Is this what a modern jazz innovator looks like? Naw. This guy must be your Sunday School teacher. A very presentable Gerald Joseph Mulligan at age 36. Photo by Bachrach |
Here's Gerry Mulligan's first session as a leader, recorded five months after the last "Birth of the Cool" date with Miles. It's been reissued several times, but here it is in a dub from the original LP. Posting it on Gems affords me another opportunity to share a collector story.
Each LP bore this stamp. |
Matt told me that back in the '80s he'd met an older woman through a book club they both belonged to. She had recently moved to the area from New York City, and seemed kind of lonely. They became friends, and he found they shared many interests. She told him she had no family but was otherwise reticent to talk about her past. Matt found that mysterious and a bit odd, but he liked her and they stayed in touch even though the book club eventually disbanded. He told me that in recent years had taken to looking in on her every so often to make sure she was OK.
Then one day Matt got a call from someone who said he was a relative of the woman. The caller said that the woman had died and they were clearing out her house. On her deathbed, she had asked that her possessions be given to her book-club friend, and the family was getting in touch with Matt to see if he had any interest.
After getting over his surprise, Matt went to the woman's modest bungalow where he found the floor covered with boxes of LPs. It turned out the old woman was a stone jazz fan and had a substantial collection of jazz records and books. She had never said a word about it to Matt. More mystery.
Matt was loathe to let such a trove be carted to the dump, so here it was, taking up one bay of his two-car garage. Did I want any of the records? He said I could take my pick and pay him whatever I thought was fair. Deal, said I. I left with a dozen cartons about two hours later.
Allen Eager in 1948. |
So why Mulligan for this posting? Well, the mysterious collector lady seemed to have a thing for Gerry. She had nearly 50 of his LPs, far more than she had of any other artist. Maybe it was his boyish good looks? I don't know, but he was her fave.
This is one of the recordings from her collection. It features Mulligan with tenor player Allen Eager, the guy who had shared front line duties with Fats Navarro in Tadd Dameron's band in 1948 and who later decided he wanted to be a race car driver and ski instructor. Here he's in superb form, trading solos with Geru on a series of original compositions. George Wallington, too, sounds great.
One other thing – the closing tune in this set takes up the whole second side of the LP. At 17-plus minutes, I have to think this is perhaps the first extended performance recorded by a single group in jazz. The long-playing record was new technology in 1951, and here Mulligan takes full advantage of its ability to capture lengthy performances. And "Mulligan's Too" is a precursor to "Tenor Madness" for its saxophonistic parry-and-thrust.
Historically Speaking
Gerry Mulligan
Prestige 7251
1-6: Gerry Mulligan, Max McElroy, bar; Allen Eager, ts; Jerry Hurwitz, Nick Travis, tp; Ollie Wilson, tbn; George Wallington, p; Phil Leshin, b; Walter Bolden, d; Gail Madden, maracas.
7: Gerry Mulligan, bar; Allen Eager, ts; George Wallington, p; Phil
Leshin, b; Walter Bolden, d; Gail Madden, maracas.
New York, NY; August 17, 1951
1. Funhouse
2. Ide's Side
3. Roundhouse
4. Kaper
5. Bweebida Bobbida
6. Mullenium
7. Mulligan's Too
Find it here: http://www.mediafire.com/?bpo90cbvce81a49
Can't believe no one's picked up on this yet; is it that Geru's too 'old school'? Whatever, I'm always eager to hear more of Allen. Many thanks. David...
ReplyDeleteIt's probably that this recording is available on CD, something I only realized after posting the dub. I try to share stuff that's otherwise unavailable. But this is a great recording regardless of its rareness (or lack thereof). Enjoy!
Deletethanks. excellent post . incredible music that you share . You Lennie Niehaus , Vol 1: The Quintets Jack Montrose and Bob Gordon & - Quartet & Sextet Sessions. . Long ago I hear these jewels of cool.
ReplyDeleteHello, Pablo. Thanks for your kind words. More great stuff to come soon, but I'm sorry that I don't have the Montrose/Gordon recordings you're looking for. If I come across a copy, though, I'll be sure to post it.
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