muzycy:
Jeb Bishop: trombonoe
Tim Haldeman: tenor saxophone
Art Hoyle: trumpet, flugehorn
Julian Priester: trombone
Mike Reed: drums
Jason Roebke: bass
Ira Sullivan: tenor saxophone
Greg Ward: alto saxophone
Editor's info:
Recorded live in Chicago's Millennium Park in summer 2008, Stories and Negotiations is the latest installment in drummer/composer Mike Reed's People, Places and Things project. Commissioned by The Jazz Institute's "Made in Chicago" series, it completes a trilogy of recordings devoted to a remarkable - but often overlooked - era in Chicago music: the years between 1954 and 1960, when the jam-session culture of the city's hard bop scene began to seed the collective avant-garde of the AACM and everything that followed.
Reed convened his working quartet, which features saxophonist Greg Ward, tenor saxophonist Tim Haldeman and bassist Jason Roebke, and invited frequent guest trombonist Jeb Bishop back to the bandstand. But for this album, he also solicited the horns of three jazz masters whose playing and personalities defined the late '50s in Chicago: Art Hoyle, Julian Priester and Ira Sullivan. The ensemble engages a set of vintage tunes - including Priester's "Urnack," John Jenkins' "Song of a Star," Clifford Jordan's "Lost and Found," Wilbur Campbell's "Wilbur's Tune," and Sun Ra's "El is a Sound of Joy" - in new arrangements, as well as original pieces composed by Reed and Ward and dedicated to each of their honored guests.
"Priester probably has the largest accomplishments as a sideman, he's on a zillion records," Reed says of the 74-year-old trombonist, who was (along with trumpet and flugelhorn player Hoyle) part of Sun Ra's Chicago-based big bands of the mid-to-late 1950s, and has played with everyone from Duke Ellington to Sunn O))). Back in the day, now 78-year-old tenor saxophonist Sullivan "was maybe the biggest name, recording dates in 1956-57 as a leader, being asked to be in the Jazz Messengers, being asked to do things with Miles and turning it down. He's incredibly important." Hoyle, who is in his mid-70s, took an opposite track. "He was in the Sun Ra band, the Lionel Hampton band, but by the mid-'60s he said, 'I'm go....... więcej