As a
follow-up to our previous post about the MOOC project, I recently engaged in an
interesting activity. For the last week of the MOOC I decided to include my own
Top Ten list of jazz recordings as a basis for discussion and feedback. The
list is not intended as the “most important jazz recordings ever,” but is
simply a collection of songs that affected me when I first heard them, and
still have a special spot in my mind.
In my teen
years I used to tune in to an all-night jazz station in Rochester, New York,
hosted by Harry Abraham. Harry had the quintessential late night jazz DJ voice,
and my transistor radio enabled me to listen underneath the sheets, long after
I was supposed to be asleep. One night Harry announced the tune “HarlemLullaby” by Junior Mance. Something about this piano trio recording grabbed
me that night and made me seek out the record, and it has remained a favorite
ever since. Its evocative, bluesy mood conjures up a feeling —a déjà vu for
something I know I have not experienced in this life.
“Harlem
Lullaby” begins and ends with a rubato piano solo based on a phrase from the
French song “Darling Je Vous Aime Beaucoup.” Junior’s A section employs a mix
of blues and Gospel chord changes, and links to a powerful bridge in the
relative minor. Throughout, his identifiable style is front and center. Listen
to the improvised lick at 2:35 to 2:55. Pure blues bliss.
Almost 40
years later, thanks to the Fillius Jazz Archive, I sat with Junior Mance and
related my late night epiphany. Junior had his own radio story:
JM: What
you say about under the sheets, well I guess I was about ten years old and my
dad asked me one Christmas, “what do you want for Christmas?” I said, “I want a
table radio.” You know this was before they had the little battery portables
and all of that. And he was shocked. He thought what does he want a radio for?
Well they would listen to all the broadcasts at night, you know like Earl Hines
would broadcast from the Grand Terrace. And there was another place in Chicago
I think called the Gerrick Show Lounge, where I remember Don Byas and J.C.
Higginbotham were in a small group there. And they would catch all — you know
that was the days when there were more radio broadcasts than there were
records. But they came on so late and my folks wouldn’t let me stay up to
listen. But I’d ease up and crack the door and I’d sit there and listen. So I
says I’ll fix this, you know, and I asked for a radio. So they gave me the
radio for Christmas. So I remember I would listen and Earl Hines would come on
I’d search and I’d turn the volume down real low until I found it. Then I would
get under the covers with the pillow and all, and listen to it. And every night
this went on and they were none the wiser so then after it was over I’d put it
back on the table. After it was over that was a time when mothers usually come
in and tuck you in, you know, and I’d fake like I’m sleeping. Well one night, I
fell asleep before the broadcast was over. The radio and me and everything is
under the pillow and I’m sound asleep. So it woke me up and she pulled the
pillow back and I says uh oh, this is it, I’m know I’m going to get it. She
called me father in and they laughed. They said look at that. So then after
that they started letting me listen, as long as I was in bed, and I could turn
it on and listen to it.
Junior Mance, in 1999 |
Junior’s
anecdote is echoed by many other jazz artists who grew up in the decades when
radio was the main source of home entertainment. The serendipity connected with
“Harlem Lullaby” did not end with my interview with Junior. Along the way I met
producer Joel Dorn who was a later interviewee, and I noticed that he produced the
album “Harlem Lullaby.” The liner notes were written by a second jazz producer,
Orrin Keepnews, who also granted us a fascinating interview.
On my CD
release in 1999, “Jazz Life,” I decided to tackle this tune, and I was quite
pleased with the outcome. You can listen to that version here.
Two years
ago I completed the circle with Junior by booking him and his trio at Hamilton
College during a celebration of Jazz Appreciation Month. He retained that
upbeat blues approach to his music, and was a pleasure to have on campus.
and Alan Dawson lays down the rhythm with his mastery of brush and high hat..and that attracts the ear in ways that causes us to listen with intent
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