Showing posts with label Baby Dodds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baby Dodds. Show all posts

21 January 2020

Art Hodes Revisited

Art Hodes
A few posts back, I reuploaded a 10-inch Blue Note LP collecting some sides that pianist Art Hodes made with various small groups in the 1940s. At the time I lamented that the LP, called Out of the Back Room, sounded more like "Out of the Bath Room" because of the clumsy reverberation that the engineers applied during the LP mastering.

Frequent commenter Charlot wondered if the original 78s would have better sound, and I speculated that they would. Shortly thereafter, I decided to see if my assumption was true, and acquired 14 Hodes needle drops from Internet Archive, including four of the eight numbers found on the LP.

Max Kaminsky
I found out that the 78s do sound better - much better - and today's post is the proof.

The items I chose generally fall into two camps. The first includes seven blues or quasi-blues riffs with Hodes leading a few small ensembles, all of which included the estimable Max Kaminsky on trumpet. A couple of the records feature trombonist Sandy Williams, once of the Chick Webb band.

Pops Foster, Sidney Bechet, Art Hodes and Albert Nicholas
The second group includes six songs from the standard "Dixieland" repertoire. I selected these because they all feature the wonderful Sidney Bechet on clarinet or soprano sax. Bechet was one of the preeminent jazz musicians of the pre-bop era. Also on these sides are trumpeter Wild Bill Davison and bassist Pops Foster, two more legendary names.

The final song is the only one not issued under Hodes' name, although it was included on the Hodes LP. It is "Feelin' at Ease" from drummer Baby Dodds' Jazz Four. Also on the date along with Hodes were clarinetist Albert Nicolas and bassist Wellman Braud. Beside "Feelin' at Ease," the other songs on both the LP and in the 78 collection are "Blues 'n' Booze," "Low Down Blues" and "Jug Head Boogie."

These sides all emanate from New York and were recorded in 1944 and 1945.

A brief note about Hodes: he was never a virtuoso pianist, but he nonetheless was a leading light among the traditional musicians that the newly ascendant boppers called "moldy figs." (The "moldy" pejorative I get; the fig reference eludes me.) For one thing, for several years in the 40s, he edited a magazine called The Jazz Record that was devoted to traditional jazz music.

Hodes also had a record contract with Blue Note, and for his sessions brought in many of the stars of the traditionalist movement. They included both musicians who came from New Orleans, such as Bechet, Foster, Nicholas and Braud, and those associated with "Chicago-style" jazz, artists from that city such as Jimmy McPartland and Bud Freeman who were inspired by the New Orleans Rhythm Kings of the 20s.

It is sometimes said that the New Orleans style emphasized ensemble, the Chicago style solo playing. Maybe, but the two greatest soloists who played this music were Sidney Bechet and Louis Armstrong, both from New Orleans. Hodes himself was from Chicago, and spent most of his career there, except for several years in the 1940s when New York was home base.

05 July 2009

Baby Dodds - Talking and Drum Solos

The pioneering New Orleans drummer Warren "Baby" Dodds, who made his name with the greats of early jazz in the 1920s, made these unusual recordings in January 1946 for Moe Asch.

Dodds was in the midst of a career renaissance sparked by a resurgence of interest in the New Orleans jazz musicians who were predecessors or contemporaries of Louis Armstrong. The winter of 1945-46 was a busy period for the drummer, who in a few months' span made records not only for Asch but for Circle and Blue Note.

The May 1946 Jazz Record, a magazine for traditional jazz fans, has Dodds on its cover (see below) and ads inside for the Circle and Blue Note releases. The magazine also has an article containing the drummer's reminiscences of his career, which I have included in the download.

The records that Dodds made for Asch were, unusually, drum solos. Four were issued on two 78s on the Disc label in 1946. In 1951 Asch packaged the 78s with some additional material and issued this LP on his Folkways label. The additional material includes a semi-incomprehensible discussion between Dodds and producer Frederic Ramsey that seems to start in the middle and proceed nowhere in particular. A recent book on Folkways quotes Ramsey as saying this was a deliberate attempt to elicit Dodds' insights on playing the drums, but I suspect it was an informal conversation that happened to be taped, and which Asch later retrieved to fill out the LP. By the way, the LP package originally included an insert that unfortunately I do not have. [Note: this is now included in the download, courtesy of Internet Archive.]

There are photos of Dodds and even a video of him on the Drummerworld site. Don't pay too much attention to the discussion about him there, though. It has the date of these recordings wrong, and the anecdote about Dodds joining Kid Ory's band is contradicted by Dodds himself in the Jazz Record article.

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