Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Walter Norris: Never Should It End


Many years ago, my local Barnes and Noble got in a raft of remaindered Concord Records CDs (back then, Concord was a first-rate indie jazz label, not today’s corporate conglomerate).  I scooped up a bunch based on the Concord brand and artist name recognitionand then let them submerge into the Great Unplayed Pile. I was rooting around in that ever-growing mass recently and ran across Sunburst, a date led by Walter Norris. In my recollection, Norris was an esteemed pianist of a rather austere bent, considered willing to move out of the mainstream in his playing. The album featured Joe Henderson on tenora good sign, and I hadn’t remembered that. Time to look into Norris a bit more.

He had an interesting career. Originally from Arkansas, he eventually moved to the West Coast and played on Something Else!, Ornette Coleman’s first album, so “willing to move out of the mainstream” was right, at least for 1958. He then spent several years in New York as musical director of the Playboy Club. In 1974, he joined the Thad Jones-Mel Lewis big band. According to his Wikipedia entry, he had a brief and frightening experience with Charles Mingus in 1976 and then moved to Germany, where he taught and gigged until his death in 2011. (Note: I saw Mingus and his Jazz Workshop on several occasions and can attest that he was indeed a formidable presence. The trumpeter Clarence [Gene] Shaw had an experience similar to Norris’s, as I recall.) In the 1990s, Norris signed with Concord, one of the products of which was Sunburst.

Now to the music. It’s really excellent. Most of the tunes are standards of one sort or another (Stella By Starlight, What’s New, Naima) or Norris originals (the title track, Never Should It End, Rose Petals). Especially in their introductions, Norris and Henderson both like to take the Lee Konitz approach of not going straight into the melody line, which freshens up the standards.  The high point of the album for me is Naima, a gorgeous, soaring rendition that evokes the spirit of Trane without imitation. Bird is an off-kilter tribute to another jazz genius, with fresh ideas aplenty. (Note to readers: the composition is listed as by Charlie Parker but I can’t decide whether it’s one composition or a compilation of Bird phrases. It’s not on YouTube, but can any ornithologist who owns or can find Sunburst clue me in?) Larry Grenadier supplies solid backing and some fine solos on bass, and Mike Hyman keeps things going nicely on drums.

All in all, Sunburst is a fine recording that pays back even more with repeated listening. I could find only a couple of tracks on YouTube, but I’d really advise hunting down the whole thing, or any other Walter Norris recoding you run across.

Here's Sunburst:

















And What's New.



4 comments:

  1. Cool.

    I should Go Look...did Concord go to hell after acquiring Fantasy?

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    1. They hold a ton of music but seem to ignore it and don't license it out. A shame, really.

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  2. Mingus's bad behavior was really unfortunate, but for whatever reason it seems to have been correctly seen as indicative of his continuing emotional problems, and not something to be celebrated, as opposed to the mindless idolatry of Miles Davis for almost everything about him, particularly the superficial aspects as his clothing choices, and some sort of bad-boy chic for his more criminal behavior. Whenever I note that Davis was probably the worst person as a person ever to have a major career in jazz, I think of Mingus and a few others as sometimes coming close, but almost no one I'm aware of was as thoroughly Enabled as Davis by the clowns around him.

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  3. Miles wore a number of masks, whereas Mingus was, as Monk put it when defining the word "genius," the man who is most like himself." They were both great musicians, but I listen to Mingus a lot more. He didn't call one of his compositions "Passions of a Man" for nothing, and if this music isn't about passion, it's not about anything.

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