NOT FOR DISTRIBUTION
FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY
Index:
1.Feel Real - Eddie Baccus
2.Relentless - Danny Gatton & Joey DeFrancesco
3.It's About Time - Brother Jack McDuff & Joey DeFrancesco
4.After The Rain - John Mclaughlin & Joey DeFrancesco
5.Live at the 5 Spot - Joey DeFrancesco
6.His Majesty King Funk - Grant Green
7.Street of Dreams - Grant Green
8.I Want To Hold Your Hand - Grant Green
9.Emergency! - The Tony Williams Lifetime
10.Larry Young's Tragic Genius by Guy Sterling
Personnel: Eddie Baccus, organ; Mose Fowler, guitar; George Cook or Charles Crosby, drums.
The flutist on A Breath In The Wind is Theoshis Tannis.
Produced by Jack Tracy
Recorded October, 1962, at Universal Recording Studios, Chicago. Engineer: Bruce Swedien.
SMASH Records, MGS 27029, 1962
In the words of Robert Burns, «Many a rose was born to bloom, untouched by the morning sun.» In the world of music there are countless numbers of exciting musicians waiting and hoping for the lucky break, which will release them from obscurity. This is particularly true in the jazz field where there seems to be more musicians than gigs, and where the life span of the jazz club is often brief.
Eddie Baccus, the young organist presented here making his record debut, has been playing in the Cleveland area for the past few years. Organ groups are vastly popular in Ohio. The fact that he has worked one club date for the past year attests to his tremendous audience appeal.
Born in November, 1936, in Lawndale, N.C., Eddie is one of 10 children. Five of his family including himself are blind. His sight faded gradually after birth. At the beginning of his third school term he was enrolled in the School for Blind Children at Raleigh, N.C. He says that he started «messing around with the piano » when he was 10. Two years later he began taking lessons. There was always music at home. His youngest sister plays drums and the other three are pianists. At present Eddie is the family's only professional musician. His parents moved to Dayton, Ohio just before his freshman year and he began high school at The School for the Blind at Columbus, Ohio. Art Tatum was one of the famous students of this school.
Roland Kirk heard about this amazing pianist and contacted him. He left school after his junior year and joined Roland's group. Due to parental influence he returned to school_ During this period,he started organ lessons.
After graduation he rejoined Kirk in Cleveland, where they had a successful nine-month engagement at the «100-Club.» Jam sessions were held at the club twice each week and these sessions helped Eddie broaden his musical scope. Charles Crosby, the drummer who appears on this date, was the third member of the trio. Crosby is one of the «Young Men of Memphis» whose home town contemporaries include Phineas Newborn and George Coleman.
Roland left for New York to join Charlie Mingus. Eddie and Crosby remained at the 100-Club for a few months, then moved to the Esquire Club as a duo. It was here that Eddie formed his present trio with drummer George Cook and guitarist Mose Fowler.
Roland began talking to Smash recording director Jack Tracy about this excitingly creative organist, and Tracy decided to record him.
Eddie is usually shy among strangers, but when he warms up, he is extremely loquacious. He has a disarming sense of humor. He recently took his first plane ride. Due to a time change, the plane left Cleveland at 1 p.m. and arrived in Chicago at 1:05. Eddie said «Man, it's o.k. to go fast, but that was just too much!»
When asked what style he played, he said - he really doesn't know - only that he hopes it is original. And it is just that. The listener will probably notice that his runs are of a rare clarity. He does not fall victim to the funky cliches, histrionics, or chomping sounds which have been run into the well-known ground by many organists. Perhaps this is due to his many years of piano training.
His aspirations are to form a quartet by adding a horn player or vibist to the present group. The trio has a fine sense of communication and complement each other beautifully from the intro number to coda.
Edith D. Kirk - 1962
A Breath In The Wind
Stranger On The Shore
Danny Gatton, guitar; Joey DeFrancesco, organ; John Previti, bass; Timm Biery, drums
Big Mo Records, 767771202322, 1993
.. Guitarist Danny Gatton has been a local guitar legend in his native Washington, D.C.-area since the early '70s. .. Gatton has always been hard to pigeon-hole, blending jazz, country, blues and rock. He toured briefly with country legend Roger Miller and rockabilly great Robert Gordon. He was part of an all-star jazz ensemble CD, New York Stories for Blue Note Records. He appears on Chris Isaac's release San Francisco Days. In 1991 GATTON gained long-overdue national attention with the release of his Grammy-nominated Elektra debut 88 Elmira Street. "Gatton is a do-anything guitarist who can wail in any style.." (Billboard). "God Himself might well be impressed by Danny Gatton" (Esquire). He and his band played a series of international music festivals including the Montreux Jazz Festival, appeared on the David Letterman Show, Austin City Limits and MTV Live..
Joey DeFrancesco, at the tender age of 23, has already made quite a name for himself on the international jazz scene. He was signed to Columbia Records in 1988, while still in his teens, and has subsequently released five albums for the label. He toured Europe with Miles Davis' band and plays keyboards on the track Cobra on Mile's Amandla album.
Broadway
Well You Needn't
Jack McDuff, Joey DeFrancesco (organ); Andrew Beals (alto saxophone); Jerry Weldon (tenor saxophone); Paul Bollenback, John Hart (guitar); Rudolph Petschauer, Byron Landham (drums)
31 May 1996
Label: CONCORD JAZZ, CCD-4705-25
Jack McDuff and Joey DeFrancesco personify the Jazz Organ Renaissance that is sweeping the world in this incredible recording for Concord. Organists have paired up before in recording studios but never in such a historical effort. Unlike Jack and Joey’s last double organ session which was live, this recording offered more artistic control. Concord wisely permitted Jack to put together the charts and gave Joey the bass duties to lessen the load. This album was recorded in New York City, NY, on December 11 & 12, 1995.
Pork Chops and Pasta
Yesterdays
John McLaughlin (guitar); Joey DeFrancesco (Hammond B-3 organ); Elvin Jones (drums).
Recorded at Clinton Studios, New York on October 4-5, 1994.
Audio Mixer: Max Costa. Producer: John McLaughlin
Engineer: Ed Rak
Clinton Recording Studios, Inc., New York, NY (10/04/1994/10/05/1994).
1995 Verve 3145274674
.. British guitarist John McLaughlin's spiritual initiation into the American jazz scene came as a member of drummer Tony Williams' Lifetime--as futuristic an organ trio as you'd ever want to hear. During their two years together, Williams, McLaughlin and organist Larry Young scandalized the jazz and rock communities alike, yet what they documented on EMERGENCY and TURN IT OVER endures as a visionary paradigm of collective improvisation...
Crescent
AfroBlue
Paul Bollenback (guitar); Robert Landham (alto saxophone); Grover Washington, Jr., Houston Person, Illinois Jacquet, Kirk Whalum (tenor saxophone); James Henry, Jim Henry (trumpet, flugelhorn);
Jack McDuff (organ); Byron Landham (drums).
Five Spot Nightclub, New York, NY; Record Plant Recording Truck. Jun 15, 1993
1993 Columbia CK-53805
«Organist Joey DeFrancesco clearly had a good time during this jam session. His fine quintet (which has strong soloists in altoist Robert Landham, trumpeter Jim Henry, and especially guitarist Paul Bollenback) starts things off with a run-through of "rhythm changes" during "The Eternal One" and the hornless trio cuts loose on a swinging "I'll Remember April," but otherwise all of the other selections feature guests. Tenors Illinois Jacquet, Grover Washington, Jr., Houston Person, and Kirk Whalum all fare well on separate numbers (Jacquet steals the show on "All of Me"), and on the closing blues DeFrancesco interacts with fellow organist Captain Jack McDuff. Few surprises occur overall (the tenors should have all played together), but the music is quite pleasing and easily recommended to DeFrancesco's fans.» ~-Scott Yanow
All Of Me
Moonlight In Vermont
Grant Green - guitar; Harold Vick - tenor saxophone; Larry Young - organ; Ben Dixon - drums;
Candido Camero - bongo and conga.
Recording: May 1965 at Van Gelder's Studios, Englewood Cliffs, N.J. by Rudy Van Gelder.
Production: Creed Taylor. Verve V6-8627
Don't be scared off by the 'His Majesty King Funk' title; this is not Green's later commercial stuff -- essentially classic four-piece soul-jazz with a deep groove.
Willow Weep For Me
Grant Green (Guitar); Larry Young (Organ); Bobby Hutcherson (Vibraphone); Elvin Jones (Drums)
Produced by Alfred Lion. Reissue Produced by Michael Cuscuna. Recording Engineer: Rudy Van Gelder.
Recorded on November 16th, 1964 at Van Gelder Studios, Engelwood Cliffs, NJ.
Originally Issued as Blue Note BST 84253. Reissue CD: Blue Note 7243 8 21290 2 8
« Grant Green's second session with organist Larry Young, Street of Dreams brings back drummer Elvin Jones and adds Bobby Hutcherson on vibes for a mellow, dreamy album that lives up to its title. There are only four selections, all standards and all around eight to ten minutes long, and the musicians approach them as extended mood pieces, creating a marvelously light, cool atmosphere that's maintained throughout the record. Hutcherson is the perfect addition for this project, able to blend in with the modal advancement of the rest of the ensemble while adding his clear, shimmering tone to the overall texture of the album. All the musicians play with a delicate touch that's quite distinct from the modal soul-jazz on Talkin' About; it's not so much romantic as thoughtful and introspective, floating along as if buoyed by clouds. There aren't really any fireworks or funky grooves, as the music is all of a piece, which makes it difficult to choose the highlights from French songwriter Charles Trenet's "I Wish You Love," "Lazy Afternoon," the title track, or "Somewhere in the Night." It's another fine record in a discography filled with them, and yet another underrated Green session.» -Steve Huey, AMG
Street Of Dreams
Grant Green (guitar); Hank Mobley (tenor saxophone); Larry Young (organ); Elvin Jones (drums)
Recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on March 31, 1965.
Blue Note (84202).
The third of three sessions Grant Green co-led with modal organist Larry Young and Coltrane drummer Elvin Jones, I Want to Hold Your Hand continues in the soft, easy style of its predecessor, Street of Dreams. This time, however -- as one might guess from the title and cover photo -- the flavor is less reflective and more romantic and outwardly engaging. Part of the reason is tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley, who takes Bobby Hutcherson's place accompanying the core trio. His breathy, sensuous warmth keeps the album simmering at a low boil, and some of the repertoire helps as well, mixing romantic ballad standards (often associated with vocalists) and gently undulating bossa novas. The title track -- yes, the Beatles tune -- is one of the latter, cleverly adapted and arranged into perfectly viable jazz that suits Green's elegant touch with pop standards; the other bossa nova, Jobim's "Corcovado," is given a wonderfully caressing treatment. Even with all the straightforward pop overtones of much of the material, the quartet's playing is still very subtly advanced, both in its rhythmic interaction and the soloists' harmonic choices. Whether augmented by an extra voice or sticking to the basic trio format, the Green/Young/Jones team produced some of the most sophisticated organ/guitar combo music ever waxed, and I Want to Hold Your Hand is the loveliest of the bunch.
I Want To Hold Your Hand
Tony Wiliams - drums; John McLaughlin - guitar; Larry Young - organ
Recorded at Olmsted Sound Studios, NYC, May 26 & 28, 1969. Produced by Monte Kay and Jack Lewis.
Polydor 849 068 2
Tony Williams' Emergency was one of the first and most influential albums in late-'60s fusion, a record that shattered the boundaries between jazz and rock. Working with guitarist John McLaughlin and organist Larry Young, Williams pushed into new territory, creating dense, adventurous, unpredictable soundscapes.
Emergency!
Star-Ledger Staff Sunday, March 30, 2003
Even in the freewheeling pop music scene of the '60s and '70s, Larry Young
Jr. was hard-pressed to find his limit. In a career that fell just short of spanning both decades, the Newark-born organist/keyboardist traveled a musical path that took him from rhythm and blues and rock 'n' roll to straight-ahead jazz to the birth of jazz-rock fusion to what one associate termed "extreme avant-garde."
Along the way, he played with some of the most innovative and celebrated
musicians of the last half-century, including John Coltrane, Miles Davis,
Jimi Hendrix, Elvin Jones, John McLaughlin, Carlos Santana and Tony Williams.
With his evolution, which was as much spiritual as musical, Young converted to Islam, adopted the name "Khalid Yasin" and traded in a well-shorn, clean-cut look for a beard, braids, robe and Muslim head wrap. One acquaintance recalled seeing him in his later years standing quietly on a hill in Central Park, carrying a staff and looking every bit the part of a shepherd overseeing his flock. At 6-foot-6 and weighing more than 200 pounds, Young could cut an imposing figure.
"Larry went all the way out," said Robert Banks, a jazz pianist from Newark who followed Young's career and observed him in the park that day. "He resigned himself from the human race." There was also the time Young broke into a home to play a piano he'd seen through a window and was arrested, but only after the owner who alerted police first sat down to listen. Another friend remembered Young tuning in to radio static for something to incorporate into his music.
And then there was Young's fascination with astrology that led him to call
people by their signs instead of their names, the concerts with no breaks between songs and the bands with musicians of less-than stellar credentials. Later albums included compositions with titles such as "Moonwalk" and "Message from Mars."
Twenty-five years ago today, Young died of pneumonia in East Orange General Hospital. He was 37. One account has it he was the victim of a mugging; another says he died from drugs. Whatever the case, Young's death went almost unnoticed. The respected jazz publication Down Beat took three months to run an obituary. But in recent years, Young's work has begun gaining wider recognition and has been discovered by a new generation of musicians and fans. In 1997, a jazz group in New York recorded a Larry Young tribute record.
Young's recordings are increasingly valued by collectors, too. An original
mint-condition copy of "Unity," his best-known album as a group leader, recently sold on eBay for more than $150. Elvin Jones, the session's drummer, called the record "immortal" and said Young's work should be viewed in the same light as that of Bach and Chopin. Today, many jazz fans, musicians and scholars consider Young an unsung hero in an era when contemporary music was undergoing seismic changes, a uniquely gifted man constantly experimenting and always striving for new levels of originality.
"The organ has tended to be a relatively conservative instrument in jazz,"
said Dan Morgenstern, director of the Institute of Jazz Studies at Rutgers
University-Newark. "Larry Young was the exception." One litmus test of a jazz musician's greatness is whether he or she can be identified with but a few notes of their music, added Nat Hentoff, a jazz critic who wrote the liner notes for some of Young's albums. "It's not easy to do with the organ, but you never had any doubt who Larry Young was," he said
By all accounts, Young's musical beginnings were as old-fashioned as they
could be. His father, Larry Young Sr., played the piano and introduced his son to music at an early age, teaching him the basics, paying for lessons and sending him to study at Arts High School in Newark. The elder Young, now deceased, also owned several bars in Newark that featured live music, providing Larry Jr. ready access to both instruments and musicians. Newark saxophonist Leo Johnson, a longtime friend of the organist, remembered Young's homes were always filled with keyboards. "He'd literally sit and play all day," Johnson said. "The only time Larry would take a break was to eat, go the bathroom or watch cartoons."
Born in 1940, Young grew up in Newark at a time when the city's jazz scene
was still vibrant and when its home-grown talents, including Sarah Vaughan, Ike Quebec and Wayne Shorter, had made or were making names for themselves on the world stage. Introduced to jazz in the mid-'50s by Jimmy Smith, the Hammond B-3 organ was a favorite attraction in the clubs of Newark and other urban centers. It would be the instrument that Young turned to for making his mark, though he continued to play the piano and later picked up the electric piano and synthesizer.
From his rhythm and blues and rock roots, Young switched his attention to
the challenges of jazz, first recording for Prestige. Between 1964 and
1969, he recorded six albums as a leader for the jazz label Blue Note. "Alfred Lion (Blue Note's co-founder) was really taken with Larry and gave him free rein," said Michael Cuscuna, a friend of Young's and a music
producer whose Mosaic Records released Young's Blue Note material on a 1991 compilation. "Unity" was one of the Blue Note records, and it teamed Young with an all-star lineup: friend and fellow Newarker Woody Shaw on trumpet, Joe Henderson on saxophone and Jones. "Larry Young was a quartet all by himself," said Jones, who remains active at 75. "He was coming from a place very deep inside." In its review from November 1966, Down Beat hailed "Unity" as a record "delivered with assurance and drive rather than any personal scene-stealing. It leaves a good feeling after repeated hearings."
In the mid-'60s, Young also developed a friendship with Coltrane and got rides out to the saxophonist's home on Long Island to jam with him in his studio. The relationship left such an impression on him that organist Jack McDuff started referring to Young as "the John Coltrane of the organ." Jones, one of Coltrane's drummers, said Young's melodic lines were similar to Coltrane's "in the emotion they could generate." "He (Coltrane) was reluctant to play with me at first, since he preferred the piano to organ," Young was quoted saying in 1975, eight years after Coltrane's death. "But one time in New York City he told me, 'You could play a shoestring if you wanted to,' and invited me out to play at his house." "John had every almost instrument you could think of, and they'd go into
his studio for hours on end," remembered Althea Young of Newark, who
married the organist in March 1966. "They wouldn't speak 50 sentences to
each other while they were in there." Speculation on whether Coltrane had a tape rolling during those jams has excited jazz fans for decades, but nothing has ever surfaced if he did. "It's a drag they didn't do an album together," said Cuscuna. "I'd kill to hear those tapes, if they exist."
But Young also came of age when rock 'n' roll was reaching its most fertile period and when some of the more adventurous jazz and rock musicians of the day were looking to each other for new sounds and styles to explore. As the music shifted gears near the end of the '60s, Young played a key role in two groundbreaking projects that, while they may have alienated purists, would be credited with giving rise to the jazz-rock fusion movement. One was Miles Davis' "Bitches Brew" album; the other was the group Lifetime, with drummer Tony Williams and guitarist John McLaughlin. Young played in each, staying with Lifetime for two records. Around the same time, he jammed with Hendrix in a New York studio, with the cut "Young/Hendrix" released on the posthumous Hendrix album "Nine to the Universe."
"Larry Young was the only musician I saw who could push Hendrix," producer
Alan Douglas told The Star-Ledger in 1991. "'I pushed him just enough for him to stay interested and have some fun,'" Barrett Young recalled his older brother telling him about his jams with Hendrix. Barrett Young, 50, still keeps some of his brother's musical tributes at his home in Newark, along with the organ Larry used on two of his final records, "Lawrence of Newark" and "Fuel."
Young never apologized for straying from straight-ahead jazz and, in fact,
complained that others didn't follow his lead. "Musicians suffer when they
do that," he once said. "There are so many jazz players who could have made a major influence on rock but wouldn't because of their attitude towards it." Cuscuna remembered Young inviting him to an early appearance of Lifetime at the old Village Gate in New York. "It was like seeing Hendrix live," he said. "You got hit with a wall of sound. I didn't know what they were doing, but it really knocked me out." McLaughlin said he had played in a number of organ trios before Lifetime and became Young's biggest fan after hearing "Unity." "Larry had the 'new school' thing going on," McLaughlin, 61, said recently from his home in Monaco. "He was the only one who had it."
The two men developed a close friendship during Lifetime's brief existence, he said, in part because of their shared interest in the Muslim faith. McLaughlin also recalled Young's ability to make up impromptu songs about people and capture every one of their idiosyncrasies. "Larry's sense of humor destroyed everyone," he said. So could his music. One night in Boston, McLaughlin said he found Young's solo so stirring he was literally moved to tears of joy. McLaughlin left Lifetime first and, before hitting it big with the Mahavishnu Orchestra, included Young on the far-reaching "Love, Devotion and Surrender" album he put together with Santana. To some, Young's genius peaked with his sideman's role on that 1973 record. He later toured with the guitarists. "Larry was perfect for the job," McLaughlin recalled. "He and I were both looking inside and outside for another kind of spiritual dimension."
In the last few years of his life, Young embarked on a determined but ultimately futile search for the success he had enjoyed earlier in his career. His last two albums, "Fuel" and "Spaceball," recorded for Arista in 1975 and 1976, were commercial and critical flops. "Fuel," said Down Beat, didn't generate enough energy "to toast a bagel." Those who knew Young best debate whether his final recordings were the reflections of a fragile soul in free fall or products of an ill-fated plan to capitalize on a market of fans eager to embrace the next new thing after the close of the psychedelic era. Althea Young, 65, maintains her husband's psyche was always vulnerable, the result of being abandoned by his mother as an infant and raised by an overly controlling father. Larry Young Jr. had three children with women other than his wife. Althea Young acknowledged she and her husband had their troubles, causing her to leave for months at a time. Friends, family and fellow musicians also acknowledged that Young was also more than a casual user of marijuana, cocaine, LSD and other drugs over an extended period. It's unclear whether the drugs fed his vision or caused him to lose grip on reality. Some argue they did both.
What seems certain is that Young spent some of his final years discouraged
and disillusioned, though his brother said he was close to signing a new
recording contract when he died. Cuscuna, who feels Young was more frustrated than imbalanced, remembered seeing him in his waning months playing piano in a small Manhattan club. "Larry's attitude was, 'Why am I here doing this when I was on top of so many important things in music?'" he said. "He wasn't in a great frame of mind when he left us." Young also sat in occasionally with the Mahavishnu Orchestra, but McLaughlin said he could tell his former band mate was in turmoil. "Spiritually, he was unchanged, but psychologically and financially it was rough on him," McLaughlin recalled. "He hadn't been getting many gigs. He wasn't his old self." According to Johnson, Young found getting dates harder and harder over his career, even in his hometown. "People in Newark wanted to hear that 'Let's Get Back to the Chicken Shack' stuff," he said. "That wasn't Larry's bag." Both McLaughlin and Jones feel Young was also a casualty of an era marked by indulgence and upheaval, some personal obstinacy and having no real role models to guide him. "Larry lived in a special place," McLaughlin said. "He wasn't the type person you'd say, 'Sit down, I have something to tell you.' If you did, he'd just look at you with that big, genial smile of his. He'd hear you, but he wouldn't hear you."
Near the end, while part of a music collective based at a former stable in
Newark, Young began toying with dissonance, where it didn't so much matter
what sounds were coming from the instruments that accompanied him, said
Althea Young. Banks referred to that music as "extreme avant-garde." Those
were the days of the single-piece concerts. "Larry would weave his own sound through the others and turn the noise into something you could listen to," said Althea Young, who sang on two of her husband's albums. "He believed sound was like light and that it traveled out into space forever. He was hoping to communicate with whoever else might be out there."
Young's funeral at at the Abyssinian Baptist Church in Newark drew a crowd, but his grave in Rosemount Cemetery near Newark Liberty International Airport remains unmarked. A memorial concert in his honor was held at CBS studios in New York in August 1978. Among those who played were Woody Shaw, McLaughlin and drummer Eddie Gladden, a boyhood friend of Young's who had found him years earlier listening intently to radio static. "You can tell from his music that Larry heard something different in his head," Gladden said. Bringing the organ into modern jazz and opening jazz to the innovations of rock are Young's greatest legacies, and he seems poised only to increase in stature as the years go by, said Cuscuna. Others agreed. "You hear him in the new breed of organ players," said Johnson. "Like John Coltrane changed the pace for the saxophone, Larry Young set the pace for the organ." "Larry lived a musically creative life," added McLaughlin. "His life wasn't tragic, it just ended tragically. Who gets remembered? I don't know. In the end, it doesn't matter. What's important is that he did it."
Larry Young (organ); Byard Lancaster (alto sax); Herbert Morgan (tenor sax); George Benson (guitar);
Edward Gladden (drums)
Produced by Francis Wolff, Recorded by Rudy Van Gelder,
Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, NJ; February 9, 1968
Larry Young - Heaven On Earth