Eddie Davis with Paul Gonsalves - Love Calls

 (Limited Edition)


Label:

Pure Pleasure Records

Genre:

Jazz

Product No.:
APPR 3882
EAN: 5060149621851
Availability:
Limited Stock
Category:

180 Gram Vinyl Record



180 Gram LP
(Not Eligible for Additional Discount)

$41.98

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Remastering by Ray Staff at Air Mastering, Lyndhurst Hall, London

Think of "Lockjaw" Davis and odds are 10-to-1 you think of Count Basie. Think of Paul Gonsalves and — same thing, you think of Duke Ellington. The top tenors, in other words, of the top big bands; musicians from the top league where the competition is toughest. Yet there is no battle here, no contest, no vying to outdo the other in terms of velocity.

If you know these two men only by hearsay, you may have reservations about them as balladeers. They both have reputations for derring-do of a different kind. Davis has never hesitated to do battle with the most frenetic performers, with those who would stop at nothing to win, and lost — to him. And Gonsalves was the hero of one of the great nights in jazz history, when he blew 27 romping, stomping choruses on Duke Ellington's Dimuendo and Crescendo In Blue at Newport 1956.

It is easy for jazzmen to become typed, so that the public demands the repeated display of just one particular facet of his talent. This has happened to the two men showcased in this album, where the other side of their musical personalities is brought into focus. Although they have both developed highly individual styles, their original sources of inspiration were masters of the ballad — Ben Webster in Davis' case, Coleman Hawkins in that of Gonsalves.

Their different approaches to the ballad make this recording consistently interesting and surprising. Both are soulful, both are rhapsodical. But Davis plays with clear, confident articulation, a buzz in his tone, and a bite in his phraseology. Generally he is the more driving and passionate of the two. The Gonsalves style is, on the other hand, sinuous, insinuating and less direct. His imaginative lyricism is more tender and often melancholy, his tone well-produced and finely rounded.

The breathy sub-tone, which Gonsalves uses so well, adds a curiously confidential and intimate dimension. It is like the musical equivalent of a whispered aside or a delicate suggestion. But both men alternate very adroitly between the discreet and the bold. Their mutual understanding is, in fact, positively uncanny at times, for they had never previously recorded together, and preparation before the sessions was minimal. In the studio their long term professionalism stood them in good stead, as did that of their accompanists, whose taste and sensitivity contribute so much to the recording's appeal. Never obtrusive, they remain in close, listening support, Hanna and Barksdale being quick to prolong or emphasize the thoughts of the two soloists.



Side 1
Love Is Here To Stay
When Sunny Gets Blue
If I Ruled The World
Time After Time
Just Friends
Don't Blame Me

Side 2
I Should Care
The Man With The Horn
We'll Be Together Again
A Weaver Of Dreams
If I Should Lose You

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