Elemental
Music is pleased to announce the release of two recently discovered, previously
unreleased live recordings: Dexter Gordon Quartet, Espace Cardin 1977 and Woody
Shaw Quartet, Live in Bremen 1983. Presented in exceptional sound quality,
these deluxe-CD editions include a 12-page booklet with an essay by famed jazz
producer and Elemental project coordinator Michael Cuscuna, as well as
contributions from Gordon’s widow and biographer, Maxine Gordon, and from
Shaw’s son and namesake, Woody Shaw III.
In 1977
Dexter Gordon returned home to the U.S. after more than a decade living in
Europe and launched perhaps the most productive period of his long and varied
musical career. “He had peaks and valleys to his playing career, but boy in the
mid-‘70s he was at a peak. It was unbelievable,” Cuscuna remembers. “I used to
hear him night after night, on and off over a couple of years, and he never had
a bad night. It was always just extraordinary.”
Not
forsaking Europe entirely, Gordon returned for gigs like the inspired set
captured here at the Espace Pierre Cardin (Théâtre de la Ville) in Paris in
September 25, 1977. Sharing the stage with him that night are the well-known
rhythm section of French bassist Pierre Michelot and American drummer Kenny
Clarke. What makes this performance unique is that it is the only known
recording of Gordon playing with one of the stalwarts of bebop piano, Al Haig.
A constant presence on 52nd street during the embryonic days of bebop in the
late 1940s, Haig’s career had gone fallow by the 1960s. At the time of this
performance, he was experiencing a much-deserved rediscovery.
In a set
that both celebrates and is grounded in jazz standards from “Body and Soul” to
“’Round Midnight,” Gordon’s tenor saxophone with its rich, unmistakable tone
dominates from the opening notes of his own composition, “Sticky Wicket,” which
he laces with playful quotes including “Pop Goes the Weasel.” This tour de
force continues with Gordon’s own fresh and inventive take on “Body and Soul,”
one that owes a debt to John Coltrane’s earlier re-imaging of this most played
of all modern jazz standards.
After a
dashing whirl through Gordon’s own “Antabus,” this set concludes with a
swinging, full-blooded rendition of Sonny Rollins’ “Oleo” in which the ever-mischievous
Gordon adds another quote, this time from “Here Comes the Bride.” A quieter
reading of Thelonious Monk’s immortal “’Round Midnight” by just the trio minus
Gordon closes an impressive evening.
To further
complement this series, Gordon’s legacy is also being illuminated by Gordon’s
widow and former manager, jazz historian and archivist Maxine Gordon, with the
completion of his official biography entitled Sophisticated Giant: The Life and
Legacy of Dexter Gordon - to be published by University of California Press in
November 2018. Maxine has preserved Gordon’s legacy and worked to advocate for
and document the work of numerous musicians and organizations since Gordon’s
passing in 1990. Visit http://maxinegordon.com and http://dextergordon.com for more
info.
Woody Shaw
Quartet’s Live in Bremen 1983 was recorded live at Post Aula, in Bremen Germany
on January 18, 1983. It’s a rare and satisfying snapshot of trumpeter Shaw’s
second great quintet, formed in 1980 with pianist Mulgrew Miller, bassist Stafford
James, and drummer Tony Reedus. Like all Elemental releases, this set was
produced by Cuscuna, who was a close friend of the late trumpeter during the
last 15 years of his life.
All of the
Shaw releases in this series were curated and assembled by Shaw’s son, Woody
Shaw III, Associate Producer of these Shaw projects. A musician and digital
producer with degrees in the arts and business from Columbia University and
Harvard, Shaw III has spent the past 15 years preserving his father’s legacy.
In fact, Cuscuna and Shaw III have co-produced several reissues of Shaw’s
classic recordings together, including the 7-CD set for Cuscuna’s Mosaic
Records label entitled Woody Shaw: The Complete Muse Sessions (2013). Shaw III
also wrote liner notes for this Elemental series.
Woody Shaw
III is currently producing a documentary film on the late trumpeter entitled
Woody Shaw: Beyond All Limits. The film which is in production, documents the
artistic, intellectual, and philosophical discoveries of Shaw through his music,
serving as an intergenerational memoir of a rich musical legacy passed down
from father to son. Visit http://woodyshaw.com for more info.
“Woody was an incredibly unique player, who
broke the trumpet mold because his style was forged on a respect for Lee
Morgan, Booker Little and to some extent Freddie Hubbard but also on saxophone
players,” Cuscuna says, “He was an exceptional soloist and also a great
intellect. He’s influenced a lot of people who came after him.”
Opening with
the “You and the Night and the Music,” a standard recorded by everyone from
Sinatra to Bill Evans, Shaw charges into a brilliant solo that turns from long
and lyrical lines to rapid fire bursts while Miller shows the influence of
McCoy Tyner on his playing. Introduced by Shaw as something “fiery and
uptempo,” his fast-paced “Rahsaan’s Run” composed as a tribute to Rahsaan
Roland Kirk who had died in 1977, appeared on Shaw’s breakthrough recording,
Rosewood. The Miller composition, “Eastern Joy Dance” follows, and here again
the lyricism that was such a striking feature of Shaw’s playing comes to the
forefront.
First
appearing on Shaw’s third Columbia Records album Woody III (which was dedicated
to Shaw’s father, Woody Shaw, Sr. and his newborn son at the time, Woody Louis
Armstrong Shaw III) — the tune “Organ Grinder” was composed in tribute to famed
Newark organist and fellow Arts High School alum, Larry Young, who was a close
friend and musical mentor to Shaw. Written as part of the soundtrack to the
silent film, Seventh Heaven, Lew Pollak and Erno Rapee’s “Diane” here receives
a deeply sensitive and emotional reading with Miller, Stafford and Shaw all
embroidering their solos with uncommon thoughtfulness and inventiveness. Shaw
closed the set with a sprightly, rhythmic version of Walter Davis Jr.’s “400
Years Ago Tomorrow,” which was chosen by Shaw to celebrate the Afro-Caribbean
roots of his music and of jazz as a whole. The show’s encore is a swift and
sweet version of one of Shaw’s most memorable melodies, “Sweet Love of Mine,”
which was first recorded on Jackie McLean’s Demon’s Dance album for Blue Note
Records in 1967, and later on Shaw’s Master of the Art album for Bruce
Lundvall’s Elektra/Musician label in 1982.
“In the
United States, all the engineers from the ‘50s like Rudy Van Gelder, Frank
Laico, Fred Plaut were all trained in mixing as you recorded,” Cuscuna
concludes. “All the European guys, especially in France and Germany, were the
same way. They knew how to record something in two-track and capture it
beautifully, and that’s reflected in the sound of all the Elemental releases.”
Best of all,
both Dexter Gordon Quartet, Espace Pierre Cardin 1977 and Woody Shaw Quartet,
Live in Bremen 1983 are presented in remarkably clear and dynamic sound
quality.
Dexter
Gordon Quartet · Espace Pierre Cardin 1977
Woody Shaw
Quartet · Live in Bremen 1983
Elemental
Music · Release Date: October 19, 2018