Blue
Note Records has announced a November 26 release date for Thelonious Monk Paris
1969, a fascinating and important late-career document of the legendary jazz
pianist and composer in performance with his Quartet at the Salle Pleyel
concert hall in Paris, France on December 15, 1969. Beautifully captured on
B&W film, the concert also featured a surprise guest appearance from
renowned drummer Philly Joe Jones. Also included is a rare on-camera interview
with Monk that was conducted by the French bassist Jacques Hess after the
concert. Paris 1969 will be available in several formats including physical
releases on CD/DVD, CD and vinyl, as well as a digital album and digital
long-form video.
“The
1969 Paris concert captures the power and the undiminished beauty of Monk’s
music, reminding us that even as his body aged his musical imagination knew no
limits,” writes Monk scholar Robin Kelley in his liner notes essay. However,
Kelley also illuminates what a peculiar and challenging moment 1969 was for the
52-year-old pianist. Monk hadn’t achieved true success until the late-50s with
his legendary run at the Five Spot Café in New York City with John Coltrane (a
band that was brilliantly captured on the lost recording Thelonious Monk
Quartet with John Coltrane at Carnegie Hall from 1957 which was discovered and
released on Blue Note in 2005). By the early-60s Monk’s success had peaked when
he signed with Columbia Records and was eventually featured on the cover of
TIME Magazine in 1964.
However,
by 1969, in addition to health issues, Monk’s success was beginning to wane
with the emergence of rock and the resulting jazz fusion movement. His recording
contract with Columbia had just come to end after an ill-advised attempt at
marketing him to a younger rock audience. That disappointment was followed by
the departure of drummer Ben Riley and bassist Larry Gales from his band which
left Monk with two chairs to fill on short notice before his European tour.
Monk
eventually found two young musicians – bassist Nate Hygelund and drummer Paris
Wright – to fill out the Quartet with his longtime tenor saxophonist Charlie
Rouse. Luckily the inexperienced rhythm section had some time to gel before
hitting the stage in Paris with a lengthy engagement in London followed by
stops in Germany and Italy. By the time they reached the Pleyel the band was in
fine form, which made for a triumphant return for Monk to the very stage he had
made his Parisian debut on in 1954 in front of a hostile audience who felt that
Monk was too avant-garde. 15 years later the situation could not have been more
different with an enthusiastic audience and the concert being broadcast on
television.
In
addition to rollicking Quartet versions of Monk classics such as “I Mean You,”
“Straight No Chaser,” and “Blue Monk,” the set also includes three stunning
solo piano performances on “Don’t Blame Me,” “I Love You Sweetheart Of All My
Dreams,” and “Crepuscule With Nellie.” However, an undeniable highlight of the
concert was when the veteran drummer Philly Joe Jones who was an expat living
in Paris at the time comes from backstage to borrow the sticks from the
17-year-old Wright, providing a palpable spark on Monk’s “Nutty.”
~ Blue Note Records
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