Thursday, November 13, 2014

Not the Miles Davis Nonet

Reprinted from http://jazzwax.com

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Picking up where we left off yesterday, 1949 was quite a remarkable year for jazz. The second American Federation of Musicians' ban ended in late '48, allowing record production to resume after nine months. The LP record was introduced by Columbia, RCA unveiled the 45, magnetic tape started to roll in recording studios, bebop was peaking, R&B was heating up and cool was the new brainy sound, with some jazz artists straddling all three genres. [Photo above: Tadd Dameron]
Pete_Rugolo,_ca._Dec._1946_(William_P._Gottlieb)
Just as jazz styles were shifting that year, arranger Pete Rugolo joined Capitol as its music director following Stan Kenton's dissolution of his orchestra for a year. At Capitol's helm, Rugolo recorded a significant number of key artists, including Lennie Tristano, Lee Konitz, Buddy DeFranco, Miles Davis and Tadd Dameron. While you're certainly familiar with the Miles Davis Nonet—also known as the "Birth of the Cool" band"—you may be less aware of a similar supergroup with a more boppish flavor led by Dameron called the Tadd Dameron Big Ten. The group first recorded for Capitol on January 18, 1949—two days before the first studio date of the Miles Davis Nonet. Interestingly, Davis was in the Dameron group during the second recording session in April, probably a last-minute sub given trumpeter Fats Navarro's growing drug use and mounting unreliability. [Photo of Pete Rugolo above by William P. Gottlieb]
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In April '49, Dameron recorded one of his most fascinating sides with the Big Ten—Focus. Here's the personnel for the Tadd Dameron Big Ten on the session: Miles Davis (trumpet), J.J. Johnson (trombone), Sahib Shihab (alto sax), Benjamin Lundy (tenor sax), Cecil Payne (baritone sax), Tadd Dameron (piano, arrange), John Collins (guitar), Curly Russell (bass) and Kenny Clarke (drums).
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Interestingly, neither the Miles Davis Nonet nor the Tadd Dameron Big Ten gained much traction with record buyers, possibly because they were too experimental sounding and didn't tour as a unit to build buzz. Many of the musicians were too busy to do so and there wasn't sufficient funding. Nevertheless, Dameron's output in '49 would pave the way for a romantic orchestral sound influenced by Billy Strayhorn and leveraged later by Dameron, Gigi Gryce, Benny Golson and Quincy Jones.
Here's the Tadd Dameron Big Ten in April 1949 with Focus...
Used with permission by Marc Myers

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