SIDE ONE
1. TWO LEFT FEET (Webster-Borne)
Robbins Music Corp., ASCAP (3:12)
2. JUST SQUEEZE ME (Ellington-Gaines) Robbins Music Corp., ASCAP
(3:15)
3. I GOT IT BAD AND THAT AIN'T GOOD (Ellington-Webster) Robbins
Music Corp., ASCAP (2:35)
4. NOTHIN' (Kutter-Golden-Borne) Robbins Music Corp., ASCAP
(4:32)
5. JUMP FOR JOY (Ellington-Webster-Kuller) Robbins Music Corp.,
ASCAP (3:18)
SIDE TWO
6. BLI-BLIP (Ellington-Kuller)
Robbins Music Corp., ASCA P (3:48)
7. CHOCOLATE SHAKE (Ellington-Webster) Robbins Music Corp., ASCAP
(2:40)
8. IF LIFE WERE ALL PEACHES AND CREAM (Webster-Borne) Robbins
Music Corp., ASCAP (5:12)
9. BROWNSKIN GAL IN A CALICO GOWN (Ellington-Webster) Robbins
Music Corp., ASCAP (2:47)
10.THE TUNE OF THE HICKORY STICK (Webster-Borne) Robbins Music
Corp., ASCAP (3:24)
Recorded in N.Y. , August 20,1958 (3/4/5/8/9) & August 21 (1/2/6/7/10)
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All arrangements by Bill Russo.
Supervision: Jack Tracy.
In an environment that now
produces as many new jazz albums a month as appeared, not so long
ago, in a year, the search for originality both in material and
content becomes a matter of increasing urgency for artist and
employer alike. The present album is one of those rare,
exceptional cases in which both the idea and its execution are
conspicuously and valuably original.
Some months ago Mercury's Jack
Tracy was discussing with Julian (Cannonball) Adderley his desire
to do something with the alto soloist that would involve an
original instrumentation and a writer who could provide some
challenging material. The idea evolved of using a string quartet
as a chief component of Cannonball's setting.
When the selection of tunes for
this unusual combination was discussed, Tracy said "Instead
of just a lot of originals or unrelated standards, let's try to
get some relative factor, something that will tie all the tunes
together." Both he and Cannonball agreed that it would be
better to avoid any of the more obvious solutions, such as a
hackneyed current Broadway show, or even Cannonball Plays Cole
Porter. It was then that Julian came up with the idea.
"Let's do the tunes from Jump For Joy," he said.
All this happened in the summer of
1958. It was by sheer coincidence that early in 1958 Jump For
Joy was disinterred and, in a modernized format, came to life
as the Ellington band took part in its production at Cops City in
Miami, Florida.
This was the first anyone had
heard of Jump For Joy in almost two decades. To get a full
perspective it is necessary to flash back to 1941. Duke
Ellington, who understandably felt that Porgy And Bess was
"not the music of Catfish Row or any other kind of
Negroes," wanted to produce an honest Negro musical that
would eliminate the old stereotypes and caricatures. It was to
be a hip show, a show in which the language and the costumes, the
singing and the dancing, would be authentic.
Jump For Joy made its bow
soon after, at the Mayan theater in Los Angeles. In the cast were
Dorothy Dandridge, a teenager only recently out of the Dandridge
Sisters trio act; Marie Bryant, a subtle dancer and comedienne;
Joe Turner, the veteran blues singer, uniformed as a policeman
for a sketch called She He's on The Beat! Herb Jeifries
and the late Ivie Anderson, Duke's vocalists; and many more. With
Duke's band playing the score, it was an intelligent,
sophisticated show. Lyrics and sketches contributed by such
writers as Paul Francis Webster and Sid Kuller insured a
consistently high level of taste and wit.
The keynote for the whole
production was struck with the title song, which many of us have
heard Ray Nance sing in the years between: Fare thee well,
laud of cotton/cotton lisle is out of style, honey chile,/Jump
for joy!/ Don't you grieve, little Eve/All the hounds, I do
believe/ have been killed, ain't you thrilled?/Jump for joy! And
the lyrics went on to point out that Green Pastures was
just a Technicolor movie, and that new groovy pastures were now
on the scene.
It has been said, many times, that
Jump For Joy when it first reached the public was far
above the heads of much of its audience, despite the profusion of
warmth and wit, of lyrical humor and musical pleasure. The Los
Angeles Tribune described it as new and exciting, yet
"gawky and unaware of its real charm as an adolescent. It's
a new mood in the theater, reflecting truly the happy satire of
colored life. In Jump For Joy Uncle Tom is dead. God rest
his bones."
Yet Jump For Joy had a run
of less than three months and never got to Broadway. Barry
Ulanov, in his book Duke Ellington, recalls that it
"left enough of an impression so that most of those who saw
it and are concerned with a vigorous and honest Negro theater
continually refer to it as the Negro musical. It was
probably the only employment of colored singers and dancers and
comedians which really didn't lapse into crude caricature of the
Negro at some point, which didn't pander to the white man's
distorted idea. . . it was ahead of its time and presented on the
wrong coast of America for theatrical success, but it made its
valorous point."
Though there was no story line to
the show, it was true to the life of the people it depicted. As
Ulanov wrote, "Here was a happy show which still had
dignity. Duke had done what he'd always wanted to do."
Luckily the legacy of Jump For
Joy included a number of songs that have become jazz
standards. The familiar melodies are included in this set, along
with several that were engulfed in obscurity right after the
show's demise.
Bill Russo's writing having
decorated the music stands of every group from the Stan Kenton
orchestra to the New York Philharmonic (for which he was
commissioned by Leonard Bernstein to write a special work),it
comes as no surprise that the challenge of this session was
boldly and successfully met. The string quartet at times gains an
extra voice through the use of the bass as a fifth part. The
muted horn of Emmett Berry, jazz veteran of the old Fletcher
Henderson, John Kirby, and Count Basie orchestras, is heard 55 a
leading voice over the strings at several points. Another
attractive tonal combination is the use of alto saxophone over
pizzicato viola, cello, and bass, employed on Nothin' and Brownskin
Gal. The strings at times are used percussively; in Bli-Blip
their finger tremolos have an impact comparable with that of
the "shakes" of a brass section.
Of the three tunes that will be
unfamiliar to most listeners, Two Left Feet contains
perhaps the most graceful and fluent Adderley ad libbing of the
entire album; If Life Were All Peaches and Cream is
noteworthy, among other factors, for the use of harmonics toward
the end; Hickory Stick makes effective continuity out of
both verse and chorus.
But to go into further
technicalities would serve merely to delay what the radio
announcers used to call "your listening pleasure"; it
would also distract your attention from the main point, which is
that the overall sound of these sides is unlike anything either
Adderley or Russo has ever done before.
The blending of the personalities
of these two, with a too-often-neglected Ellington score as their
point of contact, has produced a set of performances that gains
in interest with every hearing, and it is to their many ingenious
and subtle nuances, rather than to any analysis that we may make
of them, that your attention is recommended.
Leonard Feather -(Author of The
Book Of Jazz: Horizon)
TYPE OF MUSIC: Songs from Duke
Ellington's musical, Jump For Joy, as played by
alto saxist Julian (Cannonball) Adderley in an unusual,
bestringed setting created by noted arranger Bill Russo.
HIGHLIGHTS: Adderley's surging
solos on Two Left Feet and If Life Were All Peaches And
Cream .. . The almost eerie blend of alto and strings on I
Got It .... . The manner in which Emmett Berry's muted
trumpet is used as a lead voice with the strings
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