Craft Recordings is pleased to announce the release of Chet Baker’s
The Legendary Riverside Albums on November 15th.The deluxe five-LP box set
presents the artist’s output as a leader for the renowned jazz label, recorded
and released between 1958 and 1959: (Chet Baker Sings) It Could Happen To
You,Chet Baker In New York, Chetand Chet Baker Plays The Best Of Lerner And
Loewe. The recordings, which feature such icons as Bill Evans, Johnny Griffin and
Kenny Burrell, have been cut from their original analog master tapes by Kevin
Grayat Cohearent Audio and pressed on 180-gram vinylat RTI. Also included is a
bonus disc of choice outtakes and alternates from Baker’s Riverside sessions,
plus a collectible photo print and a 16-page booklet filled with photos and
insightful new liner notes by jazz historian Doug Ramsey. The complete
collection will also be released digitally, including in hi-res 192/24 and
96/24 formats.
Few
musicians have embodied the romantic—and ultimately tragic—jazz figure as
totally as Chesney “Chet” Baker (1929–88). Unschooled yet eloquent in his
music, and a fast-liver who survived for nearly six decades, the Baker mystique
has only reinforced one of the most haunting trumpet styles and ingenious
approaches to jazz singing. The Los Angeles–based musician rose to fame in the
early ’50s, playing with established artists like Charlie Parker, Gerry
Mulligan and pianist Russ Freeman—partnerships which would solidify his status
as a major jazz star. By the end of the decade, when he signed a four-album
deal with the New York–based label Riverside, Baker had become known for his
trademark West Coast “cool jazz” style. However, these recordings—which pair
the artist with some of the best East Coast players—demonstrate Baker’s
versatility as a modern trumpeter who could play with even the hardest boppers.
Baker’s
1958 recording session debut for Riverside, which resulted in the album release
(Chet Baker Sings) It Could Happen To You, offers a modern, hipper take on
standards like “Old Devil Moon,” “You’re Driving Me Crazy,” and “How Long Has
This Been Going On?” The only album in this collection not produced by the label’s
co-founder, Orrin Keepnews (who initially objected to his Riverside partner
Bill Grauer’s unilateral signing of Baker), Chet Baker Sings is unique in that
the nimble artist sets aside his trumpet in several of the tracks, using only
his vocals—and even scatting some of the improvised solos in a style that
sounds very much like his lyrical trumpet playing.In his new liner notes, Doug
Ramsey praises that the album contains “Baker’s most inventive and convincing
vocal work.”While All Music calls the album “An essential title in Chet Baker's
30-plus-year canon.”
A
month after his Chet Baker Sings sessions, the artist went back into the studio
to record Chet Baker In New York with a stellar lineup of Philly Joe Jones on
drums, tough-tenor Johnny Griffin, bebop veteran Al Haigon piano and bassist
Paul Chambers. The song selection, which ranges from laid-back and serene to
hard-driving bop, features top-notch performances and impressive solos from all
musicians involved. Highlights include the Miles Davis–penned tune “Solar,” the
ballad standard “Polka Dots and Moonbeams” and the effervescent “Hotel 49.”
1959’s
instrumental outing, Chet, focuses on ballads and features an all-star cast that
includes pianist Bill Evans, guitarist Kenny Burrell, flutist Herbie Mann and
Pepper Adams on the baritone saxophone. Baker shines in his languid and tuneful
approach to tracks like “Alone Together,” “It Never Entered My Mind” and
“September Song.” All About Jazz called the album “Asession that allows the
trumpeter to take his introspective time, encouraged by Evans' spare
accompaniment to transform these standards into vibrant, impressionistic
etchings.”
Baker’s
final album for Riverside, 1959’s Chet Baker Plays The Best Of Lerner And
Loewe, finds the trumpeter offering his renditions of tunes by lyricist Alan Jay
Lerner and composer Frederick Loewe who, together, penned some of the most
famous songs on Broadway. Baker, joined by an ensemble that once again included
Bill Evans, Pepper Adams and Herbie Mann—along with the great Zoot Sims on
tenor saxophone—covers material from My Fair Lady, Gigi, Brigadoon and Paint
Your Wagon.
In
addition to the four LPs, The Legendary Riverside Albums also includes a fifth
disc, featuring outtakes and alternate takes from Baker’s recording sessions
with the label. Doug Ramsey points out several highlights, including “Chet’s
playing into a Harmon mute on the new version of ‘The More I See You’ and the
spaciousness of his open horn in the Matt Dennis–Tom Adair classic ‘Everything
Happens To Me.’ There is also a rarity, ‘While My Lady Sleeps.’” Ramsey adds
that Baker’s version of the song “Underlines pianist [Kenny] Drew’s finely
honed ability to concentrate on his partner’s phrasing and harmonic turns, and
supply perfect support.’”
Though
Baker’s Riverside era preceded even more troubling times for the artist, these
recordings find the artist in excellent form, joined by some of New York’s
finest musicians, proving his brilliance as an inspired original, and as one of
the great jazz musicians of the 20th century.
TRACK
LISTING
DISC
ONE
Chet
Baker Sings: It Could Happen to You
Side 1
Do It
The Hard Way
I’m
Old Fashioned
You’re
Driving Me Crazy
My
Heart Stood Still
Side 2
The
More I See You
Everything
Happens To Me
Dancing
On The Ceiling
How
Long Has This Been Going On?
Old
Devil Moon
DISC
TWO
Chet
Baker In New York
Side 1
Fair
Weather
Polka
Dots and Moonbeams
Hotel
49
Side 2
Solar
Blue
Thoughts
When
Lights Are Low
DISC
THREE
Chet
Side 1
Alone
Together
How
High The Moon
It
Never Entered My Mind
’Tis
Autumn
Side 2
If You
Could See Me Now
September
Song
You’d
Be So Nice To Come Home To
Time
On My Hands
You
And The Night And The Music
DISC
FOUR
Chet
Baker Plays The Best Of Lerner And Loewe
Side 1
I’ve
Grown Accustomed To Her Face
I
Could Have Danced All Night
The
Heather On The Hill
On The
Street Where You Live
Side 2
Almost
Like Being In Love
Thank
Heaven For Little Girls
I Talk
To The Trees
Show
Me
DISC
FIVE
Bonus
LP: Outtakes and Alternates
Side 1
While
My Lady Sleeps (Take 10)
You
Make Me Feel So Young (Take 5)
The
More I See You (Take 8, Alternate)
Everything
Happens To Me (Take 2, Alternate)
Side 2
Soft
Winds
Early
Morning Mood