
I have picked over these boxes many times. I let a few months go by and then revisit them. There were only six boxes marked “Jazz” when I first came across them, so I guess it is a good sign that there are now nine. The ninth, out of view in this photo, is all boxed EPs. I found a couple of Bud Powell beauties in there. I didn’t see any new ones yesterday — well, all of them are old; I mean newly added. And I worry that the old-timers who had these items in their collections have already moved on. The selection is certainly drying up.
I listened to a short stack and came home with five. “Bacchanal” by Gabor Szabo is a winner. The Hungarian guitarist fell in love with jazz listening to Voice of America and wound up playing in Chico Hamilton’s chamber jazz combo. I picked up a Coleman Hawkins track on the Impulse label, a crazy version of “Little Liza Jane,” a song written so long ago (1917) that Hawkins could put his name on it.
I grabbed another Gerry Mulligan disc, another of those four-song 45s on the Pacific Jazz label (think cool jazz). I have four now. I wish they hadn’t done that. 7-inch records were designed to carry one song on a side. A or B. You like it or you don’t play it. Nobody wants to have to cue up the one song on a side that you like. And it certainly wouldn’t work in a jukebox setting.
For me, I can’t get enough of the slow, moody Mulligan. He plays baritone sax. There is no piano player in his band, and Chet Baker plays trumpet with him. (Nobody wants to hear an upbeat Chet Baker.) The two horns on the late-night, “Darn That Dream,” “The Nearness of You,” and “My Funny Valentine” sound like heaven.
Ray Brown has got to be the greatest bass player who has ever lived. No, that can’t be right. Charlie Mingus, Richard Davis and Charlie Haden could all be that guy. But Ray really shines on “Song of the Volga Boatmen.” I found a copy of his version of the Russian folk song in a trio setting with Hank Jones and Buddy Rich. Here you get to savor the attack, the swing, and the shape of every note.
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