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We Get The Message

by Oscar Pettiford Quartet

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  • Record/Vinyl + Digital Album

    8 Tracks, Remastered 2015, with unseen photos and new liner notes.

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  • Compact Disc (CD) + Digital Album

    9-Track CD in 6-Page Digipack with unseen photos and new liner notes.

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1.
Cohn`s Limit 06:28
2.
3.
Dark Glow 05:47
4.
5.
Stalag 414 04:47
6.
Love Nest 04:11
7.
8.
9.
Ghost Track 05:11

about

Newly unearthed live recordings of jazz bass and cello legend Oscar Pettiford and his quartet from Hamburg in 1958, featuring the great Kenny Clarke (dr), Hans Koller (ts), Attila Zoller (g) & guests in front of an excited audience. Eight tracks full of bluesy modern jazz, with a gloomy version of Friedrich Gulda`s “Dark Glow” or the cheerful “Gertberg Walk”, written by Pettiford especially for the occasion. Excellent sound quality, carefully mastered in 2015, comes with new liner notes and unseen concert photos from the same evening. Oscar at his best, passing the message of jazz as it was received!

“When Oscar set up to take a solo, he had that built-in thing of knowing what not to play and what`s good and what`s bad.
Taste, I guess you`d call it. I never in my life heard that man play a bad solo, no matter what the circumstances.”
(Ira Gitler about Oscar Pettiford in “Jazz Master of The Forties”/ Macmillan Series)

We get the message:

Oscar Pettiford, born 1922 on an Indian reservation in Oklahoma, still holds the highest reputation of bassist in the world of jazz, next to Jimmy Blanton or Charles Mingus. Besides his career as a musician, who established the bass as a solo instrument, he worked as a teacher of jazz improvisation and also composed well known tunes like “Bohemia After Dark” or “Blues In The Closet”. Already in the 1940s he was responsible for educating bassists like Percy Heath or Ray Brown and even today, important traces of Pettiford can be found in the performances of numerous musicians.

He made a name for himself in New York with such orchestras as Duke Ellington, Woody Herman or Charlie Barnet and, in 1944, formed the first modern jazz band with Dizzy Gillespie to play a style that was later known as Bebop. It was with Herman`s band that Pettiford substituted a cello for his bass solo as some kind of joke. Then he discovered the expressive potential of the cello as a jazz instrument and started to play it in various groups, introducing innovation to the playing of both instruments.

In September 1958 Pettiford travelled to Europe, touring with a package show called “Jazz From Carnegie Hall”, featuring Kenny Clarke, Lee Konitz, J.J. Johnson and Zoot Sims. After completion of the tour he decided to stay on the old continent, playing and teaching In France, Germany, Austria and later also in Denmark, where he regularly performed with Stan Getz and Jan Johansson at Copenhagen`s Cafe Montmartre. “To pass on the message”, as he used to say, became the center of his work. In particular it was his task to pass on the universal message of jazz to young European musicians.

Two months later he was invited by producer Hans Gertberg of Norddeutscher Rundfunk to play a few concerts in Hamburg with his European Quartet. On the evening of November 14, 1958, he was recorded with Hans Koller on tenor saxophone, Attila Zoller on guitar and US expad Kenny “Klook” Clarke, who settled in Paris at the time, on drums. They played with some local guests in front of an excited audience at “Studio 10” of Funkhaus Hamburg. The previously unseen concert photos from the same evening were taken by the well-known Berlin photographer Susanne Schapowalow.

In tribute to the work of the Quartet, German “Jazz Pope” Joachim Ernst Berendt stated in the sleeve notes of the Philips LP "In Memoriam Oscar Pettiford" from 1963: "The Hans Koller-Oscar Pettiford Quartet was the best combo that ever existed in the history of German Jazz". Attila Zoller described the genesis of the group in Jazz Podium magazine, February 1961: "In October I met Oscar Pettiford and Kenny Clarke, who were on tour. Oscar wanted to stay in Europe and Kenny lived in Paris for a long time, which enabled us to establish a quartet together with Hans Koller”.

With the exceptional American drummer and the Hungarian-born guitarist, two musicians gathered around Pettiford that evening, who complemented the band as a weighty rhythm section. Kenny Clarke is still regarded as the inventor of modern jazz drumming and has influenced several generations of European drummers. In addition there were the contrasting reeds sounds of Hans Koller and guests, that mingled beautifully with the rhythm group. Although Oscar Pettiford was put in the foreground of the concert as one of the most important jazz bassists, it is mainly Clarke, Koller and Zoller, who astonish the listener with their brilliant and sophisticated playing on these unreleased live recordings.

Only a few weeks after this concert, at christmas season 1958, Pettiford and Koller got involved in a car accident. Both musicians were injured and moved to a hospital in Vienna. Pettiford, proud father of his two months old son “Cello”, suffered a severe laceration to his head and bit his tongue through. He had to stay longer in hospital than Koller, who was already able to play again at the Berlin Jazz Salon in January. Meanwhile, Pettiford`s American friends had established a fund in New York to pay for the hospital costs of the bassist. A benefit concert for Oscar Pettiford at Birdland, organized by manager Larry Douglas and prominently staffed with Dizzy Gillespie and Duke Ellington, raised $1.200.

With his health apparently restored, Pettiford performed again in March 1959, together with his old friends Sonny Rollins and Horace Silver at Jazzkeller Atlantic in Stuttgart. A large scar on his high forehead reminded of what had happened. In the summer, he moved to Copenhagen and his Danish wife Jackie gave birth to the twins “Celesta” and “Cellina”. At that time he became one of the most important jazz musicians in Denmark, playing on several recordings and performing many concerts. The famous bass pioneer performed for the last time on September 4, 1960, at the art exhibition in Copenhagen. After a short episode of severe paralysis, Pettiford fell into a coma and died four days later. He was only 38 years old.

A little later Danish jazz musicians and fans founded a fund to pay for the orphans` expenses and allow the family to remain in Denmark. Olaf Hudtwalcker, chairman of the German Jazz Federation, wrote a fiery appeal to German jazz fans in Jazz Podium magazine, January 1961: "Oscar has lived in Germany for a long time. Tens of thousands cheered him and we counted him among our best friends. It's not about the glorious name of one of the greatest bassists in jazz history, who has always been the first to play for nothing in order to help others. It`s about the protection of three little children who are entrusted to us in our care. And about our idea of jazz.”

Ekkehart Fleischhammer / Sonorama 2015

credits

released July 17, 2015

Concert recording from November 14,1958 at Studio 10 in Hamburg, Germany

Oscar Pettiford (bass & cello), Kenny Clarke (drums), Hans Koller (tenor & alto saxophone), Attila Zoller (guitar) and guests: Werner Giertz (piano), Gerd Dudek (tenor saxophone), Willi Sanner (baritone saxophone), Dave Moore (bass), produced by Hans Gertberg

Thanks to Jazzinstitut Darmstadt, Susanne Schapowalow, Natascha Brüggemann, Klaus Scholz and Arne Reimer.
Producer for release: Ekkehart Fleischhammer, final mastering in 2015: Roskow Kretschmann, Audiomoto Berlin, photo on frontcover from 1959 by Hanns E. Haehl, used by friendly permission of Jazzinstitut Darmstadt, all other photos from November 14, 1958 in Hamburg by Susanne Schapowalow, used by friendly permission, cover artwork: Patrick Haase.

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Sonorama Records Berlin, Germany

Sonorama Records is an independent and worldwide distributed label for rare jazz, funk, soul, library and world music, established 2004 in Germany. It is all about music archaeology, an infinite search for soulful sounds, about tracing unrestricted musical diversity and the love for good music in general ... more

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