Tuomo's Recommendations for Pianist/Albums

Betty Carter: The Audience With Betty Carter

The Audience With Betty Carter Review by Eugene Chadbourne

After years of being told what she ought to do by record companies and producers, and then putting up with being ignored thanks to the public’s fanatic interest in rock & roll, virtuoso jazz singer Carter started her own label. After getting her feet wet with the first few releases, she came up with this double album, which some fans would consider her masterpiece. Eventually it was licensed to Verve.

The set is as faithful as possible; a transcription of her nightclub sets with piano trio backing. Interestingly enough, it is not actually recorded at a nightclub per se, because the Great American Music Hall, formerly one of San Francisco’s most posh bordellos, is actually more a small theatre, with the set up just intimate enough to pull off this kind of live recording. A pity that the singer herself had to fund the project, because, in 1980, it was much more expensive and complicated to record live than it would become decades later with new technology. And no doubt Carter had to cut a few corners and make do with the results. So, most listeners will have some quibble with the sound, wishing, for example, for much more piano presence, more clarity from the drums, and so forth. This would have to be the only complaints that could be allowed over this material, recorded over three nights, and no doubt allowing plenty of choice of takes. “Sounds (Movin’ On)” is Carter’s “Chasin’ the Trane”: it is a bit more than 25 minutes worth of vocal improvisation, use of the voice as an instrument in interplay with the other musicians, and, above all, sheer energy, which is one thing it definitely has in common with the aforementioned Coltrane performance.

Another thing in common with Coltrane would be the pianist, John Hicks, who comes out of McCoy Tyner, the saxophonist’s main piano accompanist. Hicks goes just about as far out as his notoriously anti-avant-garde boss will allow in these circumstances.

The remaining three sides are a mixture of standards and songs written by Carter. Her songwriting talents are an area that has definitely been overshadowed by her singing chops in terms of critical reception. The fourth side of this set, which consists almost totally of her originals, is a good place for one to explore the beautiful, tough-minded songs she writes. Other high points are the lovely exploration of “Spring Can Really Hang You Up the Most” and, of course, the fast numbers. There is not a singer alive that takes on the tempos Betty Carter does, and it is a good thing, too. Otherwise, the cardiac wards would be full of drummers and there would be no room for anyone else to get treatment. An interesting choice amongst the songs is a version of “Caribbean Sun,” written by the under-appreciated saxophonist Carlos Garnett. Carter’s original gatefold packaging included a photo of the entire audience.

Personnel

  • Betty Carter - Vocals
  • John Hicks — piano
  • Curtis Lundy — bass
  • Kenny Washington — drums

Tracks I’d recommend to start with:

  • Sounds
  • Spring Can Really Hang You Up The Most
  • My Favourite Things

'Lester Young Trio

The Lester Young Buddy Rich Trio is a jazz trio album recorded in Hollywood, California in March and April of 1946 by Lester Young, Nat King Cole and Buddy Rich. It is an excellent example of a trio without a bass.

The first 4 tracks were originally released on Mercury Records. The remaining 4 tracks were released on Norman Granz’ Clef Records label as *The Lester Young Trio No. 2 before all 8 tracks were combined and released by Granz’ Norgran Records label as The Lester Young Buddy Rich Trio. Nat King Cole was under contract with a different record label at the time so was credited only as “Aye Guy” on the original Mercury / Clef / Norgran releases.

In 1994 Verve Records released a CD version of The Lester Young Trio which combined all 8 tracks from the 1946 Hollywood trio recordings, plus an alternate take of “I Cover the Waterfront” and an additional shortened version of “Back to the Land”, with 4 additional tracks recorded earlier by a quintet with Nat King Cole (but without Lester Young or Buddy Rich).

Personnel

  • Lester Young — tenor saxophone
  • Nat King Cole — piano
  • Buddy Rich — drums

Tracks I’d recommend to start with:

  • I Cover The Waterfront
  • I Want To Be Happy
  • Somebody Loves Me

A Love Supreme

A Love Supreme is an album by John Coltrane. He recorded it in one session on December 9, 1964, at Van Gelder Studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, leading a quartet featuring pianist McCoy Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison and drummer Elvin Jones.

A Love Supreme is a through-composed suite in four parts:

“Acknowledgement” (which includes the oral chant that gives the album its name)

“Resolution”

“Pursuance”

“Psalm”

One critic has written that the album was intended to represent a struggle for purity, an expression of gratitude, and an acknowledgement that the musician’s talent comes from a higher power.

According to assistant music editor at Time Out John Lewis, the album “pulls off the rare track of being utterly uncompromising yet completely accessible.”

Tracks I’d recommend to start with:

  • Whole thing in order!

Bill Evans: Everybody Digs Bill Evans

This album is Bill Evans’ second album as a leader. It is a superb document of Bill’s trio work before the legendary trio with LaFarro and Motian, and includes two of his original compositions, ‘Epilogue’ and ‘Peace Piece’.

“I’ve always felt pretty good about that record, because I know there was a strong feeling to it, and that’s the hardest thing about recording to begin with. You know, you go in at a certain time on a certain day, and you hope you’re going to have that kind of peak. No matter what happens, you play, you do a job, and to most listeners it probably doesn’t make that much difference. However, when you do have that special day, it penetrates—I mean this album has gotten a certain kind of reaction from people through the years; it seems to have a lot to do with that very special feeling I had then.”
-Bill Evans 1975

Personnel:

Bill Evans - Piano
Sam Jones - Bass
Philly Joe Jones - Drums

Tracks I’d recommend to start with:

  • Young And Foolish
  • Oleo
  • Peace Piece

Lester Young Trio (Nat King Cole, Lester Young, Buddy Rich)

The Lester Young Trio is an album by Lester Young with Nat King Cole and Buddy Rich, recorded in March–April 1946, with the first four tracks being released in 1951.

In 1994 Verve Records released a CD version of The Lester Young Trio that combined all eight tracks from the 1946 Hollywood trio recordings, plus an alternate take of “I Cover the Waterfront” and an additional shortened version of “Back to the Land”, together with four additional tracks recorded earlier by a quintet with Nat King Cole (but without Lester Young or Buddy Rich).

This album is an excellent example of a trio without a bass; and beautiful documentation of Nat King Cole’s great playing.

Tracks I’d recommend to start with:

  • Somebody Loves Me
  • I Want To Be Happy
  • Sweet Lorraine