Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Count Basie-Small Group Studio Recordings Complete 1952-1956

Count Basie-Small Group Studio Recordings Complete 1952-1956


The two Dance session albums, originally released on Norman Granz's Clef imprint and here reissued together, marked the resurrection of the Basie Orchestra after its brief dissolution in 1950. There was a good deal of continuity between the so-called "Old" and New Testament' versions of the band, although the 50s incarnation was less soloist-oriented. Its sound also boasted a new dynamism, with evertighter ensemble work and a host of fresh voicings. But, above all, as the title of these early recordings suggests, propelled by Freddie Green's guitar, the music was intended to be danceable - the mood is accordingly generally serene and stately rather than stomping. This fresh direction was determined by the introduction of new arrangers, notably Neil Hefti, a major contributor to Woody Herman's outfit in the Forties and the реп behind some of the sleeker, more insinuating numbers here. This Jazz Connections reissue also adds two cuts from the Clef album Basie, Blues Backstage' and `Rails'. If Dance Sessions shows the orchestra moving forward - albeit gently - to accommodate the shifting tastes of postwar audiences, there are times on the contemporaneous small Group Studio Recordings when Basie's own playing recalls that of his early hero Fats Waller, especially when his instrument of choice is the organ. Key to the main body of songs here, recorded as а sextet in December 1952, is the spirited interplay between trumpeter Joe Newman and Paul Quinichette, whose insistent Lester Young-isms earned him the nickname `Vice Pres'. Two numbers from an earlier session team the Count (again on organ) with an emergent Oscar Peterson, while the fast swinger `Parry Blues' pairs Ella Fitzgerald with Joe Williams (by this time - 1956- vocalist with the Basie Orchestra) for а goodnatured scatting duet. The last five tracks are from sessions featuring but not led by Basie.


Robert Shore

No comments: