at Airways. Buddy Tate. Dicky Wells and Herbie Lovelle enjoyed themselves here until Sunday, then caught an evening plane to New York. Bassist Gene Ramey, who says he "went crazy and bought up Cecil Gee's stock," stayed a day longer before making for Paris. Blondie When Dicky Wells heard that his old friend Henry Allen - who used to be known as "Red" or "Blondie" in the Fletcher Henderson band - was in Town, he made straight for Oxford Street and Allen's hotel. He went up and knocked, without results; so he wrote a note and pushed it under Red's door. Allen returned from his walk and was shaving when the maid came in, picked up the paper and said: "There's a note here for you, Mr. Allen." The trumpeter, with five minutes in which to catch the band bus, asked her: "What's it say?" She opened the note: "Hey, Blondie," she read. "Why the don't you stay home?" "Here give me that," Red demanded, "That sounds like a friend of mine." Afterwards he told me: "I damn near cut my throat when she read it out." Trombones for two Next day, the two former Henderson and Spike Hughes brassmen got together when Wells visited London's New Victoria theatre. "I went to see Ory's band," said Dicky Wells. " Man, they did knock me out. I hung out with Allen and got together with Ory. Red and I even had some photos made together." One of the photographs (adorns this page. Ory completed his British engagement at Hammersmith on Sunday, with a two-band march around the stage on "Maryland." Terry Lightfoot presented Ory and company with silver tankards, and Red Allen thanked everybody for the warm reception he had been given. I think that if Allen has his way, we shall see him back here before 1960 is out. Famous U.S. trombonist Dicky Wells, heading home from the Continent, split his journey in London last week-end and saw Kid Ory (see Trombones for Two) -------------------------------------------------(photos Red Allen with Ray Nance on p-82a / with Gene Ramey on p81,) - 83d - Addenda MELODY MAKER-10/17/59p11 Honestly, I Feel Honoured says Red Allen - This World of Jazz by Max Jones IT is not every day I meet a hero of my youth, so it was with uncommon pleasure that I said "Hallo" to Henry Allen on Monday. Allen and the rest of Ory's bandsmen came into London by air—two days ahead of the trombonist, who travelled from Denmark by sea with his family. In my young collecting days, arguments about rival schools of jazz were endless. But everyone who admired the Negro bands at all conceded that Henry Allen Jr. was a trumpet player in the grandest manner. Legend Today, at 51, Henry "Red" Allen must be considered a living legend. But he looked a remarkably vigorous one as he strode about the West End on Monday evening, trying the British beer at the " Downbeat " and " Blue Posts," and the music of Acker Bilk at the Jazzshows Club. Allen, a large and amiable man, is manifestly pleased to be here, and delighted with everyone he meets. "This is my first time in England, though I nearly got here, 25 years ago when Jack Hylton brought Coleman Hawkins across. I'm surely enjoying it" he said. "I didn't realise so many people would know me, though I receive letters from several people on this side. "It seems that all over Europe they take to jazz like a kind of religion. Youngsters have come up with books full of old pictures of me that I don't have myself. And they know pretty well all the records I've made. "Honestly, I feel honoured. In Vienna, the other week, I was entering Fatty George's club and the first thing that caught my eye was a big picture of my father. Henry Allen Sr. That was kicks. Spike Hughes "Then, in Berlin, I picked up an album of the records I made with Spike Hughes in 1933. You know, I never heard those since the day they were made. "I believe Hughes was the first to feature two tenors like that - playing behind each other - and to record flute solos." At New York's Metropole, where he has led a band since 1954, Red Allen works some six hours nightly -roughly 45 minutes on, 45 minutes off. "It's not so long if you like it," he says with conviction. "Now one hour can be awful long if you don't enjoy playing. I do. "In all my time at the Metropole I´ve been out twice, a month last year and a month in June. I went to see my, mother in West New Orleans— Algiers, they used to call it, now it's all New Orleans. My father, he passed in 1952. I spent a fine time with my mother, though. She's 75, -looks so sweet. " A few months ago, Norman Granz flew me out to Hollywood on my day off from the Metropole. I left at 9.45 in the morning, was recording with Kid Ory by 3 o'clock, and in the air again by 11.30 that night. It was my first experience of the jet." Long Playing The resultant LP, played by substantially the line-up that is here, is the first recording to team Allen and Ory, though Red said, he once worked with Ory for a short time in King Oliver´s band. Among the titles are "In The Mood," "Honeysuckle Rose," "Ain´t Misbehavin´," "Sister Kate" and "Tishomingo," and the combination of Allen´s trumpet, Ory´s trombone and McCracken´s clarinet is rich and satisfying. Encouraging BROWNIE McGHEE Sonny Terry, who left London on Tuesday at the end of their second British tour, gave an encouraging start to the Jazzshows Jazz Club's new blues policy. Business was good for their three- ----------------------------------------day appearance (Saturday to Monday last) and the pair were very much on form. … Red Allen (centre) meets Brownie McGhee (l) and Sonny Terry at the Jazzshows Jazz Club, London ======================= unknown English source Jazz man Ory gives the legend life JAZZ SHOW - PLACE : Gaumont, Kilburn. Express Music Reporter ONE of the veterans of New Orleans jazz opened his first British tour at the week-end. During the next two weeks, trombonist Edward Ory— still known as Kid Ory despite his 72 years—is taking his six-man Creole jazz band to more than a dozen cities. To jazz enthusiasts he has long been a living legend. Slim, sprightly, with a leathery terrier face creased by a wide grin, his roots go back to the nursery of jazz itself. His first appearance in the Gaumont Cinema, Kilburn, on Saturday night gave a glimpse of the past which had his audience in a rising crescendo of excitement. In all fairness. much of the band's impact was due to the lively trumpeting of bulky Henry "Red" Allen-a comparative youngster of 56. … ======================= Shoppers in London's famous Oxford Street were given a preview of Kid Ory's British tour on Tuesday when New Orleans trumpeter Red Allen was persuaded to blow a chorus for the MM. (It is not recorded what the Happy Wanderers had to say on the subject.) Ory himself arrived on Wednesday and the rest of the group on Tuesday following its Continental tour. The band opens at Cambridge tonight (Friday) -see pages 2 and d 3. Melody Maker 10/17/59 p1 ======================= Melody Maker 10/24/59p8 What readers think about Kid Ory WHEN I attended the Ory concert I was expecting some good traditional jazz - and he came right up to expectations. The thrill and excitement of having seen and heard him still possess me. Red Allen was terrific! He has always been a big jazz name, yet we hear very little of him from the BBC. ======================= - 82e - Addenda MELODY MAKER; 10/24/59p9 MAX JONES REPORTS – Red Allen shines in Ory Band UNTIL I saw Kid Ory's band at London's Gaumont State last Saturday, I had almost forgotten how alive and enjoyable New Orleans jazz could be. Ory's appearance was long overdue. Had he been presented even eight years ago, I expect half the audience would have dissolved into tears of joy at the sight of him. As it was, the loudspeaker announce-ment, followed by the disorganised strains of "Original Dixieland One-Step," released waves of applause and emo-tion, in both of which I shared. The opening was rugged. I began to feel worried. But Red Allen's intense tone and behind-the-beat phrasing arrested the attention. And the actual sound of the front-line, authentically expressive, excited the ears, despite flaws in the blending. A quiet, very rhythmic chorus gave promise of pleasures to come. "I Wish I Was In Peoria" brought improvements, including an unorthodox solo from Allen and ripe, "singing" trombone from an unexpectedly agile Ory. By this time, at least two things were clear. First, Red Allen was a pillar of strength; and, second. the drummer was socking out a loud, unvarying rhythm which tended to drown softer instruments. solos, employing a style somewhere between Goodman and the Bob Crosby clarinettists, and discerning - almost discreet - in collective passages. SOBER LEAD But he doesn't, I feel, completely fill the role of New Orleans ensemble player, and I missed the soaring, swee-ping clarinet of countless Ory finales of the past. Allen, it is true, is not the sober lead man of Crescent City theory. He is highly individual; but he adapts himself admirably to Ory's methods, and when he breaks out he offers more, and not less, than traditional requirements. Kid Ory, blowing what he has blown for years, is still a tailgate master. His presentation gave us pure jazz, a lot of nostalgia, some powerful stageman-ship, and three singers. I wouldn't have asked for more than that, myself. But we were given more. A short first half was capably filled by Terry Lightfoot's six-piece band. SECOND SHOW For the second concert, Ory obligingly changed and improved his programme, which increased the atmosphere of spontaneity already created at the first. "Basin Street," "Do What Ory Say," "High Society" and "Aunt Hagar's Blues" were among the successes. The band played better than before, and Red Allen's talent and showmanship again made him the hero of the event. Long may Red ride! ALTON REDD - singing drummer SQUIRE GERSH - Ory's bassist --------------------------------------------CRISP PIANO And so it continued. "Careless Love" showed that Cedric Haywood played crisp piano, that Alton Redd was a singing drummer, and that the band could establish real rapport when it " held back " in time-honoured Ory fashions. Ory's " Bill Bailey " vocal jumped as it does on the record, and his "Savoy Blues" solo - much the same as 32 years ago with the Hot Five - was punched out with the finesse of a shipyard riveter. He also managed some very rude notes on "St. James' Infirmary." "Savoy," " Tin Roof " and "St. James' (which last Allen sang in a vibrant and humorous manner) were very impres-sive in the more noncha-lant band moments and during Allen's original trumpet excursions. "Muskrat" and "Maryland" didn't come off unscathed, and drummer Redd accelerated in " Wolverine." During the first concert I much preferred the slow and medium tunes, since at speed the ensemble work sounds uncertain and the drumming grew louder. In particular, I delighted in the "whispering " stuff, the sudden contrasts, the element of surprise which Red Allen imparted to the oldest flagwavers, and the across-the-beat quality achieved in the best contrapuntal choruses. Bob McCracken is fluent enough in The band can create real rapport when it "holds back" in tome-honoured Ory =========================== unknown source & date JAZZ - Bone Idol by Benny Green TERE is something decidedly ungallant about criticising the playing of a trombonist when he happens to be seventy-twoyears old. When he happens also to be the New Orleans hero Edward "Kid" Ory, the critic's position becomes almost untenable. Like Achilles, Ory is only halfhuman, the rest of him being genuine god whom the audience at his London debut at the Gaumont State, Kilburn, last weekend, propiti-ated without the slightest regard for the possible existence of any clay feet. (shortened) ORY'S chief support on this tour comes from Henry " Red " Allen, a trumpeter who used at one time to play second to Armstrong. Allen deve-loped technically and imaginatively far beyond the point at which Ory came to rest, and in bis prime was one of the great jazz artists. Evidently he still retains something of his old power. even though the clarity of conception has naturally faded somewhat in the course of twenty-five years. Every so often at Kilburn, Allen would brace himself and produce a single note, clear and loud, with a genuine rich jazz resonance, a rare plum from the past, as it were. He Would hold the note, and then tear the trumpet from his mouth, swing round and invite applause like a weightlifter who has just broken the world record. Whether the impossible acoustics of the Gaumont State were too much for me, or whether Ory's drummer. Alton Redd, was really as bad as he sounded is a delicate point, but the effect was one of Redd striking his cymbal with his stick at one point in time, and the rest of the group acting on the assump-tion that the heat was occurring at quite another. The result was a kind of rhythmic tugof-war which Ory and Allen blandly ignored. (shortened) ======================= MELODY MAKER. 11/7/59p4 KID ORY exposes the revivalists By Humphrey Lyttelton Traditionalists have been exulting in the presence of Ki Ory's Creole Jazz Band - and quite rightly, too. It is unlikely that shall ever hear such convincing and exciting example of "survivalist" New Orleans jazz. Despite the presence of a piano (Ory has never been a banjo man), the group evoked a more authentic outdoor. streetparade atmos-phere than any revivalist group I ever heard. To sit in one of great Gaumont edifices, and hear the music echoing around the walls, occasionally changing completely in quality as the most mobile front-line in jazz history swung into range of a microphone, was like being suddenly plunged into the swirling excitement of a carnival. Never was the fruitlessness of revivalism more starkly revealed. New Orleans For beneath the more obvious New Orleans allusions - the marching up and down, the hokum, the nostalgia - one was strongly aware of mysterious, intan-gible elements, of attitudes, emotions, and atmosphere inherent in a way of life vividly recalled by veterans like Ory and Allen but far beyond the reach of the most diligent revivalist's. ( shortened words about Ory´s former clarinettists). Bizarre It can, I think, be taken for granted by all those who know what New Orleans jazz is about, that Kid Ory is the best trombonist in the idiom that has ever lived. But Ory is more than that. Next week, I want to talk about the somewhat bizarre combination of Ory and Red Allen. (this article is missing) There is no doubt from the general reaction to the Ory concerts that Allen made a very strong impression. Those who have heard him at the Metropole in New York, and who were at the last concert in Hammersmith. are probably still gasping at the incredible contrast. It can be confidently predicted that in the next MM International Poll, Allen will be highly placed - having not been mentioned at all in recent years! Did Allen dominate the Ory band. putting the leader in the shade? Or did Ory act as a kind of Svengali? ****** - 83 Dicky Wells -who saw Red in UK-1959- In a letter to Steve Voce 11/15/6a ...THE GANG CAME BY WIVES AND ALL WE WENT TO CATCH RED THEY KNOCKED US OUT SOME CUTE BAND I REALLY DIG THAT DIXIE AS I SAID BEFORE IF ITS GOOD REGARDLESS OF WHAT KIND OF MUSIC IT IS I DIG IT BECAUSE THERES A PLACE IN LIFE FOR IT. RED ALLEN AND KID ORY AND THE MEMBERS OF THE NEW 'CREOLE' BAND; Jazz News 10/9/59p7 FOR the second time this year brilliant trombonist but he has a giant of jazz from New Orleans always played correctly and with is bringing his band to this coun- confidence. try. Kid Ory, now seventy-three Bricklaying years old and recently released He is not a brilliant soloist and from hospital, begins his first has never aspired to the heights British tour in seven days time. of virtuosity. His nature is too Ory's post-war fame dates from quiet and dignified for that. He RED ALLEN is a New Orleans a period during the early jazz contents himself by playing a man born and bred. His family revival when actor Orson Wells near perfect ensemble trombone, were brass band men from way been where Louis is today. Allen gathered together under Ory's taking a raucous but simple solo back. Had Louis Armstrong not joined the Ory group just for this name a group of jazz pioneers whenever the mood moves him. become the 'King' of jazz during tour - he is more normally found at the Metropole cafe in New from the early days. The group, Instead of starving during the the 30's Allen might well have York where the management first formed for broadcasts, stay- depression years he saw the take advantage of his fame ed together and was the forerun- writing on the wail and retired to ner of the 'Creole Band' that we run a chicken farm. will be hearing. In the post-war Since the days of the Orson groups were trumpeters Mutt Wells broadcasts Ory has toured Carey and Teddy Buckner. clari- the world with his band and has nettists Darnell Howard, Jimmy opened his own club in San FranNoone, Wade Whaley and cisco. The present Creole band Albert Nicholas, guitarist Bud is a far cry from the "Sunshine Scott, drummer Minor Hall and Orchestra" and the "Brownskin Zutty Singleton, pianists Alton Babies", nevertheless it is playPurnell and Don Ewell and bas- ing a traditional jazz which over Kid Ory received a musical welcome to Liverpool Street Station sist Ed. Garland. The present the years has become identified in London last week. Seen here providing the music are band contains … with its leader, and has become trombonists: unknown, Phil Rhodes, Mac Duncan and Terry The outstanding thing about a. model for the younger genera- Lightford, partially visible is trumpet man Alan Elsdon. Ory s life is that it has not been tion to follow. spectacular. Henry Allen He stayed with Louis until 1940 times slightly raucous. Recent He is not a self confessed brag- Henry "Red" Allen is perhaps and since that (late has played in recordings have shown that gart and "wide boy" like Jelly the only member of the band and around New York, mostly at although age may weary it does not dim the style of a true master. Roll Morton. nor is he technical- besides Ory, who has a true New the Metropole Cafe, Bob McCracken ly poor but worshipped like Orleans background, Allen has often been labelled as Bob McCracken was horn in George Lewis, Ory is a quiet Born in 1908 he played in the an Armstrong imitator. His enviworking man who enjoys play- Excelsior Brass Band, with ronment has been similar to Louis' Texas. He joined Jack Teagaring jazz.. If domestic troubles Marable, King Oliver and Luis and he has played with many of den in the Doc Ross band in kept him at home then he was Russell. In 1933 he joined the the same leaders. His technique 1924 and during the 30's played quite contented to work as a Fletcher Henderson band lea- is good, his tone clean and majes- with Trumbauer, Venuti. Bud bricklayer. Ory has never been a ving to join Armstrong in 1937. tic, his style attacking and some- Freeman and Jimmy McPartland. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Tailgate jazz in best tradition Jazz News 10/23/59p8 Patrick Richards All eyes on this tour are obvi- for everyone to move around. IF there is one thing that British Bob McCracken stopped playing It seems probable that this will ously on Ory and he holds the jazz audiences cannot be accused to get back into the proper key. There was less ensemble limelight well, although he did be the first and last tour of of, that is xenophobia. The audience at the first Kid playing than I had expected and look tired by the end of the Britain by the Kid and I strongly Ory concert at the Gaumont the accent lay heavily on solos concert and the impression was urge you not to miss the show. State, Kilburn. were cheering winch was fortunate as the given that one more /number Apart from the excellent jazz that the band play, the entertainthe band before they had played soloists were in excellent form. might be too much for him. ment and showmanship content their first notes. Ory played all the obvious (but Rousing The applause was really a right) solos, exiting with an It is in the slower blues that he is very high and may even please moving tribute to a great legend isolated single note at the shines, muted and open, whereas people who have no predilection - the personificatior, of the tail- conclusion of each chorus. Red Allen is better on the up- for traditional jazz. A word also about the Terry He is master in the ensembles. tempo tunes, where his crowd gate trombone, the man who took the first coloured jazz band into placing his notes judiciously and rousing style is particularly Lightfoot band which shares the bill with Ory. Entertainment is a recording studio in 1921, the refusing to dominate. effective. man whose life spans the whole _Red Allen, a surprise choice Outstanding numbers were the their object and they achieve it of jazz history, a seventy-three to many. blows well with a fier- lovely 'Careless Love', 'Tin Roof admirably. This band will succeed because years young legend - Kid Ory. ceness that opens up the usual Blues', and 'St. James Infirmary' traditional sound and spurs the in which Ory's growing horn the leader is determined to succeed. Technical Their programme was balanconveyed a sombre atmosphere. Technical faults the band may other soloists to greater effort. Bob McCracken has a fine The dynamics in these numbers ced and thoughtful and the musihave had but for sheer enthusiasm and spirit this band cannot conception of his place in the are an object lesson in how to cians are all good showmen. ensembles and his playing is play the New Orleans style with- Solo honours must go to Alan bettered. Elsdon with Jerry Lightfoot not The deficiencies I will dispose particularly attractive for his low out trying to blow the roof off. The band also played 'Savoy far behind. of first because they in no way register solos. Eighteen-year-old Jimmy Gardetract from the entertainment Cedric Heywood on piano Blues', 'Bill Bailey', 'Muskrat value of the band's performance. played capably as did Squire Ramble', 'Do What Ory Said', forth was featured on an interesThe drumming was unbelievably Gersh, when the effect of his and requests from the audience. ting drum solo and should do For fans who have heard recent well once he has mastered his stodgy and unvaried and the bass was not being nullified by Ory bands on record. this group tendency to drag the beat. band appeared to have some the heavy handed drumming. The band played well above difficulties over which keys they The band generate a happy will be no disappointment - an were playing in. sound and they show a genuine excellent band. strong in soloists their club standard and had the At one point in 'Maryland' the delight when the audience and with the ensembles freely audience on their side from the swinging and loose with room start. front line with the exception of applaud their efforts. - 84 HENRY “RED” ALLEN - The happy musician from New Orleans by John Martin in Jazz News 11/6/59p9: HENRY ALLEN Jnr. - Henry Allen Snr. play at the Metropole. And I generally Red was persuaded to go on stage by - Red Allen, sat back jacketless in his chair sit in with Wilbur DeParis in NewYork." Wally Fawkes. and talked about the many records that he At the Metropole Red has been He did not have his horn with him but has made in the course of his long career. resident on and off for thepast eight he sang three numbers with style and "Yeah, I guess I've been known by all of years and if he plays there the way he voice that would'have done credit to Rushing. those names on my records at one tune or has been playing on the Ory tour, then Jimmy another and maybe a few more, too" he I predict that he will be resident at that -------------------------------------------------Within sound of .. said. "Red is a real friendly person who venue for many years to come. RONNIE SCOTT'S Club opened in loves to laugh and enjoys talking. Facts -----------------------------------------------London last week. What this club lacks in Jazz News 11/6/59p12: Quieter? and dates are no problem for him." … ALLEN arrived at the Marquee area it will obviously make up for in Red picked up his trumpet which was RED club not altogether unexpectedly on quality of groups and atmosphere. lying across a chair. "It's a King,' he said, his two nights off and practically bodily On the opening date musicians far out"but I don't know what make the mouth- carried me into the adjoining pub. I had numbered the Press which is how it piece is. A guy just asked if he could make two beers down my throat before I had should be. Ellington virtuoso Ray me one so I said go ahead. It's probably fully recovered (as had just about Nance, just completed a European tour, the same as the one I had. It suits me." everyone else in sight). came by dropped in to meet old friends and all He blew air through the instrument air to Britain and he toldRed the assemb- Ronnie's past musica1 associates were without producing a sound. why. "Listen. When 1 was a kid I there-Tubby Hayes, Terry Shannon, Bill "No. I never play scales ... gave them up lage had to cross the river to my school in le Sage, Benny Green and Harry Klein years ago. " "This is all I do now … makes New Orleans. When I started work, I were among the many. my embouchure more flexible. had to cross the river every day. When Ronnie has been contemplating a club of This is my first time out of the States and I worked with Fate Marable I was on his own for some time. Re deserves I'm enjoying it all the way. I like playing the riverboats. I've seen enough water success. I think he will find It. with Ory. It's no so different from what we to last me the rest of my life." --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------THE KID ORY CREOLE JAZZ BAND – JAZZ – VAN Rhythm Dec.1959p14 – GISTEREN Een tegen veler verwachtingen in redelijk gevulde Concertgebouwzaal werd zaterdagnacht 7 november j.l. overspoeld met enthousieste, ongekompliceerde New Orleans Jazz. Het was Kid Ory wat de klok sloeg en geassisteerd door trompettist Red Allen, klarinettist Bob McCracken, pia-nist Cedric Haywood, bassist Squire Gersh en drummer Alton Redd demonstreerde deze 'eeuwig-jonge', bijna 73jarige jazzveteraan een welhaast overrompelende vitaliteit. ROUTINE Natuurlijk was het gehele programma getint door een nauwelijks verholen routine, die het als-maar-weer-afdra-aien van 'vergeelde' classics uiteraard met zich meebrengt. En, er waren nog wel meer bedenkingen, zoals drummer Alton Redd, die zich de gehele avond onderscheidde door een konstant doorgevoerd wood- blocritme, zó ongenadig hard en voluminous, dat 'papa' Ory hem soms tot minder luidruchtigheit moest manen. Zijn breaks waren van een stereotiepe eentonigheid, om van swing maar niet te reppen! Bob MacCracken zagen we jaren geleden reeds bij Armstrong. We kunnen ons nauwelijks aan de indruk onttrekken, dat hij voor Ory's muzikale gedachtensfeer wat té 'glad' is. Alhoewel zuiver intonerend, ontbrak het hem aan het ware vuur, de grillige, juichende fantasie van de New Orleans klarinet. BEPROEFDE SUKSESSEN Red Allen was beslist de man met de meeste 'power', een bruisende lead, vooral in Carelesslove. Ory zelf was nog altijd de 'tailgate-master' bij uitstek, waarbij hij voluit beter uit de voeten kwam, dan wanneer hij met plunger werkte. Ory's repertoire bestond, zoals trouwens bij de meeste oude stijlsessions, uit vertrouwde, beproefde suksessen. Via de Original Dixieland Onestep, Basin Street, Wolverine- en Tin Roof Blues, naar de 'marching-parades'-ophet-podium met Maryland, High Society en de geestige Allenvocal in St. James Infirmary. MEER FOLKLORE DAN MUZIEK Dit was meer folklore dan muziek. Het riep visioenen CONCERT KID ORY and his Creole Jazz Band starring: Henry „Red" Allen (1959) VERVE MGV 3001 Das Phänomen Kid Ory besuchte unser gutes, altes Europa jetzt zum zweiten Mal, und dürfte nun allgemein als einer der Großen des traditionellen Ja« entdeckt worden sein, - größer, echter, vitaler und überzeugender als die meisten schwerverdienenden Stars der RevivalScene. Phänomen ist das einzige Wort, mit dem ich einen Musiker zu belegen weiß, der die Posaune ,erfand' (wie Hawkins das Tenorsaxophon), sein Format über eine Berufskarriere von co. 60 Jahren bewahrte, und heute als 73jähriger souveräner, flüssiger und stwingender spielt, als je zuvor. Erwies er sich bisher vor allem als meisterlicher Ensembleleiter, der seinen Gruppen stets jene dichte, heitere Spielatmosphäre der Kreolen verlieh, die er als einziger in dieser Form bewahrt zu haben scheint, so zeigt er sich mit seiner neuen Band nun plötzlich auch als überlegener Chorus-Spieler in einem gelockerten, mehr zur Solistik tendierenden Combo-Stil. Die erste der vorliegenden Bands (1945, kurz nach seiner Entdeckung durch Orson Welles) enthält Bud Scott g und Mutt Carey tp, älteste New OrleansVeteranen, die Ory genau ihrer Art und ihrem Können entsprechend einsetzte, Naivität mit Charme vermischend - das Ergebnis war eine der beglückendsten Revival-Bands, die es gegeben hat. Auch die Band, mit der Ory das erste Mal Europa besuchte, war auf gleichem Rezept aufgebaut -stilechte, aber nicht überragende Solistik, die ganz aus dem Rahmen lebte, den Ory ihr gab, - lebendiges, vielleicht darf man sagen: liebevolles Kollektivmusizieren, das einen Charme ausstrahlte, wie man ihn bis dato bei uns noch nicht erlebt hatte. Keine Interpretationen von New Orleans Musik, sondern New Orleans Musik schlechthin. op aan voorbije dagen, met een aparte, lokale kleur. En romantiek, gelardeerd ook met weemoed en droefgeestigheid. De nuchterheid gebiedt ons te bedenken, dat dit 'past time' is, doch in feite was en is het deze jazz, deze pijler, waarop de huidige modernen zich grondvesten. Er was niemand, die zei dat hij het 'mooi' vond, dit konsert. Maar wel was iedereen tevreden. RUD NIEMANS O.Hudtwalker in Jazz Podium 11/59: Die letzte Platte, die soeben zu Ory's zweiter Europatournee erschien (das Platten-Cover korrespondiert graphisch mit dem Plakat und dem Programmheft - einmal wieder ein Novum zur künstlerischen Bereicherung der internationalen Jazz-Scene aus der Werkstatt Michel-Kieser-Lippmann!), präsentiert die neue Ory-Band, wie wir sie erlebten. Man hatte sich vorher gefragt, wie Ory wohl den _"wilden" Henry Allen, den letzten Trompeten-König aus New Orleans (King Oliver holte ihn 1928 aus der Jazzwiege nach New York) und stilistisches Zwischenstück von Armstrong zu Eldridge, in das Konzept seiner Band einpassen würde. Und war überrascht, mit welchem Geschmack und welcher Intelligenz Ory dieses Konzept für Allen soweit gelockert hatte, daß Allen's bravouröse Solistik Platz fand, ohne daß der Charme des Kollektivspiels á la Ory verloren ging. Das Ergebnis war eine Ory-Band, die nicht nur spannungs-reicher, sondern auch vitaler und swingender als die vorangegangenen war. Man hätte sich an Stelle des durchaus achtbaren McCracken wohl nur noch den kürzlich unerwartet verstorbenen Omer Simeon als Klarinettisten wünschen mögen, um eine vollendete Traumband zu erleben. Daß auch Ory neben dem „jungen" Allen (51) solistisch stärker hervortrat und, obgleich die Welt von seinen Klischees lebt, völlig unklischiert wirkende, frische Chorusse von klassischem Format spielt, gehört zum ‚Phänomen' und beweist, daß der 73jährige Ory seinen Vornamen Kid zurecht beibehalten hat. Lang Live The Kid! - 85 David Griffiths for a UK-newspaper 1959: KID ORY'S CONCERT AT THE, VICTORIA CINEMA On October 31st., I went to New Victoria Cinema, to see and hear Kid Ory's Creole Jazz Band. For the first thirty five minutes of the show the audience were warmed up to the music of Terry Lightfoot's Jazzmen, This is about the best group Terry has led, with Alan Elsdon on trumpet being a stand-out member. On drums is an eighteen year old boy, by the name of Jimmy Garforth, he played a drum solo lasting about five minutes which pleased most of the audience. Completing the Group are Terry's brother Paddy Lightfoot on banjo, Phil Rhodes on trombone, Vic Barton on bass and of course as most of you know, Terry on clarinet. I am afraid that it was a great pity that this Group had to play on the same bill as the Kid Ory Band, for immediately Ory's Band came on, the shortcomings of the Lightfoot Band were revealed. Following the Lightfoot Band we had a short inter-val and then on came the Kid Ory Creole Band. We were very lucky in the fact that all the members of the band were on their best form. Reports f'rom other concerts complained of the noisy drumming, but at this concert the mikes had been placed just right. The first three numbers played were quite good, but then they continued with "Careless Love" and from then on the Band played brilliantly. In particular, Henry Red Allen, his solos I thought were magnificent and I regard him as the most underrated trumpeter ever. I have seen many American trumpet players over here, but never have I been so much impressed as I was by Red Allen's playing Kid Ory, well everything has been said about him, how at 72 he can still play so great is just one of those mysteries. Bob McCracken on clarinet also had one of his good nights and played excellently. The rhythm section of Cedric Hayward (Pno), Squire Gersh (Bass) and Alton Redd (Drums) really swung. Cedric Hayward's playing was really good, I had never heard him before and he certainly surprised me with his playing. Alton Redd's vocal effords brought forth some well deserved applause. The highlight of the evening was when the Band played “Maryland, My Maryland”.It opened with Ory leading the introduction, then came Red Allen's trumpet call and they swung into the chorus with the whole of the front line of Ory, Allen and McCracken marching around the Stage. This number Ory-Allen at the Free Trade Hall, Manchester 1959 received so much applause that the Band replied with an Allen is also a singerof some repute, and particularly shines encore. This time, just the trumpet call and straight into Focus, March 1964p3 the chorus, as they marched again Squire Gersh came forward with his Bass and stumbled along after them. Other outstanding numbers were “Bill Bailey”, “Muskrat Ramble” (with Kid Ory singing) and “St.James Infirmary (with Red Allen doing the vocal). Truly a memorable evening and the best jazz concert I have ever attended yet. There will shortly be issued a L,P. by H.M.V., on which most of this Band may be heard, if it is anything like the concert I saw, it will be really worth getting. I only hope we will hear Red Allen over here again perhaps with a group from the Metropole and Kid Ory can come back anytime he likes. ---------------------------------------------------------------------Zürich-concert 5/11/59:“Red Allen Special” by Johnny Simmen, Le Point Du Jazz 1976– look page-76a: out of Red Allen´s scrapbook RED ALLEN is a New Orleans man born and bred. His family were brass band men from way back. Had Louis Armstrong not become the 'King' of jazz during the 30's Allen might well have been where Louis is today. Allen joined the Ory group just for this tour - he is more normally found at the Metropole cafe in New York where the management take advantage of his fame Jazz News 10/9/59p7 - 85a - 9/27 Köln, same photo-advert was used for 9/25 Munich 11/9/59 Basel – Liederhalle . courtesy Christer Fellers & his kidory.com 85b 10/6/59 Göteborg 10/6/59 Göteborg 10/19/59 Birmingham 10/8/59 Copenhagen 10/15 until 11/1 UK-tour 10/15 until 11/1 UK-tour 10/17/59 Gaumont 10/22/59 Leicester 10/23/59 Brighton-afternoon 10/23/59 Brighton-evening 10/8/59 Copenhagen.. 10/27/59 Bradford 10/24/59 Manchester 11/13/59 Copenhagen 10/23/59 Brighton -advert - 86a THE NATIONAL FOTO-NEWS, Toledo-2, Ohio, Sat., 10/17/59 AVALUABLE LIGHT CANDIDS OF TWO GREATS Speedie Jones and the pops of New Orleans, Blues Henry Red Allen! Mr. Allen went to a great expense to have Speedie Jones shipped up from his home in Florida. Mr. Jones was a sensation in the U.S. Army Band. 'Red' heard about him, caught his fine percussion and coordination on the beat and hired him at once for his Broadway All Star Band. Now Speedie is a top bracket man getting more pay than any Ammer in the Metro-pole due tohis drawing power over the many fans, who come to watch and hear Speedie with his speed licks on the sticks. pic by Jerome Lee Three Kings Of The Drum World … Often you can see many all star attractions bigger than the Met at Jazz palace the Metropole, NYC...Here is Cozy Cole, Buddy Rich and J.C. Heard, often a sensation as names for all star billing at many all star Jazz events. They have come to the Metropole to dig the tremendous maneuvers of 'Speedie' Jones, the new sensation of Broadway montaged in this picture. Tho Speed got Lionel Hampton crazy with his fast drumming, Speed is a feature with the Henry 'Red' Allen Band. Most of the world's greatest drummer men have been treking to the Metropole to dig this little man's perfect precussionality. Benny Goodman, Stan Kenton, Perez Prado and Louis Armstrong have been watching this little man of the pig-skins to try to bid high for his services. Autor Visits Copper Rail … left to right: Assistant for Author Langston Hughes, who was a guest at the NAACP convention here in New York visiting an old friend of his, the smiling gent in the center, Sammy Price, Jr., New Orleans and Paris piano man, now the rhythm with Henry Red Allen. Sammy is one of Langston Hughes´ favorite characters used in many of his popular books DRUM STARS MAKING FAME … Speedie Jones, the newest sensation to break up all sessions now with the famed All Star Henry 'Red' Allen band at Metropole Care, a saloon on Seventh Ave. and 48th St., NYC where they blast out Dixieland music. 'Speed', has the most wonderful hands and precussion rhythm with these golden paws, that patrons and passersby when they hear these machine-gun blasts of the Man-Jones, flock in to see what's happening in this double decked beer parlor. Here's Cozy Cole, who has made several hit records top one "Topsy" that was No. 1 position on the Juke Boxes for a long time. This little man of the fast and furious beating of the pig-skin is a big favorite with Cozy, "Who wants to steal him away for an extra attraction on his one night stands throughout the country. ==============================================- - 86b 59/11/26, NYC., Hotel Astor on Times Square, personnel: Irvin Markowitz; Jack Honywill, Joe Shepley, Ike Iacometta (t) Ben Long (tb) Stan Rubin (cl,ld,v) Bob Wilber (cl,ts) Bill Cooper (ts) Danny Derasmo (lead-as) Vinnie Riccitelli (as) Kenny Arzberger (bars) Marty Napoleon (p) Mel Rose (b) Gary Chester (d) Harry Sheppard (vib) Jack Lewis (producer); added in big band: Wild Bill Davison, Pee Wee Erwin, Max Kaminsky (t) J.C. Higginbotham (tb) only on two sides: Pee Wee Russell, Tony Parenti (cl) all on JCH-CD-12b 01 5;35 HINDUSTAN (Harold Weeks-Oliver G. Wallace) big band feat. Higgy., W.B.Davison, P.W.Russell, Tony Parenti JCH-CD-12 02 4:57 BEALE STREET BLUES (W. C. Handy) -big band JCH-CD-12 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 4:17 2:51 4:04 5:01 3:03 3:12 2:50 TIGER RAG (ODJB) –feat. Stan Rubin Sextet HIGH SOCIETY (C. Williams-A. J. Piron) feat. Bob Wilbur & Stan Rubin SLIPPED DISC (Benny Goodman) –Stan Rubin Sextet w.H.Sheppard LIMEHOUSE BLUES (Braham-Furber)-big band incl. P.W.Russell & Tony Parenti / P.W.Erwin out 8-.9-10 (I'll Never Get Mad Again) -vStR (Stan Rubin) SWEET GEORGIA BROWN (Casey-Bernie-Pinkand) -big band IVY JAZZ BAND BALL (Stan Rubin-Bill Yensky-Sam Denng) JCH-CD-12 JCH-CD-12 STAN RUBIN PLAYS THE IVY LEAGUE JAZZ BAND BALL UAL 3085 / UAS 6085/ Ivy League slogans do not change radically. Right before twist by Bob Wilber's writing. the Thanksgiving holiday college kids used to whisper to Wilber, clarinetist-tenor saxophonist with the band, scored each other, "I'll meet you under the clock at the Biltmore," the famed Alphonse Picou chorus for two clarinets playing in while today, the 1960 co-ed croons to her swain, "I'll lose my harmony against a vibe background. The reason for so doing heart to you at the Astor." was to tone down the brash Dixieland sound to take more When the leaves are off the trees and the snow starts to fall advantage of the melodic content of the tune. The clarinet on the eastern college campuses the collegiate mind dreams duo, made up of Wilber and Stan Rubin, effectively of the concrete canyons and plush cocktail lounges of accomplish the desired result. Manhattan. It's traditional - the Thanksgiving long week-end Another number where Wilber's clarinet is featured, Slipped in New York. Disc, is reminiscent of the classic Benny Goodman recording Stan Rubin, a Princetonian golfer from New Rochelle, N. of the tune. It is performed here by the Rubin sextet with Y., has been following an extracurricular muse since 1951, Harry Sheppard on vibes. his freshman year at Princeton, when he organized a Most of the Friedlander arrangements are taken at upDixieland jazz band called the Tiger Town Five. tempos and feature chording backgrounds front the sax Two degrees later, Princeton '55 and Fordham Law School section during solos. This gives a rich sound and is used '59, Rubin finds himself firmly established in the music busi- behind Dixieland solos from the sextet to offer a bit of ness. The young leader, who plays clarinet himself, has noti- modernity for dancing. … ced business opportunities involved with college traditions. The big band versions of standards like Hindustan, Beale In fact, he looks upon the entertainment of youth in the big St. Blues, Limehouse Blues and Sweet Georgia Brown all city at Thanksgiving time as a social obligation. Many of the offer danceable ensembles and a series of round robin solos students making the four-day scene live out West and there from trumpet, trombone, piano and drums. isn't time for them to make the festive-laden table at home, Rubin's playing of Tiger Rag is another example of subdued Where there's a need, there's a Stan Rubin. His contribution Dixieland. The tiger wails softly and politely in comparison to the holiday welfare of the happily stranded students is an to the usual interpretations of this tune. annual Ivy Jazz Band Ball. The set includes two original songs by Rubin. A novelty This album takes you inside the Ivy ball that took place last entitled 8-9-10 was a big favorite at the wedding of Princess Thanksgiving night (November 26, 1959) in the Grand Grace in Monaco. It is a ditty based on counting to ten before Ballroom of the Hotel Astor on Times Square. you get mad. Rubin sings the vocal, counting off in both The young collegiate Meyer Davis has a definite concept English and French, in a Phil Harris style. regarding his functions. Musically, he believes in a well Rubin wrote Ivy Jazz Band Ball especially for the occasion. balanced night of joy, and offers three requisites there must It is taken at a march tempo and features Rubin's clarinet. be good danceable tunes; there must be entertainment, maybe If the listener to this album would like to play a game it can a little hokum, and above all there must be jazz. The Tiger be done. Rubin invited a long list of famous name jazz men Town Sextet, a jazz combo, is carried within the fold of the to be guests during the evening. They brought their Stan Rubin Dance Orchestra in deference to the last named instruments and sot in for one or may be two numbers. requirement. The guest list included trum-eters Wild Bill Davison, Pee The excitement, the hand clapping, the leader's announce- Wee Irwin, and Max Kaminsky; trombonist J.C. ments and the danceable tempos are all heard on this record Higginbotham; and clarinetists Pee Wee Russell and Tony as they happened. Parenti. All of the arrangements but one were furnished by This listener heard Davison and Higginbotham on freelancer Bob Friedlander. The one exception is the Hindustan. Maybe listeners can hear some of the name guest stars playing solo or in the ensembles of other renditions. The second annual Ivy Jazz Band Ball with almost two thousand students jammed into the Astor ballroom is herewith put on the record for posterity. GEORGE HOEFER New York Editor, Down Beat marching jazz tune, High Society, which was given a new - 86 - CD-1/16/60p13: TRUMPET star Henry”Red”Allen receives his “Playboy” Certificate of Merit from coleagues Dizzy Gillespie (left) and Cozy Cole (right) at New York's Metropole Café. Magazine named “Red” one of the year's outstanding jazzmen. Veteran trumpeter, now in his sixth consecutive year at the Metropole, recently returned from a smash European tour with Kid Ory. (alternate text and photo, of poor quality in NYAN:1/16p13) TOGETHERNES – And for a worthy cause is demonstrated at our Monday Night Camp Fund held at the Midway Lounge. From left: Red Allen, Louise Speller, Dawn Café; Ernie Cobb, American Tobacco Co., Selbra Hayes, Midway Lounge and Dan Arrindell, Cutty Sark, all smile pretty. NYAN-1/23/60p14 (due to 1/18/60 date) 60 N.Y.C. Metropole: Downstairs - Red Allen All Stars: J.C.Higginbotham (Dec-Jan.), Ricky Nelson (Feb.-March), Keg Johnson (mid March-April) then Jimmy Buxton (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) Sam Price (since Dec.)(p) unknown (b) Zutty Singleton(d) / vs. Sol Yaged Quartet, occasionally Charlie Shavers Sextet added; in May Turk Murphy for Shavers; Upstairs: Cozy Cole 1/11/15/60, in May: Chico Hamilton; June: Louis Jordan ; July: Gene Krupa 4 & Turk Murphy band; Aug.: Jack Teagarden; Sept.: Gene Krupa; Tony Parenti Trio; Nov.16-Dec.13: Lionel Hampton Big Band; Dec.: Sol Yaged; Dec.59-June NYAN-12/26/59p13: Red Allen & his Gang back at the Metropole including Sam Price piano. Dan Morgenstern, Jazz Journal Jan. 6o; NEW YORK SCENE: ... Buster Bailey rejoined Red Allen at the Metropole upon Red's return, ditto Higgy, Sam Price and Speedy Jones Jazz Monthly Jan.1960 shows a portrait of Red Allen in action Louis Armstrong, ”Red”Allen, Sammy Price, unknown , Lucille Armstrong, 1960, perhaps from the “Playboy”date;out of the “Sammy Price”- book / poss. by Milt Hinton 1/18/60 Mo.,, NYC., Midway Lounge – Night-Camp-Fund with Red Allen as guest (photo) 2/8/60 Mo., NYC., Lundy's Paree – Red Allen NYAN-2/6/60p14 NYA-2/6/60p12: portrait of Charlie Shavers – METROPOLE STAR. Charley Shavers, the great trumpeter, is wailing at the Metropole these nights with his new quintet. Riding high in a 3 week engagement, Charley's torrid group share the spot light with the rhythm-packed Dixieland combos led by Red Allen and Sol Yaged, with Chubby Jackson's quartet joining the fold every Friday and Saturday night at the Metropole's special added attraction for the week-ends. Bul.H.C.F. 3-196o:Metropole-RED ALLEN BAND: with Keg Johnson, Buster Bailey, Sammy Price, Zutty Singleton, - 86cundated & without details out of Red Allen´s photo-collection Red Allen & Albert Nicholas on his visit in the USA in 1959 1960 Metropole; Red Allen & Buster Bailey, unknown (d) unknown (tb) at the Metropole: unknown Metropole unknown date, musicians; poss. Henry P.Allen III at the Metropole, unknown; probably Pearlie Mae; the white woman seems to be of interest because also on the following photo Metropole; unknown;Higgy, same white woman; Pearlie Mae - 86dundated without notes from Red Allen´s photo collection w.Gene Krupa in July-60 at Metropole upstairs; unknown other persons cut on the same photo in Chilton´s Red Allen book with Gene Krupa at the Metropole-upstairs in July-Sept.1960: other persons unknown surely in the `60s; unknown location, unknown persons; possibly out of interest if not it’s a jazz-critic unknown date, location, persons; top right poss.B.Bailey; right poss.Herb Flemming unknown date, location, musicians; probably on tour possibly: Willie Humphrey, Allen, Paul Barbarin (leaning) surely in the `60s; unknown location, unknown persons; possibly out of interest if not it’s a jazz-critic or organisators - 87 Jack Bradley, Jazz Journal April.60-New York Scene: The Metropole is still jumping with the groups of Red Allen and Sol Yaged. At the beginning of the year trombonist Ricky Nelson replaced J.C.Higginbotham with Red's group. Nelson remained with Red only five weeks, then left to join Bob Scobey in Chicago. Keg Johnson replaced Nelson but this too was for only a few weeks. The present trombonist with Red is Jimmy Buxton. At various time's during the past few months the groups of Chubby Jackson, Bobby Hackett, Charlie Shavers and Dizzy Gillespie have appeared at the Metropolesometimes upstairs, sometimes down, sometimes weekends, and sometimes not, depending upon the whims of the management. Jazz Music March 60; Vol. 11/3 : Air Mail from N.Y.: To keep up to date on the current lineup at the Metropole requires a scorecard or'program of some type. Red Allen and Charlie Shavers both lead a sextet six nights a week, along with Sol Yaged and his quintet. ?March/April?/60, trip to New Orleans, Ricard "Ricky" Alexis died; (Jack Bradley, J.J.I.5/60) ... Henry "Red"Allen & Danny Barker are but two among hundreds who mourn the passing of Ricard Alexis. (note: usually Red Allen made his trips to New Orleans about Mardi Gras) 4/11/60 Mo., NYC., Spot Lite Bar –Camp-Fundsession; Red Allen guest; NYAN4/9/60p14 5/9/60 Mo., NYC., Renny Bar – Camp-Fund- session; Red Allen guest ALL FOR THE CAMP FUND – When the crowd overflowed last week Monday Night Get Together held at the Renny Bar, the manager showed her appreciation with a donation to the Fund Shown at left is Rose Yuen, manager, deposting check with the approving smiles of Doris Anderson, Red Allen, and Frieda Harris. NYAN:5/14/60p16 5/16/60 Mo., NYC. at Brown Bomber – Camp-Fund-session; Red Allen guest with Sammy Price; NYAN.5/21/60p16 Jazz Music - May 60/ Vol. 11/5 : Air Mail from N.Y.: Bobby Hackett and his quartet has for the past two weeks, been helping out the regulars being at the Metropole: the regulars being the groups of Red Allen, Sol Yaged, Tony Parenti and Johnny Lettman. Later this week, Turk Murphy and very solid jazz band replaces the Hackett group as featured attraction............... Central Plaza, NYC., Oct.1961: Lee Blair (g) Red Allen (t) Kenny Davern (cl) Jimmy Buxton (tb) Buxton replaced Keg Johnson in Red Allen's band in April-59; see page-97; (court.Teresa Chilton) (court.Teresa Chilton) - 88 Red Allen Band vs. /& Turk Murphy Band – Dr.Al Vollmer in a letter: “It coincided with the week that the Turk Murphy band was added featured attraction there. I recall the Murphy's last set as Henry Allen sat in with them and played wonderfully. They did a CHIMES BLUES with Henry Allen taking the traditional trumpet solo remembering it note for note. It was a real joy as his own style of playing at that time was no longer in the traditional mold.” 7/3/60, Sun-, prob.WCTC-bc/ CBS-bc”World Jazz Series” ; NPT. Jazz Festival , HENRY”RED”ALL STARS: Red Allen(t,v) other unknown (In the 6/30-7/4/60 program of Down Beat 7/7/6o; Red is not mentioned, as also not some other performers in "Newport Festival" Down Beat, 8/18/6o) (tape: WCTC-program F.Bruce Parson Jr.-New Brunswick, N.J.) ………....... with the Red Allen group Newport tape is said to exist (WCTC-bc) Neville Dickie stride-piano & boogie woogie, July 2002: MIFFED: ‘Sadly, by 1960 Miff’ Mole´s health had deteriorated and he was walking with a stick, the result of several hip operations. He was also destitute. … That same year, he was invited to play at the Newport Jazz Festival alongside Henry ‘Red’ Allen. This would have helped him financially, and put him in the public eye again but it wasn’t to be – the concert was cancelled at the last minute and ‘Miff’ had to borrow his fare home. That winter he was seen selling pretzels in a New York subway. He died in 1961 aged 63. … CBS Radio to Broadcast Top Jazz Stars From Newport Festival N.Y.-CBS Radio's “World Jazz Gerry Mulligan's Big Band with Series,” which last week broadcast Bobby Brookmeyer, the Dizzy two New York News jazz concerts Gillespie Quintet, Sarah Vaughn, from Madison Square Garden, will Oscar Peterson Trio, Ray Charles, next originate from Newport, R.I. to The Lambert Hendrickson and present hour-long concerts from the Ross Trio, Tyree Glenn, Harry Newport Jazz Festival for four Edison, Georgie Auld and Ben consecutive nights, beginning Webster. Friday, July 1 and ending Monday, Also Dinah Washington, Jonah July 4. The programs will be heard at Jones Quartet, Horace Silver 9:05-10 p.m. Quintet, Bill Evans Trio, Shorty The broadcasts will draw on talents of Rogers Quintet, the Henry Red the following jazz greats sche-duled Allen All Stars. to participate 1960 Newport Jazz Also Count Basie and orchestra, Ray Bryant Trio, Dakota Staton, Festival: Dave Brubeck Quintet, Cannonball Thelonious Monk Quartet, the Adderley Quintet, Nina Simone, Art Buck Clayton All Stars, Jimmy Farmer-Benny Golson Jazztet; Rushing and others. Ornette Coleman Quartet; Charlie Mitch Miller is the host of “World Mingus Quintet; Marshall Browe & Jazz Series” which is sponsored by Studebaker Packard Corp. the Newport Youth Band. PC-6/18/60p20: Also the Louis Armstrong All-Stars, BAA-6/4/60p15: Newport Jazz bill list top artists NEWPORT, R.I., The following Program for the seventh annual New-port Jazz Festival (June 30-July 4) has been announced by George Wein, fete musical director: Thursday night, June 30: an evening of modern jazz to be announced; Friday. night, July 1: Louis Armstrong All Stars with Trummy Young and Barney Bigarde; Gerry Mulligan's Big Band with Bob Brookmeyer and Zoot Sims; Dizzy Gillespie Quintet; Saturday afternoon. July 2: Rudi Blesh, narrator, "The Stride Piano"; Dom Cerulli narrator, Marshall Brown and Newport Youth Band; Saturday night, July 2: Dave Brubeck Quartet; Sarah Vaughan; Oscar Peterson Trio; Lambert-Hendricks-Ross; Tyree Glenn; Harry Edison; Georgie Auld; Ben Webster; Stan Getz; Cannonball Quintet; Sunday afternoon. July 3; -Langston Hughes, narrator, "The Blues;" Sunday night. July 3: Dinah Washington; Jonah Jones Quartet; Horace Silver Quintet; Sonny Stitt; Shorty Rodgers Quintet; Red Allen All Stars; Monday afternoon. July 4: Gunther Schuller, narrator, Ornett Coleman Quartet; Bill Evans Trio; John Coltrane; Dave Baker Orch.; Monday night. July 5: Count Baste Orch.; Ray Bryant Trio; Nina Simone; Jimmy Rushing; Buck Clayton; Earl Warren; Buddy Tate; Emmett Berry; Dickie Wells; Anita O´Day. VV-6/30/60p8: Leonard Feather – NEWPORT – Its Impact on Jazz – and on America ; a longer article together with “Newport Sets Afternoon Programs” (same source) & “The Newport Blues” in VV-7/7/60p2, without of interest for this book , reprinted in JAZZ AD Vol.3 p1041 DB-1960-Combo Directory listed: RED ALLEN QUINTET: Red Allen, Jimmy Buxton, Buster Bailey, Sammy Price; Solomon Hall (d) … Red Allen and Sammy Price still having fun at Metropole and greeting friends with “Happy Birthday,” no matter when your birthday…. NYAN-8/20/60p..: VV:6/23/60p7 - 89 8/6/60 Sat., NYC., Roof Garden at Museum of Modern Art, -"SUMMER CONCERT”: BUD FREEMAN–SHORTY BAKER ALL STARS:- Shorty Baker (t) & guest Red Allen (*t,v) Tyree Glenn (tb) Bud Freemen (ts) Gene Schroeder (p) Bob (date & location in NYAN: 8/6/6op15) Haggart (b) George Wettling (d) unknown (narr) Perdito S' Wonderful Dinah Big Noise From Winnetka 3:16 *ST.JAMS Jazz Arch.JA-38/ --/ INFIRMARY -vRA (J. Primrose) ----- / / --- / RA-CD-13 -Wettling & Schroeder & Allen-vRA (Glenn)-Allen in ens9:51 *EDDIE CONDON BLUES ( ALGIERS' BOUNCE) (Allen) --/ RA-CD-13 -Schroeder-Allen in ens-Schroeder-Glenn-Glenn in ens-Baker-Freeman-Freeman in ens-Haggart-Allen-Allen in ens-ens-Wettling-Allen in ens-Glenn in ens-Wettling brk3:45 *CRAZY RHYTHM (J.Meyer-R.W.Kahn) --- / RA-CD-13 -Schroeder intro-ens-Glenn-Baker & AIlen-ens-Allen in ens-Freeman-ens,Wettling brkLonesome Road --/ Frank S. Driggs, 1977, covernotes on Jazz Archive-38: Bud Freeman needs little introduction. He has been a moving and influential figure in jazz since the late twenties. He was one of the first and one of the best tenor sax men. He's been with many bands, big and small, from Ben Pollack, Roger Wolfe Kahn, Red Nichols, Joe Haymes and Ray Noble to Tommy Dorsey and Benny Goodman. As leader of his own units for well over thirty years, everything from trios to big bands, he has played in such far away places as the Aleutian Islands, Chile, Peru, Brazil and throughout Europe. One of his better attributes was his ability to choose side-men, and then give those men the widest latitude in solo expression. On this session he gave rare solo opportunity to Harold"Shorty"Baker, who was a talent known primarily to other musicians, with a beautiful tone particularly admired by the late Bobby Hackett. He came out of territorial groups around St. Louis and was featured with Don Redman, Teddy Wilson and Andy Kirk prior to his years of section work with Duke Ellington. He also chose Tyree Glenn from Co-sicana, Texas and a dozen territory and name bands, who made his mark with Benny Carter, Cab Calloway and Duke Ellington, before settling into commercial broadcasting on the Jack Sterling show. Therefore, his voice was not often heard in jazz settings at this time. With Bud-that's the front line on this session. The rhythm section has old friends in pianist Gene Schroeder, a long-time Condonite; bassist Bobby Haggart, also in those days a studio player, but well remembered for his days with the old Bob Crosby big band; and drummer George Wettling, heard here in very good form. George and Bud go back together to the twenties in Chicago. The album opens with the long-time Ellington standard Perdido justifying their existence and making sure the audience is properly warmed up. Dinah, the great standard originally written for Ethel Waters back in the twenties has exemplary Bud and some fine muted Baker to recommend it. After this try George Gershwin's S' Wonderful which has some good playing by Tyree to take note of. The first side is closed out by a rousing version of Bobby Haggart's classic Big Noise From Winnetka, and this gives George Wettling plenty of latitude to show his years of experience and solo abilities. Turning over to side two, we are greeted with the arrival of that master brass and showman Henry "Red" Allen, Junior. Red was then in the middle of one of the longest running jobs at the unlamented Cafe Metropole on Seventh Avenue, which has long since cast out its jazzman and turned to top-less. Red has a way of dominating nearly everything he is part of and this session is no exception. Bud, true gentleman that he is, let's Red pick his own tunes and they roll into one of his time-tested crowd pleasers, St. James Infirmary. Next is a patented Red Allen blues, which he aptly calls Eddie Condon Blues, and everybody shows off here, but honors must go to Red himself. He shares his highlights with Shorty, who is equal to the task, while Bud and George take care of their end in top form. Crazy Rhythm, the wonderful Joe Meyer-Roger Wolfe Kahn collaboration of 1928 follows, and is given a fine workout, with some excellent work by Tyree and the two trumpet men. With this, Red is given a fond farewell and he takes off for the Metropole on Seventh Avenue and another night's work. The final number is the memorable Nat Shilkret melody Lonesome Road. Bud gives this over entirely to Tyree, who fashions a Tricky Sam-styled wah-wah solo that is worth hearing a second time. Tape is a miracle. We can be thankful that this one was preserved. It helps balance the books in the post-1950 years, a time when melodic players such as those heard here, were not earning a top living nor being show-cased the way they deserved. I can only think of three times when I had a chance to hear Harold Baker play at length, through an evening. To hear Red Allen properly in those years one had to put up with an awful lot of insensitivity on the part of the Metropole management and patrons. Red could carry it all off, but I imagine he held that job for so long, because of his carefully developed act, not because of his superb musicianship. Tyree, as I said earlier, was mostly in the studios or else playing lowkey jobs like the Embers, where he had to play muted horn. Bud Freeman moved around a lot and was not exactly over recorded in the LP years, but he probably fared the best of the men heard here, in that he rarely had to compromise his playing or record unduly commercial albums. I doubt that Gene Schroeder ever made a solo album, and I can only recall one done under George Wettling's name. That's not a lot for several lifetimes of good music. It is important to consider that we no longer have the presence of Red Allen, Harold Baker, Gene Schroeder, Tyree Glenn or George Wettling, and that, jazz lovers, is some-thing to think over. Harold Baker died in New York in 1966. Red Allen died in New York in 1967. George Wettling died in New York in 1968. Tyree Glenn died in New Jersey in 1974. Gene Schroeder died in Wisconsin in 1975. Down Beat- 9/15/60: Metropole- Krupa / Allen's Giants/ Yaged's Quintet until 9/18 see photo for July-60 on p87 11/14/60 Mo. NYC., Renny Hall – Red Allen NYAN.11/19/60p15 11/16/60 N.Y.C., Metropole - Lionel Hampton Big Band - Cozy Cole & Buck Clayton Orch. - Red Allen Band Jack Bradley, Bul.H.C.F.Dec.60: ... Red Allen est toujours l'orchestre-maison, et Red maintient a son repertoire de bons morceaux tels que SNOWY MORNING BLUES, JUST A CLOSER WALK WITH THEE, et TISHOMINGO BLUES - 90 11/21/60 NYC., Nola-studios - "ALLEN PLAYS KING OLIVER" - RED ALLEN & HIS ORCH. : Red Allen (t, v) Herb Flemming (tb) Buster Bailey (cl) *Sammy Price or Bob Hammer (p) Milt Hinton (b) Sol Hall (d) all sides on RA-CD-20 // Verve- /VerveMGV1025/WRC(S)T567/MetroRec./ 845149-1/HMV-CLP1483/Verve533263-2/2356016/ / --- / --- / --- / --- / --- / / --- / --- / --- / --- / / --- / --- / --- / --- / - MARCHING THROUGH GEORGIA (P.D.) - BATTLE HYMN OF THE REPUBLIC -vRA (P.D.) - BOURBON STREET PARADE (P.Barbarin) / --- / --- / --- / --- / 3:11 *HOW LONG BLUES -vRA&ch (Carr) / --- / --- / --- / --- / 3:20 JUST A CLOSER WALK WITH THEE (P.D.) 6:10 BILL BAILEY, WON´T YOU PLEASE COME HOME (Cannon) / --- / --- / --- / --- / / --- / --- / --- / --- / 3:16 *SNOWY MORNING BLUES (J.P.Johnson) 3:07 *BABY, WON´T YOU PLEASE COME HOME -vRA (Williams-Warfield) / --- / --- / --- / --- / --- / 4:35 FIDGETY FEET (LaRocca-Shields-Ragas) / --- / --- / --- / --- / --- / Verve 845149-1/ --- / --- / --- / --- / 4:14 *YELLOW DOG BLUES (Handy-Pace) -vRA (Simon-Mark) / --- / --- / --- / --- / 3:50 *ALL OF ME ………………….. uniss. ………………….. uniss. ………………….. uniss. 3:16 3:41 3:55 6:24 BALLIN´ THE JACK (Smith-Burris) CANAL STREET BLUES (King Oliver) SOMEDAY SWEETHEART (Ben&John Spikes) -Allen muted-tDIXIE MEDLEY:- DIXIE (P.D.) Dom Cerulli covernotes on Verve V-1025: There is a tradition of jazz in New Orleans, and a part of it concerns the brass men who went out from that city to change the face of music. Louis Armstrong, of course, comes first to mind as the leading former citizen of New Orleans. But there was a long list of others, including Bunk Johnson, the legendary Buddy Bolden (he never left the city, but his fame and notoriety did), Mutt Carey, Buddy Petit, Punch Miller, Kid Rena, Freddie Keppard, and the two principals involved in this record, Joe "King" Oliver and Henry "Red" Allen. Each belonged to the tradition of jazz in New Orleans. Each came under the sphere of influence of Louis Armstrong. But each contributed something lasting of his own to jazz. Legend has it that Oliver started studying trombone as a child, but played the horn too loud and was switched to cornet by his teacher. While still in his youth he played with the Melrose Brass Band. Later he was installed in the "25" Cabaret as leader and was playing with his chair tilted against the wall and with a derby cocked over his forehead. When he joined Kid Ory's band, Ory began calling him "King" Oliver, and the name stuck. In 1918 he went to Chicago where, by 1920, he was leading his own band and building the unit which was soon to set musical Chicago on its car. That turmoil began when Louis Armstrong joined Oliver at the Lincoln Gardens and musicians began stopping by to hear the two brassmen leading their cohorts through this new, exciting music. It was with Oliver's band that Armstrong cut his first recording, Chimes Blues on Gennett Records. Oliver's great band included himself and Armstrong on first and second cornets, continuing the style popularized by Buddy Bolden with Bunk Johnson, and by Manuel Perez with Oliver. Honore Dutrey played trombone, Johnny Dodds, clarinet; Baby Dodds, drums; Bill Johnson, bass; and Lil Hardin, piano. Bix Beiderbecke was among the scores of musicians who stopped by to hear the band and went away with a headful of new musical ideas. Oliver led a succession of bands through the 1920's, but none so great as that 1923 crew, the one which laid much of the foundation of jazz. Through the chairs of his bands passed many of the great musicians of the day, including a young trumpet player, like Armstrong, who came from New Orleans with the tradition of jazz deeply instilled in him. He was Henry Allen Jr., son of a cornetist and brass band leader. Red learned the horn under his father, and marched with his father's band while still wearing short pants. He played with such bands as those headed by George Lewis, Eddie Jackson, Fats Pichon, and Fate Marable. In 1927, he stepped into the second cornet position in King Oliver's band. During the 1930's, while Oliver's star declined, Allen's rose continuously. His style was lyrical and not bound so strictly to the beat. He forged a style of his own which was unlike that of Armstrong, and which was reflected in the later work of such stalwarts as Roy Eldridge and Dizzy Gillespie. He still plays a personal, fiercely blue trumpet, as evidenced on this album. And, while his vehicles are the standards of Dixieland, his trumpet work in the frames of these tunes is rarely bounded by the usual rules governing improvisation in this area. Just as there are jazz- critics and writers who credit Oliver's main contribution as that of bringing Louis Armstrong out of New Orleans, there are those who, feel that had Louis not come along, Allen would have been a primary influence on trumpet in that generation. But despite the if's and all the conjecture, what remains is that King Oliver did contribute to the establishment of jazz with his band and with his cornet, shaded and colored by a variety of mutes. And Red Allen, by his ringing trumpet and his warm and friendly personality, also contributed to the advancement of the art that Oliver had established. On this set, Red pays homage to his one-time leader, accompanied by Herb Fleming, tb; Buster Bailey (also an Oliver alumnus of note), clt; Milt Hinton, bass; Sol Hal1, drums; and Sammy Price (on How Long Blues and Snowy Morning Blues only) or Bob Hamner on piano. The format is simple and easy. Red usually leads the way after a brief piano introduction, driving the ensemble and setting the mood of the piece. His range of cotion is wide. Muted, he growls and snarls on Canal Street Blues and Someday Sweetheart. On Snowy Morning Blues, he makes his horn play down and dirty. On Yellow Dog Blues, he sounds low and mournful. But on How Lonq Blues, there is genuine hope in the clean, ringing open horn declaration he plays on the out chorus. Red has been a fixture for years at New York's Metropole, a club on Times Square where; the musicians are perched over the bar and strung out, single-file, against the wall. At least once a night some flannel-clad wag will glance up at the players and utter some variation on a crack dealing with "wallto-wall musicians." But despite the raucous atmosphere and the echoing and re-echoing sound and the clumps of curious outof-towners peering in the always-open doorway, there is often a feeling of history around the place. Legend has it that when Buddy Bolden wanted to fill-up his New Orleans hall, he'd just open a window and blow a little, and they'd come running from all over the city. That scene isn't hard to believe on nights when the crowds are really thick outside the Metropole and Red Allen is on the stand, blowing his horn and calling all the children home. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Down Beat's Annual Combo Directory 6/21/62:: “Henry Red Allen” - In recent years Allen has been rediscovered by critics and praised as the best of the last of the red-hot trumpeters. When he is good, he's very very good, even if some of his groups are horrid. representative recording: Verve 1025, Red Allen Plays King Oliver - 91 " Al McCarthy covernotes on WRC T567, 1966: The present LP features one of the groups he led at the Henry 'Red' Allen is the most avant-garde trumpet, player in Metropole in 1960. This includes the Moroccan trombonist New York." This rather startling statement was recently made Nicolaiih El-Michelle, better known by his adopted name of by trumpeter Don Ellis, himself a member of the avant-garde, Herb Flemming, and an old associate from the Henderson band and it must have astonished many readers of Down Beat who in William Buster" Bailey. The programme selected for this would never consider Allen in such a connection. Fanciful record is fairly typical of what Allen plays in clubs ranging though the comment might seem one knows what Ellis meant, from the boisterous medley to standards performed with great for the fact is that Allen has developed an expressive range on sensitivity. It is worth noting the poised solo on Someday his instrument equalled by few other trumpeters. He has Sweetheart as an example of Allen at his best and there is also always been noted for his rhythmic flexibility, but to this he some beautiful playing on How long, how long blues, Just a adds a tonal variety that is unique,, alternating passages of closer walk, Yellow dog blues and All of me. Allen can at great power with those played at little above a whisper and times be a maddening musician, switching from marvellously producing a series of growls, slurs and inflections, that make conceived solos to roaring showmanship all in the space of one his solos remarkable in their diversity. The surprising thing is number, but at his finest he is undoubtedly one of the great that Allen will use all these effects in the course of one solo, figures of jazz. His strengths and weaknesses are all of a piece yet that solo will have its own logic and will not sound like a and this LP is representative of his contemporary examples of string of disparate phrases. both sides of his personality. Despite the fact that Allen has a Allen, now a man close to sixty, is amiable, raucous and considerable following it is probably still true to say that he is assured on stage, never treating his audience in an off-hand an underrated musician, for the surface dazzle of his more manner but using tricks of showmanship learnt in over forty flamboyant work has led many people to ignore the fact that he years of professional playing to hold their attention. Yet it is a creative performer whose playing has evolved over the would be false to deduce from this that Allen takes his years while retaining its very personal flavour. Henry Allen musicianship lightly, for he is offstage a quiet, sensitive man remains today a unique and totally dedicated artist and it is very proud of his place in jazz and well aware of the role he pleasant to know that as the years go by more and more jazz has played since the early days in his father's band. … listeners are beginning to realise this fact. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------John S.Wilson "Allen Plays Oliver"-DB.8/31/61 Rating ****: adventurous bit, of programming by the way), and flaring with Allen seems to be in the process of making a new and electricity on Yellow Dog. successful claim for serious recognition as one of the major He sings, too, with a sincerity that is very effective. In jazz trumpeters. Thirty years ago he had that claim sewed up, addition, there are some good glimpses of Bailey and a pair of but he has spent much of the past quarter century vitiating it excellent piano solos by Price. with his tawdry and tasteless catering to the tourist trade. There is, however, one track on this disc to which none of On his recent records he has played with steadily increasing the above applies. It is called Dixie Medley, and it is a witherin validity and honesty. This is the best he has turned out yet a summation of Allen at his abymal worst. It's all very well to set that is full of splendid Allen solos in a variety of moods, try to give a rounded picture of a musician but surely no crisp and lazily edgy on Canal Street, muted amusing on picture has to be this round. (J.S.W.) Sweetheart, crackling an brassy on Snowy Morning (an -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Tony Standish about HMV CLP1483, Jazz Journal Int., 1-62: control as he demonstrates that the glories of "Patrol Wagon When Red Allen toured here with the Ory band he left no Blues" and "Feeling Drowsy" are by no means things of the doubt in anyone's mind that he is still one of the great jazz past. His playing on "How Long", "Closer Walk", "Someday", horns, as good now as he was during the 'twenties and 'thir- "Snowy Morning" and "All Of Me" is so excellent that it more ties. But only when he wishes to be. On the recent LPs with than makes up for the occasional boorishness, Sol Hall's bad Ory, for instance, Red showed his respect for the veteran drumming, the ineffective piano playing. of Bob Hammer and trombonist's wishes by playing serious and exciting trumpet. On the complete lack of conviction in Buster Bailey's work. this album, with no Ory to restrain.-him, he shows a tendency Keg Johnson(?), whose style is a pleasing mixture of Ory and to revert to the valve-fanning antics that have marred his Benny Morton, plays extremely well throughout. Had all the. playing for the past twenty-odd years. Fortunately, these sidemen been up to his, Sammy Price's and Milt Hinton's lapses are mainly concentrated in the appalling "Dixie standard-and had the "medley" been omitted-this might easily Medley", although "Bill Bailey" and "Fidgety Feet" also have have been a great record, instead of one which fluctuates their bad moments. On the remaining tracks the good Red between the very good and the abysmal. Allen flares and crackles, his jumping-jack style well under --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Charles Fox in Jazz Monthly 4/62 about HMV-CLP1483: THERE HAS always been a certain waywardness about Red is typical of the juvenile antics that Allen has always got up to Allen's playing, a disruptive quality that could, on the wrong from time to time. On the other hand, there is a beautifully occasion, result in downright bad and tasteless music. On the sensitive muted solo on Someday sweetheart, and more good whole he kept the wilder side of his lyricism fairly under playing on How long blues, Bill Bailey, Just a closer walk, control during the Twenties and Thirties, but the Forties and Yellow dog blues and All of me. On the last-named track Fifties have heard some embarrassingly rowdy jazz emerge Allen's singing sounds oddly like Louis Prima's-or should it be from his trumpet. A long period spent amid the hub-bub of the the other way round? The supporting musicians perform with Metropole can't have helped either. And yet Allen has always variable success. The rhythm section is all right, especially been capable of presenting the listener with a sudden revelation, Sammy Price when he takes his solos, but Buster Bailey plays a solo where everything falls exquisitely into place. Both the clarinet as if he were knitting a Fair Isle sweater. Herb aspects of Red Allen, the buffoon and the artist, are displayed Fleming, although unremarkable as a soloist, fits reasonably on this LP, a record, by the way, that has-whatever the title well into the ensemble, playing. as it were, a refined variant of may suggest-scarcely any connection with King Oliver. The tailgate trombone. C.F Dixie medley, for instance, a part from Bourbon street parade, Max Harrison WRC T/ST-567, in Jazz Monthly 2/67: Like the and one is made to realise that he has avoided the traps of last Henry Allen disc I reviewed here, this appears to be typical pseudo-dixieland into which others of his generation have from of his current output. He sounds gay and uninhibited yet his time to time fallen. Allen dominates amiably here and the rest involvement in the music is always genuine. That music seems of the band have little more than a supporting role. Yet Buster simple and merely entertaining much of the while but every so Bailey reminds us of his superb technical equipment while, in often we find a hint of the real depth, and complexity, of the sleeve note, the Editor reminds us of Herb Fleming's Allen's gifts. Such hints are often to be found in his fascinating real name: Nicolaiih El-Michelle. The sole surprisingly free placing of accents. HOW LONG and objection is to this LP's title-King Oliver recorded no more CANAL STREET give an indication of his power in the blues, than two of these items. - 91a Sinclair Traill about WRC T/ST-567 in Jazz Journal I., Jan.67: Although this contains some good trumpet playing from and the tasteless Fidgety Feet and Bill Bailey. Allen it also includes some of his most ostentatious blowing. But all the faults don't lie at Henry's door. Hall is a shocking When he wishes he can be one of the great trumpet masters, drummer, Hammner no great pianist, and I have heard Buster but like others I could mention, he is often apt to show off. Bailey play much better than he does here. Hinton does his His playing on How Long Blues, Someday Sweetheart, All best to keep a beat going, but except for on How Long and Of Me and Snowy Morning (I wonder where King Oliver is Snowy Morning, the rhythm is rather pedestrian. supposed to have heard that one?) is excellent. His tone has Herb Fleming, (seldom heard on record) plays some good that cavernous bite and his rhythmic phrasing, particularly trombone, rather in the Benny Morton tradition, and on certain on Someday is as good and hot as it was in the early '30s. tracks, such as Closer Walk, the front line gain that affinity Splendid stuff. What a pity therefore that he has to give way and integration of timing, which one would expect from a to exhibitionism as he does on the appaling Dixie Medley band carrying these famous names. A disappointment. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------solo work. But at a certain point he seems to throw taste to the Max Jones in undated Melody Maker It is possible that "RED ALLEN PLAYS KING OLIVER" winds, which is a pity in view of the lyricism of the best (World Record Club T567) captures the musical taste of the playing. Aside from these up-and-down numbers there are the New York Metropole, where Allen led the band featured on Metropole flagwavers - "Bill Bailey" and a "Dixie Medley" this LP (during 1960), but it scarcely does justice to his prominent among them - which bring out the worst in most of with Allen are Herb Flemming (tmb), imaginative trumpet playing. Except, that is, on the slower the musicians. Working . "How Long, How Long", which also boasts one of his fine Buster Bailey (cit ), Bob Hammer (pno), Milt Hinton (bass) gruff vocals, "Someday Sweetheart", on which his solo is and Sol Hall (drs). Pianist Sammy Price replaces Hammer on filled with contrast. Others such as "Canal Street", "Ballin' "How Long" and "Snowy Morning". This is not a poor record, The Jack" and "Snowy Morning", are acceptable, even because of the authority of Red's conception in his more exciting, For the intense, driving quality of Red's lead and inspired moments. — (M.J.) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------MAX JONES about "Red Allen Plays King Oliver." in undated Melody Maker RED ALLEN is no ordinary trumpet notion encouraged him to loose off some blues soberly before singing - for all the player, and so this is no ordinary record of his freshest, most engaging variations. world like Wingy Manone. (On other of traditional jazz. His trumpet has retained its restless vocals, he sounds more like Louis Prima; Still original and articulate, Allen can fervour, and the tone, despite occasional all three stern from the same source.) be relied upon - when not trotting out a bizarre extremes, still boasts a cutting edge. On "Canal Street," Red tends to overdo Showman potboiler - to breathe life into the the growling, but his long solo is full of Allen can be cool - ultra-relaxed, unexpected ideas. He is rather flambohairiest old standards. This he does here, most of the way, subdued, and oblique in his melodic yant on "Snowy Morning," very fine on and to excellent effect. Ostensibly, Red approach - but he is never cold or aloof. " Yellow Dog" (listen to the loosepays tribute to his one-time friend and He is first and foremost a jazz musician, swinging ensemble, " Bill Bailey," "Baby" and " All of Me." a vital showman, too. leader, King Oliver. In contrast, the Medley - misprinted Now and then, his playing on this From that point-of view, the choice of tunes is odd. I don't think ,Oliver album holds echoes of Oliver. Passages "Dixie Melody" on the sleeve - is minor recorded more than four of them, and I on Someday Sweetheart," muted and stuff, conventional and boring. The group performs confidently and doubt very much if he knew several of rather pinched in tone. are clearly slanted at the King. with style so that there is generally the others. This is a good track. and so is "How something worthwhile going on.Never mind: Red was always an individualist, and the "Plays Oliver" Long," on which Red introduces the -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------HOT TRUMPET COLOSSUS - Jack Hutton in New Jazz Records in Melody Maker 11/22/69 (RCA RD 8049). HENRY RED ALLEN: It Should Be You; Biff´ly Blues; Feeling Drowsy; Swing Out; Dancing Dave; Roamin'; Singing Pretty Songs; Patrol Wagon Blues; I Fell In Love With You; Stingaree Blues; Hocus Pocus; The Crawl; Let Me Miss You, Baby; I Cover The Waterfront; Love Is Just Around The Corner. photo RED ALLEN: big man in every sense RCA VICTOR deserve the biggest medal ever devised for issuing these wonderful Vintage Series albums. It seemed nothing could eclipse their current Jelly Roll Morton album " I Thought I Heard Buddy Bolden Say " (RD 8048). But I am now listening to it. Please don't write to disagree (or agree) because when you're comparing golden vintage jazz of this quality who cares about personal preferences? This features the colossus the hot trumpet, Red Allen, with Luis Russell, King Oliver and Fletcher Henderson musicians between 1929-1934 and his own groups between 1946 and 1957. Involved are such swingers is J. C. Higginbotham, Albert Nicholas, Charles Holmes, Hilton Jefferson, Hank Duncan, Coleman Hawkins, Cozy Cole and Marty Napoleon. Red was a remarkable man and musician. He was a big man in every sense, ebullient, a lover of fife. And he played like every solo was his last. On the early sides on this album he was supposed to be presented as an "answer " to the acclaimed Louis Armstrong. And certainly the Armstrong influence is clearly visible as it is on every trumpet man of the time. But Red stood firmly on his own feet. His style is intensely personal, his tone hot and driving and his timing way ahead of his contemporaries. Red has been called the first avantgarde trumpeter. It was meant as a compli-ment, but he started no fashionable schools of playing. He played Red Allen and his style was so much his own, so melodically unusual, so rhythmically stimulating and yet so individual that, like Louis, he could never really be emulated. His musk beats my words - try "Feeling Drowsy" (a new take, by the way) and "Swing Out." No further explanations are necessary. This album is crammed with gems - altoist Charlie Holmes burbles away in a manner that must have blown 1929 minds, J. C. Higginbotham is ridiculous all the way from '29 to '57 with a burnished tone and a rhythmic fluency that roars, and Coleman Hawkins proves, once again, that the tenor was made with him in mind. The most frustrating thing in the world is to try to write about an album like this. Please, just get it. — J.H - 92 mid.Dec.60, NYC., Birdland – Klaus “Oscar”Doldinger & His Trio vs. Feetwarmers; Red Allen among the guests; CD-12/17/60p19: Top Jazzmen Greet German Hornmen, Drummers In Café – by Doug Quigg N.Y.-Birdland, a jazz emportum of note, got invaded by a German band but not an oopah was burted. This was not a hot combo, the first German jazz band ever to hit this country, and a group of American jazz great men called it “Bedient” and “Dufte.” Them is words that the cats in Germany use when they mean cool, man – very good, excellent. Like when a drummer goes out of his mind-then according to the German teenage idiom he's “eine schaffe,” which, according to the visitors means “he's working with all his heart. The group of eight young (average age 24) German amateur jazz musicians entertained at a reception for prominent Ameri-can jazzmen before the regular evening's program of band music began. They were given a two-week trip to the United States by virtue of winning both the traditional and modern style competitions in the annual German amateur jazz festival. They're surprisingly good,” said Eddie Condon, the American jazz gauleiter, listening to the best of “the Feetwarmers,” a seven-piece traditional style group. Among the great men sitting as an audience were Condon, Bud Freeman, Red Allen, Buck Clayton, Hucko, Zutty Singleton, J.C.Higginbotham, Sammy Price, Sonny Greer, Herbie Mann, Tony Parenti, Miff Mole, Buddy Rich, Marshal Royal. The modern group, known as “Oscar's Trio,” was so named because his leader, Klaus Doldinger 24, is nicknamed Oscar due to his admiration for jazz Pianist Oscar Peterson. It did not get so much applause because it playedsecond, and by that time most of the giants had retired to the bar. … late Dec.1960 trombonist Benny Morton has joined Red Allen's band at the Metropole (until 2/27) Upstairs: Feb.: Roy Liberto's Bourbon Street Six; Cozy Cole Quintet; Sol Yaged-Group (until 2/27) Cozy Cole, Salt City Six (March/...) Salt City Six (4/25-6/4); Benny Morton - Melody Maker 10/21/1967: Red would arouse them those six with chatter and so on “A point I want to emphasise is that Red Allen made the before we started playing even. Metropole job. The whole jazz life of the place, such as it Yes, Red made it possible for all who came after: Krupa, was, was owed to him. He stayed seven years and that Hampton, Herman, Cannon-ball Adderley all the rest. They've speaks for itself. had all sorts of groups since, some of them making three times He had such an entertaining personality, going along with the money that he got, but if his music hadn't been successfull his music that he created audience participation. And, of there wouldn't have been a job. He made all that big money course, he worked hard. I've seen time, of at one o'clock possible. If he hadn't done what he did Hamp would never Sunday lunchtime, when there's been six men at the bar. But have looked inside the place.” ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Jan.61 - Metropole - "Jazz Skyline" by Ray Norman in J.J.61: It is a couple of decades since Henry "Red Allen was proIndeed, the closer Allen came to the Luis Russell-Henderson perly recorded. Yet he plays as excellently as ever. January vintage, the stronger the audiences enthusiasm. Yet, mulishly, saw the termination of his seemingly endless residency at the Red persists in foolery-Buster Bailey almost fainted when, on Metropole. Now that unhappy saloon is really desolate, nearly Labour Day, Red announced DIXIE - I mean, from a Negro ruined by its manager's idiotic policy of "showman-ship", band! Recently, though, his pianist has been a white guy, Bob drink-hustling, and the squeezing out of Negro groups custom Hammer -whose light, Zurke-Stacy oriented style was has melted away. Let us hope Allen's temporary exodus preferable to Sam Price's angry thunderings. Benny Morton, will give Red some pause for thought, anyway. His misgui- too, took over from Henderson Chambers, but had little ded tendency towards the Dixieland or antic was, I noted, opportunity to display the elegance and inventiveness that opposed to the tastes of the customers-for their interest typify his work. Some-body should record Allen immediately quickened enormously when he began to swing out on such with Bailey, Jeff, Charlie Holmes, Sidney Grant, Gene Sedric, Benny, Sonny White, Hayes Alvis and Slick Jones. classics as YELLOW DOG and WILD MAN, and others. Jan-61, two weeks single egangement of Red Allen at Boston – Savoy Ballroom - Red took time off from the Metropole prob.Jan.61, Central Plaza – sessions incl. Red Allen & Band Nouvelles de New York by Jack Bradley, Bul.HCF. 3-61: METROPOLE: 1'etablissement est devenu assez morne depuis qu'il ne peut plus s'offrir Red Allen, 1'homme qui a fait le prospérité du Club en l'organisant tel qu'il est maintenant. Red Allen a terminé son engagement au Metropole le 22 janvier dernier, et les musiciens de son orchestra (Buster Bailey, Benny Morton, Bob Hammer et Jerry Potter) sont également en chómage. Le club semble d'ailleurs avoir décide de n'engager que des musicians blancs, et l'orchestre-maison est maintenant celui de Sol Yaged, avec Roy Liberto and His Bourbon Street Six qui sont engages pour 5 semaines. Quelle injustice! CENTRAL PLAZA: des iausiciens remarquables y défilé durant ces derniers mois: Buck Clayton, Roy Eldridge, Johnny Letman, Charlie Shavers, Ruby Braff, Red Allen, Gene Sedric, Vic Dickenson, Herb Fleming, Russell Moore, Ralph Sutton, Sammy Price, Dick Wellstood, Zutty Singleton, Eddie Locke, Jo Jones, … prob.2/1 or one week before, Wed., NYC., Renny – Jimmie Jones with Red Allen & J.C.Higginbotham; NYAN-2/4/61p9: Bandleader Jimmie Jones had the Renny swinging Wednesday Night with Henry Red Allen & J.C.Higginbotham sitting in at the Ladies of Distinction dance. prob.mid Feb.61, N.Y.C.Centra1 Plaza - again a concert with: Red Allen, Johnny Letman, Herman Autrey, Gene Sedric, Buster Bailey, J.C.Higginbotham, Vic Dickenson, Red Richards, Sammy Price, Panama Francis, etc. (Jack Bradley, Bul.H.C.F.-April-61)