@frogman
Great clip. It has to be tough not having lips.
Great clip. It has to be tough not having lips.
Jazz for aficionados
frogman great Don Byas selections. Don recorded a lot of live material after he moved to Holland. A few of his live releases have a young Niels-Henning Ørsted Pedersen on bass. I have 2 of these live recordings titled "A Night in Tunisia" and "Walkin’" Both were recorded at the Montmartre Jazzhus Copenhagen. January 13 / 14, 1963 Btw in the James Carter interview I posted above Carter describes Byas' sound as "thick". I think "husky", as you described it, and "thick" as JC said, are the best ways to describe the tone of Coleman Hawkins, Ben Webster, Don Byas, and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis. Willis "gator" Jackson and many others could also be put in that category. In the following interview, Sonny Rollins, at the 1 minute mark of the video, describes Ben Webster's and Eddie Davis' tone as "gruff" so, "thick", "husky" and "gruff" are all good descriptions of this classic "tone". A question to you frogman, being that you play the sax: Is this tone achieved by the way a player blows, the model of tenor sax used, or a combination of both?? https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iDF8xC6Ats8&t=304s |
In the above Sonny Rollins interview he mentions a Herschel Evans. Evans played in the Count Basie Band and he also had that "gruff" tone. Evans died very young of heart failure in 1939 but I was able to find the following video in which you can hear him solo. A very good player, IMHO. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XTrvw850N84 And this one with both Herschel Evans and Lester Young: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EQf8p2hRecc Herschel Evans quick bio: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herschel_Evans |