Bobby Pierce Introducing Bobby Pierce (Cobblestone 1972)

He should have been better known but he should have known better than to sing on his debut album.

Bobby Pierce - Introducing Bobby Pierce

Personnel

Bobby Pierce (organ), Bobby Jones (tenor saxophone), Pat Martino (guitar), Bob Cranshaw (electric bass, A2, B2), Roy Brooks (drums)

Recorded

in New York City in 1972

Released

as Cobblestone 9016 in 1972

Track listing

Side A:
Think
Here, There And Everywhere
I Remember Ray
Side B:
Mr. PC
Wichita Lineman
To Newport With Love


TIt was rather late to introduce a Hammond organist in 1972. The glory days of the organ jazz circuit in the 1960’s were over and electronic organs and synthesizers surpassed the Hammond organ as a beacon in popular music. Of course, Bobby Pierce couldn’t be blamed for not being in the right place at the right time. Growing up in the late 1960’s, he had woodshedded in New York City, California and Chicago with the likes of Sonny Stitt, James Moody and Gene Ammons. Born in Columbus, Ohio, Pierce was influenced by local giant and perennial Flophouse favorite, Don Patterson. All this indicates that Pierce was ready and able.

According to the liner notes of Introducing Bobby Pierce, the obscure gentleman was part of the soul jazz group Clarence Wheeler & The Enforcers from Chicago at the time of his recording. The session was set up by Cobblestone’s label boss Don Schlitten and included tenor saxophonist Bobby Jones, guitarist Pat Martino and drummer Roy Brooks. Class acts. Pierce’s debut album is a weird stew with a couple of superb highlights. Obviously an accomplished player and writer, Pierce presents I Remember Ray, based on a thing that he heard from John Coltrane. It feels like a chord-heavy outtake from the Giant Steps-sessions, good news, all the more so because of Pierce’s fluent and fierce phrasing.

More Coltrane. The band swings Mr. PC to the ground, particularly Pat Martino, whose attack and single line runs hit you in the eye like Sugar Ray Robinson’s fists, crushes trees like lightning bolts. Too bad Pierce (or Schlitten) didn’t come up with the sane idea of completing his introduction with similar modern jazz compositions. That would’ve really sealed his reputation. Instead, the repertoire further consists of so-so funk jazz (Aretha Franklin’s Think) that lacks the excitement of the Idris Muhammad-driven funk jazz of the Prestige and Blue Note catalogue and a stab at great pop songs as McCartney’s Here, There And Everywhere and Glen Campbell’s Wichita Lineman that demonstrate that Pierce is just not a really good singer.

One of the joys of collecting, though, is picking some exceptional stuff from an uneven oddity. Two years later, Pierce recorded New York on the Muse label. Pete Fallico, the great organ jazz ambassador from the West Coast, brought Pierce back on the scene in 2008 and released The Long Road Back on his Doodlin’ label.

Listen to Introducing Bobby Pierce on YouTube here.

Pat Martino Strings! (Prestige 1967)

I’ve been on the lookout for snippets of Pat Martino ever since my college years. Once there was a guy in college who asked me about my favorite jazz guitar players. When I mentioned that one of them was Pat Martino the guy, a sophomore guitarist, sneered: “O, that single-line player.” I’m glad I’ve never seen that guy since, I need him as a hole in the head. He’s probably drooling over the umteenth remastering of Kind Of Blue. So very sound.

Pat Martino - Strings

Personnel

Pat Martino (guitar), Joe Farell (tenor saxophone, flute), Cedar Walton (piano), Ben Tucker (bass), Walter Perkins (drums), Ray Appleton, Dave Levin (percussion A1)

Recorded

on October 2, 1967 at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Released

as PR 7547 in 1967

Track listing

Side A:
Strings
Minority
Side B:
Lean Years
Mom
Querido


Naturally, Mr. Kind Of Blue had every right to his own particular tastes. Yet, in denouncing Martino as merely a player with a ‘lineair conception’, he obviously was oblivious to the emotional effect of Martino’s approach; and furthermore traded objective critique for subjectivism. Because surely it would be hard to find a Pat Martino record or side date on which the single-line maestro omits Wes Montgomery-style octave playing.

It’s there on Strings!, Martino’s second album on Prestige in 1967; particularly in Minority, Gigi Gryce’s Impressions-type composition, a driving piece in which Martino’s pyrotechnical, flowing statements create a whirlwind of ecstatic feelings. And pianist Cedar Walton is in fine enough form to follow this up with perhaps a just as impressive solo.

One would expect a breather after this, but what follows in the footsteps of Minority, Lean Years, is the same type of tune, but less interesting compositionally, and a bit crudely formed. It doesn’t seduce us enough to take heed of the solo’s.

Two more originals encompass the start and finish of the guitarist’s endearing follow-up to his debut on Prestige El Hombre. Opener and title track Strings! is a real treat. It consists of a smooth, effective Latin rhythm made up off drums and percussion and a joyful theme flavoured with thrilling breaks, stated by Joe Farrell’s flute and Martino’s guitar, that intelligently alternates between licks and chords. Reedman Farrell proves to be a proficient flutist and Martino an astute improviser, not interested in virtuosity for virtuosity’s sake, but instead in what it brings about as concerned to feeling.

Strings! is the most enjoyable tune of the album, but Querido, the last track, has the same Latin-American atmosphere and is also worthwhile. Mom is a slow mood piece that basically revolves around three chords, in which not much is happening until the third minute, when Martino follows up ebullient romantic with hard speed phrases. Other ballad work of Martino of this kind comes to mind, such as his contribution to Embraceable You from Don Patterson’s Four Dimensions. Martino’s comprehension of balladry is striking.

Early Martino was a striking period. With or without single lines.

YouTube: Strings

Willis Jackson Live! Action (Prestige 1964/66)

By the mid-sixties Willis “Gator” Jackson, who started out as a honker and shouter in the r&b field, had recorded prolifically on jazz label Prestige. Nevertheless, a burst of tenor madness always peeked around the corner. Live album Live! Action definitely brings to the fore Jackson’s trademark r&b riffing.

Willis Jackson - Live! Action

Personnel

Willis Jackson (tenor saxophone), Pat Azzara (Pat Martino, guitar), Carl Wilson (organ), Frank Robinson (trumpet), Joe Hadrick (drums)

Recorded

on March 21, 1964 at The Allegro, NYC

Released

as PR 7380 in 1966

Track listing

Side A:
Hello Dolly!
Annie Laurie
Blowin’ Like Hell
Blue Gator
Side B:
I’m A Fool To Want You
Gator Tail
Satin Doll


This is particularly noticable on Blowin’ Like Hell. Indeed, Jackson blows like hell! As if battling with Big Jay McNeely, keeping the honk up till kingdom come, sometimes extremely low in the register, creating a buzz that goes directly to the guts. It’s the kind of tune that breaks the bottles and the mirror behind the bar, has women screaming murder and frolically hiking up their skirts. The crowd we hear on Live! Action seems to react accordingly.

Willis Jackson had two good chart runners with Gator Tail and Blue Gator and they’re both included here, as well as a joyful rendition of Hello Dolly. A disposable version of Satin Doll, however, fails to pick up steam.

The group possesses an old-timey sense of swing and sound. The sound quality of the recording is rather poor, thus hard to digest. Luckily, there’s the added bonus of guitarist Pat Martino, (credited as Pat Azzara) whose crackerjack runs come in loud and clear. Early in his career, Martino already displays dazzling technique and pace, if not always the intention to classify stories into build-up and climax. As he would do many times in the future, Martino engages in playing octaves in Gator Tail in honor of his mentor Wes Montgomery.

Live! Action brings uncomplicated entertainment and is a design for a pleasant, toe-tappin’ night out. More than anything else, it is a happy gig.

YouTube: Live! Action