JULIAN ADDERLEY alto sax
BLUE MITCHELL trumpet
SAM JONES bass
PHILLY JOE JONES drums
BILL EVANS piano
Recorded July 1,1958 , Reeves Sound Studio , New York
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SIDE 1
1. Minority (Gigi Gryce) 7:05
2. Straight Life (Julian Adderley) 5:25
3. Blue Funk (Sam Jones) 5:26
SIDE 2
1. A Little Taste (Julian Adderley) 4:34
2. People Will Say We're in Love (Rodgers & Hammerstein) 9:38
3. Nardis (Miles Davis) 5:30
Bonus Track on Japan CD mini lp release
1. Minority - alt take 02(Gigi Gryce) 7:26
1. Minority - alt take 03(Gigi Gryce) 7:08
3. Nardis - alt take 04(Miles Davis) 5:37
"Portrait of Cannonball"
strikes us as a most fitting title for JULIAN ADDERLEY's first
album for Riverside, not only because of the unusually
expressive photograph of the man on the cover, but also because
the contents of the LP seem to make up an equally expressive
musical ''portrait.
Centuries ago, when a painter was
commissioned by some important or wealthy man to create one of
those portraits that were supposed to hang forever in ancestral
halls, he was apt to show the subject at his ease and in familiar
surroundings: perhaps seated in a favorite chair or with member's
of his family around him. This album meets many of the conditions
for being a current jazz equivalent of such a portrait. Here is
Cannonball, blowing in wonderfully relaxed fashion, surrounded by
a hand-picked group that happens to represent different phases of
his career to date.
Adderley himself is just the same
sort of imposing, assured figure as one of those portrait
subjects of another day. But since the mood here is modern, we
might as well get off this particular comparison by noting that
there is nothing formal in this portrait: both the cover photo
and the spirit of the album are candid and easygoing....
Cannonball today, just short of
thirty (he was born in September, 1928), can be described as
having a solid present position in jazz and an awesomely
promising future. This is true at least partly because he has been able to resist the worst aspects of a dangerous kind of
success. The usual jazz pattern calls for much early scuffling
(the big fish from a little local pond comes to the big city and
gets lost in the shuffle for a while before eventually, if at
all, finding his way). But when Julian Adderley first arrived in
New York from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, where he had been a
successful local bandleader and then a high school music teacher
and band director, he found to his surprise that he had it made
in advance!
Rumor, reputation and legend had
preceded him on their mysterious grapevine. There were all sorts
of stories: some seemed based on an assumption that all of
Florida (outside of Miami) is backwoods and swamps, and claimed
that this boy born and raised in Tallahassee (the state capitol)
had never even heard of Charlie Parker until after he had
coincidentally developed a similar style; some, based on
ignorance of how young he was, claimed that Adderley had been
playing that way first, or even that Bird had somehow heard and
copied him; still others went back to some mysterious other
musician from whom both had separately learned.
When, out of all this fog and
nonsense, there appeared at the Cafe Bohemia in New York, in the
Summer of 1955, a young man who really played remarkably well,
the result was an immediate sensation. He began recording, went
on the big-cities road route with his own group. He was, without
quite knowing what hit him, a star.
It was all a bit too good to be
true. The first kind of reaction was one described by Coleman
Hawkins in his Documentary album (RLP 12.117/8), in
speaking of the musical perils of New York. He used Cannonball as
an example of how the bright new star becomes everyone's target;
everyone considers him the man it would be most advantageous to
'cut', and inevitably at least some succeed. Another problem was
that the critics largely turned on Julian, dismissing him as just
a Bird imitator. Every alto player for years now has been called
that, but it's even easier to attack on those grounds someone who
gets publicized as "the new Bird." Finally, as Julian
himself admits, he just didn't know enough about all the
sub-surface problems of being a big-time bandleader. Although he
turned out to be one of the few capable of introducing his
personnel and tunes in lucid, audible English, there were lots of
non-musical essentials of handling people and places that you
just can't command without experience. So, by early 1958, he had
disbanded and begun a new phase of his career, as a featured
member of the Miles Davis Sextet.
The Cannonball who had come up
from Florida was very probably less deserving of the "Bird
imitator" tag than many others, although of course he shared
with practically everyone that deep influence. Julian's first
interest in jazz had come from his father, a one-time cornetist.
This has helped make him one of the few modernists with knowledge
and appreciation of the jazzmen and music that preceded him. He
has also always had a strongly lyrical quality and a deep
understanding of the blues. These were qualities that Bird had,
too; and that kind of similarity should not be undervalued.
By now he has added a growing
maturity of concept and richness of tone to his originally
powerful musical equipment That pre-appearance hoopla and legend
(none of it of his own making) has died down - and it's important
to note that Cannonball never paid it any attention. So he stands
on his own feet today as one of the most richly talented and
swiftly-growing of contemporary jazz figures, speaking ever more
importantly with his own musical voice.
The colleagues he selected for
this album include, first of all, "BLUE" MITCHELL, an
exceptionally gifted young trumpet man who is an old friend from
Florida days. It was Cannonball who brought Blue forcibly to River-side's
attention (the story is told in detail in the notes to
Mitchell's own album RLP 12-273 - recorded in the same week as
this one) and it was Cannonball who felt that using Mitchell on
this LP would be a most helpful way of introducing him. SAM
JONES, one of the best of several superior young bassists
currently on the New York scene, is also from Florida and was an
important part of Adderley's own group. PHILLY JOE JONES (no
relation), who was Miles Davis' drummer when Cannonball joined
that unit, is one of today's most formidable rhythm men. He can
be heard with great frequency on Riverside LPs, and his
presence here is an indication that Cannonball shares our high
opinion of him. BILL EVANS, also currently featured with Miles,
is a brilliant and distinctive stylist just beginning to gain
recognition (he was voted "New Star" pianist in the
1958 Down Beat Critics Poll).
The friends-and-associates aspect
of this "portrait is also in evidence in the
repertoire. In addition to one free-blowing version of a
standard, there are two Cannonball originals (A Little Taste, first
recorded on the first album Adderley made; and Straight Life, a
new ballad), a blues contributed by Sam Jones, a new scoring of
one of the best tunes of the talented composer-arranger-altoist
Gigi Gryce, and finally the Oriental-flavored Nardis, one
of Miles Davis' rather infrequent compositions, specifically
written for Cannonball's Riverside debut.
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