While it is a truism worth remembering that the early work
of a great artist is unlikely to equal the work of his maturity, it is also
true that any work produced by a genius demands attention. At the very least it
gives an insight into the artist’s development; at its best, it reveals an
artist whose talent shown through from earliest days. The discovery of
previously unreleased material from such an artist is never without interest.
So when Resonance Recordings comes out with a deluxe
two-disc set of early tracks from one of the most influential jazz guitarists
of the last century, Wes Montgomery, attention must be paid. The album, In The Beginning contains 26 tracks from
the years 1949 through 1958. It includes club dates, recording sessions, and
jams from the Mongomery-Johnson Quintette which featured the three Montgomery
brothers, pianist Buddy, bassist Monk along with Wes and tenor sax man Alonzo
“Pookie” Johnson and drummer Sonny Johnson, a set of five Quintette tracks
produced by the young Quincy Jones for Epic Records in 1955 only one of which,
“Love for Sale” was ever released and an assortment of other pieces.
Disc One has 14 Montgomery - Johnson tracks recorded in 1956
at the Turf Club in Indianapolis. They run through some driving takes of tunes
like "After You’ve Gone,” “Four,” and “My Heart Stood Still.” There is an
enticing take on the John Lewis composition, “Django” and a blues jam featuring
an Andrews vocal. This may be young Montgomery, but it is fine Montgomery
already showing his chops. The disc closes with a private recording of a jam
which has Wes playing bass on “Ralph’s New Blues.” There are two vocal tracks
from Debbie Andrews: “Going Down to Big Mary’s” and the standard “I Should
Care.”
The second disc begins with quartet versions of “Soft
Winds,” “Robbin’s Nest,” and “A Night in Tunisia” recorded in 1958 at the
Missile Lounge in Indianapolis in 1958. It has Montgomery working with a variety
of other musicians on individual tracks: Melvin Rhyne and Richard Crabtree on
piano, Flip Stewart and brother Monk on bass and Paul Parker on drums. The
Jones produced tunes include three Montgomery originals—“Leila,” “Blues,” and
“Far Wes.” The disc ends with a set of three pieces recorded for Spire Records
in 1949—“King Trotter,” “Carlena’s Blues,” and “Smooth Evening” with a vocals
on the last two from Sonny Parker.
The set comes with a 55 page booklet complete with some
vintage photographs and notes from producer Zev Feldman and authors Ashley Kahn
and Bill Milkowski. There are excerpts from an unpublished book from Buddy
Montgomery as told to Joseph Woodard, conversations with others and an
appreciation from Pete Townshend.
The recording on some of the tracks leaves something to be
desired, but the music gives a real taste of the great things to come. In The Beginning is not the mature Wes
Montgomery at the top of his game, but early Montgomery is nothing to sneer at.
No comments:
Post a Comment