Coinciding
with the centennial of pianist and composer Joe Bushkin's birth, the release on May
19 by trumpeter and singer Bob Merrill of Tell Me Your Troubles: Songs by Joe
Bushkin, Vol. 1 (Accurate Records) celebrates the musical legacy of a man who
was revered by many of America's foremost entertainers for his wizardry at the
keyboard and skills as a tunesmith. He also happened to be Merrill's
father-in-law.
Bushkin
penned songs with his longtime lyricist John DeVries or the great Johnny Burke
in the repertoires of the likes of Sinatra (Joe's "Oh! Look at Me
Now" was Frank's first hit), Bing Crosby, Nat "King" Cole, Benny
Goodman, Louis Jordan, and countless others. This first volume of a planned
two-album commemorative project pays reverential tribute to Bushkin's oeuvre
and its special blend of mood and merriment on contemporary interpretations of
10 songs ranging from the popular to the obscure. The album opens and closes
with archival spoken word salutes to Bushkin by Sinatra and comedian Red
Buttons.
Cut from the
same engaging entertainer's cloth as Bushkin -- not to mention
trumpeter-singers like Louis Armstrong, Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Prima, and Chet
Baker -- Merrill was already performing crowd-pleasers like "Oh! Look at
Me Now" and "Boogie Woogie Blue Plate" (a 1947 hit for Louis
Jordan and his Tympani Five) before he met his future wife Christina and bonded
with her gregarious father. "These songs have such a timeless, universal
appeal," says Merrill. "I really hope the album exposes them to a new
generation. Maybe Harry Connick, Diana Krall, Michael Bublé, or even Lady Gaga
will give them new life."
Tell Me Your
Troubles is full of classic tunes and rediscoveries, charismatic vocals,
swinging solos, and sparkling arrangements and presents Merrill at his elegant
best, whether showcasing his brass palette of trumpet, cornet, and flugelhorn
or his smooth Tormé-like vocals, easy articulation, and natural enthusiasm. In
addition to the A-List rhythm section of guitarist Howard Alden, bassist Nicki
Parrott, and drummer Steve Johns, the album features an illustrious list of
guest artists including saxophonist Harry Allen, trombonist/singer Wycliffe
Gordon, cabaret star Eric Comstock, guitarist Bucky Pizzarelli, and pianist
Laurence Hobgood.
Joe Bushkin
and Bob Merrill A previously unreleased performance of "Oh! Look at Me
Now!," from Bushkin's final recording session in 2003 with Merrill, Howard
Alden, and drummer Duffy Jackson, is one of the album's standouts. "Joe's
tempo for the song had increased over the years," says Merrill, "but
I suggested we slow it down to the tempo of Sinatra's later version, from the
1957 album Swingin' Affair on Capitol." (Pictured at left: Bushkin and
Merrill, 2003.)
"I got
to spend a lot of time with Joe, always looking over his shoulder, absorbing
stuff by osmosis," recalls Merrill, who coaxed Bushkin out of retirement
in the early 1990s and performed with him at festivals and clubs such as New
York's Tavern on the Green and L.A.'s Jazz Bakery until his passing in 2004 at
age 87. He also produced and wrote liner notes for CD reissues of four Bushkin
albums, including last fall's release of Live at the Embers (Dot Time Legends)
from 1952.
Born in
Manhattan in 1958, Bob Merrill traces his early interest in jazz to the fact
that Benny Goodman lived in the penthouse of the building he grew up in on the
Upper East Side. After his father took him to a Tonight Show taping where he
heard Doc Severinsen, Merrill devoted himself to the trumpet (Bushkin's second
instrument). He studied with William Vacchiano, first trumpet of the New York
Philharmonic, and received improv tips as a teen from Red Rodney. Merrill
attended both the New England Conservatory of Music (studying with Jaki Byard,
in whose Apollo Stompers he played) and Harvard, where he co-founded a jazz
concert series at the Hasty Pudding Club and led a house band for such visiting
artists as Illinois Jacquet, George Coleman, Lee Konitz, and Warne Marsh.
Merrill
released his first album as a leader, Catch as Catch Can, in 1997, the same
year he was featured on American Movie Classics leading the AMC Orchestra on the
series Gotta Dance! His second album, Got a Bran' New Suit, featured pianist
Bill Charlap among others. It was followed by Christmastime at the Adirondack
Grill, and then the wildly eclectic Cheerin' Up the Universe (2015), which
featured pianist John Medeski and trombonist Roswell Rudd.
On Thursday
May 4, Merrill will preside over a Joe Bushkin Centennial concert at the BMCC
Tribeca Performing Arts Center (199 Chambers Street, Manhattan), part of Jack
Kleinsinger's Highlights in Jazz series. Featured performers include several
from the new CD's cast (Wycliffe Gordon, Eric Comstock, Nicki Parrott, John
Colianni, Harry Allen) as well as pianists Ted Rosenthal and Spike Wilner.
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