One of the legends of Belgian Jazz and a highly influential
figure on the post-war Belgian jazz scene, Sels died in 1970 at the mere age of
48, and he remains the country’s most mythical jazz musician, almost fifty
years after his death. Throughout his career, he would play with jazz legends
such as Dizzy Gillespie, Lester Young, Lou Bennett and Lucky Thompson, but he
remained virtually unknown outside Belgium due to his reluctance to leave
Antwerp.
Released 31st August on 2CD, vinyl and digital formats,
‘Minor Works’ is a collection of rare, previously unreleased studio and live
recordings paying homage to the life and jazz of the enigmatic musician. Often
overlooked by a wider audience, partly due to a limited discography, his
contribution to the development of the modern jazz scene in Belgium cannot be
underestimated, and neither can his influence on his fellow musicians, to whom
he was the embodiment of jazz. As vibraphone player Fats Sadi once said: “I
loved Jack. He had never studied music and didn’t have the least bit of
technique. But if Jack played, the gates of heaven opened. Jack was more jazz
than jazz itself.”
2CD, vinyl and digital release includes 12 previously
unreleased studio tracks and 8 unreleased live tracks from highly influential
post-war Belgian jazz saxophonist.
Born 29th January 1922, Sels was the only child in a wealthy
family. His father Joseph, whom he referred to as ‘The Boss’, held a high
position at the maritime company, John P. Best. He was predestined to follow in
his father’s footsteps and become a businessman himself, until the early death
of both his parents changed everything.
As a young adolescent, he inherited the family fortune which
he spent in no time on everything in life that’s good: girls, champagne and jazz
records. By now an avid jazz fan, Jack accumulated a notorious collection of
original 78 rpm jazz records which ran up into the thousands. A family legend
goes that one day he bought all the tickets of Antwerp’s famous cinema Rex, and
handed them all out to passers-by on the street. “He was a millionaire, but he
gave everything away,” explains Jack’s son-in-law and close friend Willy Van
Wiele. “He hung out with people of a lower social class and adapted to them,
instead of to the rich.” Jack’s good life however, ended with a bang when a
World War II bombing destroyed the family house, including his precious record
collection and everything else he had.
But this setback was not going to stop Jack from indulging
even further in his love for music, and he began to study piano, and then
taught himself the tenor saxophone while spending as much time as possible
listening to his jazz idols, among them the tenor saxophonist Lester Young,
trumpeters Miles Davis and Dizzy Gillespie and alto saxophonist Charlie Parker.
The arrival of Dizzy Gillespie’s big band at Antwerp in 1948
made a lasting impression on Sels as well as the legendary Birth of the Cool
sessions by Miles Davis’s nonet, which were crucial for his further
development, and he decided to start his own big bands including the All Stars
Bop Orchestra, including a young Toots Thielemans, and the Jack Sels Chamber
Music Orchestra.
In 1951, he travelled to Germany to perform for the American
troops, and after his return to Antwerp he played in basement pubs, dance halls
and jazz clubs and would later compose the soundtrack for the film ‘Meeuwen
Sterven in de Haven’ (Seagulls Die in the Harbour) by Roland Verhavert.
In 1959, he supported Nat King Cole and had the opportunity
to perform with his idol Lester Young in Brussels. Later, a career working on
radio programmes for the NIR, then later BRT, was short lived due to the
musical restraints held upon him.
His first and only studio album came in 1961 and featured
American musicians Lou Bennett and Oliver Jackson and young Belgian guitarist,
Philip Catherine. However, on release, the sleeve failed to mention the famous
artists involved in the recording and the album didn’t bring the long awaited
breakthrough Sels craved, who had already given up on his jazz career by the
time it was finally released.
By 1966, Sels’s working opportunities in jazz had become so
slim that he was forced to start working at the Antwerp harbour, where he
helped to unload boats. During this period, he rarely performed in public anymore.
Besides the irregular local gig, he occasionally appeared in schools and
cultural centres, illustrating lectures about jazz history by jazz critic Juul
Anthonissen. Instead he devoted his time to writing music, which he did on a
small harmonium.
It was while making music, sitting at his harmonium, that
Sels suffered a fatal cardiac arrest on 21 March 1970. Once one of Belgium’s
foremost modern jazz musicians, he died in poverty, largely forgotten and after
a turbulent life.
Tracklisting:
CD1
1. Spanish Lady
2. Ginger
3. Nick's Kick *
4. Dorian 0437 *
5. La Campimania
*
6. African Dance
7. Softly, As In
A Morning Sunrise *
8. Blues For A
Blonde
9. Blue
Triptichon *
10. Rain On The
Grand'Place
11. Night In Tunisia
*
12. Minor Works
13. Tchak-Tchak *
14. Invitation *
15. Minor 5
16. The Preacher *
17. Dong *
18. Gemini *
19. It Might As Well
Be Spring *
Previously unreleased *
CD2
1. Night In
Tunisia (Live)
2. Taking A
Chance On Love (Live)
3. Zonky (Live)
4. Blue Monk
(Live)
5. Swingin' The
Blues (Live)
6. Walkin' (Live)
7. Unknown Title
(Live)
8. Broadway
(Live)
All tracks previously unreleased
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