Showing posts with label Grant Green. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Grant Green. Show all posts

February 14, 2010

A Good Week for “Baby Face”

Face to FaceOn January 23, 1961, saxophonist Lou Donaldson recorded Here ‘Tis, his first album as a leader with an organ quartet. He was trying to get a sound closer to the basic blues. “We tried to play the blues like they were originally played,” Donaldson stated. “Like a conversation with the instruments – just talking to each other.” For this session, he brought in a couple of new faces: Grant Green on guitar and Roosevelt “Baby Face” Willette on the B-3 organ. (He looks like a teenager, hence the moniker.) The results were just the kind of funky sound he wanted on both the driving songs like “Watusi Jump” and on the brooding title tune.
     Blue Note took notice of the newcomers. Five days later, Green recorded Grant’s First Stand, which was his debut album but, in spite of the title, actually his second session. Willette appears on this album as well. Two days after that, Willette recorded his debut album, Face to Face, with Green on guitar and Fred Jackson on sax. All of them shine on the album. Willette composed all but one of the songs, and they all have a propulsive, deep groove, provided by Willette on the organ with his use of sustained rhythmic notes. Jackson has a bluesy, showy style on sax that uses all the tricks in the book. And Green sounds heavy and funky on the guitar on “Goin’ Down” and flying on “Swingin’ at Sugar Ray’s.”
     Grant Green went on to be one of the stars of Blue Note. Willette, on the other hand, recorded only a handful of additional albums after this. Then, he largely faded from the jazz scene. He had always been an itinerate musician, touring with R&B and gospel groups in the Fifties and returning to this life in the Sixties before settling in Chicago. He died in obscurity in 1971 at the age of 37. Still, “Baby Face” had a spectacular debut here in 1961 and left behind a small legacy of great grooves.

January 27, 2010

Happy Birthday, Bobby Hutcherson!

The KickerVibraphonist Bobby Hutcherson was born in 1941 in Los Angeles. His first recording as a leader was The Kicker, with an all-star cast of Joe Henderson, Grant Green, Duke Pearson, Bob Cranshaw, and Al Harewood (the album was inexplicably kept in the Blue Note vaults until 1999). His vibraphone style is reminiscent of Milt Jackson, fast and tuneful, but with a more modern sense of interaction with his band mates. He also appeared on Grant Green’s Idle Moments, showing his hard bop credentials.
     Over the years, Hutcherson has recorded with Eric Dolphy, Andrew Hill, Jackie McLean, Freddie Hubbard, Lee Morgan, and a long association with McCoy Tyner. He also made an appearance (as the bandleader) in the classic Sydney Pollack film They Shoot Horses, Don’t They? (1969) starring Jane Fonda. Hutcherson once stated that “the whole thing of being in music is not to control it but to be swept away by it.” He’s been sweeping us away now for decades.