Thursday, April 16, 2026

More Vault Treasures:From Yusef Lateef, Ahmad Jamal, Joe Henderson & Mal Waldron

     Nobody runs a jazz club to get rich. Impresarios like Todd Barkan (Keystone Korner in San Francisco), Max Gordon (The Village Vanguard in New York), and Joe Segal (The Jazz Showcase in Chicago) were all fans of the music they presented on their stages. One of the semi-hidden perks of running a club is having the man in the sound booth tape the show. I should know, because I did precisely that when I worked at Keystone Korner in the late Seventies. By now, it’s no surprise at all, and so many Keystone tapes have been spruced up for official release (including an earlier Resonance release by Jaki Byard and Tommy Flanagan) that it’s hard keeping track of them. It turns out that Joe Segal, who opened his Jazz Showcase in 1947 and subsequently moved the location many times over the years, amassed a collection of between 8,000 and 10,000 tapes. As producer Zev Feldman writes “The path to releasing this material has been long and, at times, complicated ... I’m very lucky to have known Joe over the course of many years ... he always knew I was looking for tapes to release. In 2011, I began to work with him to delve into his archives and go over his collection of tapes, and now, 13 years later here we are.” Working closely with Joe Segal’s son Wayne Segal, who continues to operate The Jazz Showcase, Feldman has settled on an initial four releases, available on vinyl for Record Store Day and on CD one week later. Each booklet in these sets comes with an introduction by producer Feldman, reminiscences by Wayne Segal, and Joe Segal’s neighbor, friend and lawyer Stu Katz, plus some comments by Sonny Rollins on Joe Segal, who he describes as “one of a kind.”

    The earliest music in the batch comes from multi-instrumentalist Yusef Lateef on Alight Upon The Lake: Live At The Jazz Showcase. As Lateef biographer Herb Boyd writes in his liner essay, Lateef put his quartet, with Kenny Barron on piano, Bob Cunningham on bass, and “Tootie” Heath on drums, back together in order to bring some income into his life. Boyd says that “Yusef and his crew settled in for a live recording.” It’s finally out, as a 3-LP/3-cd package. Lateef took an unusual approach to a live record date, starting off with the nearly half-hour excursion through pianist Barron’s The Untitled. Only one tune in the lengthy program, Lateef’s I Remember Webster is under 10 minutes. The band is hitting hard from the start of The Untitled, with Lateef on tenor, but it breaks down in the middle for a very long piano solo before erupting into a wild passage as the drums come in, and Barron and then Lateef steer the piece to a close. I’ve always thought of Lateef’s most successful work as hard bop with a personal slant, and so a burner like his original composition Mutually Beneficial is one of the highlights of the music for me. The tempo is ferocious, the rhythm section is giving it all they’ve got with an explosive Lateef on top. Over the course of the concert, Lateef also plays bamboo and transverse flutes, and oboe. A solo on bamboo flute leads off Roy Brooks’ Eboness, which features a well-recorded arco solo by Cunningham. The second half includes a long look at Kenny Barron’s bouncy Inside Atlantis, followed by I Remember Webster, a beautiful and otherwise unrecorded Lateef original ballad dedicated to Ben Webster. The half-hour long Opus 1 & 2, written by Akira Inoue, sustains the mellow mood as Lateef wields his transverse flute after a long introductory passage featuring Cunningham’s bowed bass. The set winds up with a romp through Nat King Cole’s Straighten Up and Fly Right, and then the oft-recorded set closer and the “going home number” Yusef’s Mood, an r’n’b flavored number that has everybody feeling all right. Your guides to contextualize both the music and the man are producer Zev Feldman, who knew Lateef many years ago, Herb Boyd, and saxophonist Bennie Maupin. Maupin describes Lateef as “a great mentor to me.” The most important things he learned from him, he says were “how to be truthful, to speak your mind creatively ...” The booklet also includes a great photo spread of old Joe Segal concert posters, with an engagement by the Yusef Lateef band on each one. Alight Upon The Lake has plenty to offer for fans of this influential figure in improvised music. 

Resonance HCD-2088 ; Yusef Lateef (ts, fl, oboe) Kenny Barron (p) Bob Cunningham (b) Albert “Tootie” Heath (d); Chicago, IL, June 1975; Disc 1 (55:26): The Untitled/ Mutually Exclusive/ Eboness. Disc 2 (55:28): Inside Atlantis/ I Remember Webster/ Opus 1 & 2. Disc 3 (51:21): Golden Goddess/ Straighten Up and Fly Right/ Yusef’s Mood. resonancerecords.org

    The influential pianist Ahmad Jamal is heard At The Jazz Showcase: Live In Chicago in his usual trio format, with John Heard on bass and Frank Gant on drums. Gant spent over a decade playing with Jamal, mostly with Jamil Nasser on bass. Heard was a member of the trio for just a year. Jamal was a frequent performer for Joe Segal over the years. Jamal, of course, grew famous in the Fifties when he recorded At the Pershing: But Not for Me in Chicago in 1958. He could always be sure of a receptive audience when he played there, and the tracks included here prove it. Jamal’s music was changing in the mid-Seventies, but his innate melodicism and firm touch never abandoned him. The repertoire encompasses Johnny Mandel’s Theme From M*A*S*H (also a Bill Evans favorite in this period), Antonio Carlos Jobim’s Wave, and Herbie Hancock’s Dolphin Dance plus a few standards. At 9:28, Jamal’s solo rendition of Duke Ellington’s Prelude to a Kiss, is a very long prelude to what one hopes is a fantastic kiss. His other solo excursion, a calm and deliberate version of A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square, closes the show on a graceful note. Jamal’s frequent tendency on stage to turn the tunes into marathons of twists and turns doesn’t always grab me, and I wish the piano didn’t sound quite so tinny. Eugene Holley, Jr.’s liner notes, John Heard’s memories, and appreciations by pianists Fred Hersch and co-producer Joe Alterman all help to put this concert in perspective. 

Resonance HCD-2085; Ahmad Jamal (p) John Heard (b) Frank Gant (d); Chicago, IL, March 20-21, 1976; Disc 1 (50:08): Ahmad’s Song/ Wave/ Have You Met Miss Jones?/ Theme From M*A*S*H. Disc 2 (52:26): Dolphin Dance/ Prelude to a Kiss/ A Time For Love/ Swahililand/ A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square. resonancerecords.org

     Tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson was between labels at the time of Consonance: Live At The Jazz Showcase. No longer a Milestone artist, he would record his sole Contemporary release in 1979. He was probably touring at the time of this show with pianist Joanne Brackeen (her name is on the poster for this gig), adding a new rhythm section in each town. Bassist Steve Rodby and drummer Danny Spencer were called upon in Chicago, and as Rodby told producer Zev Feldman, Henderson “made you sound good just by playing with him.” Rodby was the house bassist at the Jazz Showcase for a spell, and backed many of the headliners. Another interviewee, Danny Spencer, notes that he knew Joe Henderson through his brother Leon, when Spencer and Leon Henderson were both members of the Contemporary Jazz Quintet. Playing with Joe, Spencer feels, was like having a conversation in music on stage. Joanne Brackeen, was Henderson’s pianist of choice from 1972-1975, and obviously performed in his groups after that. She told Feldman these performances “reflect a way we often played, but which was never captured on recordings.” The elements are all in place for an inspired (and long) evening from the quartet. And so it proves to be. They come on strong with an almost impossibly fast and extended version of Coltrane’s Mr. P.C., with solo space for all. The quartet proceeds to tackle a trio of Henderson’s best-known compositions (Inner Urge, Recorda Me, and Isotope), Bird’s Relaxin’ at Camarillo, Monk’s 'Round Midnight, and a few of his favorite standards. Among the high points are Henderson’s unaccompanied opening to the Monk tune, the joyous finger-snapping approach the quartet brings to Softly, As In a Morning Sunrise, and the evolved hard-edged bebop of Relaxin’ at Camarillo. Co-producer John Koenig contributes a set of informative liner notes and there’s an array of photographs of the musicians as well. Henderson was always regarded as a top tenorman by other musicians, but he didn’t really achieve more visibility and recognition until his The State Of The Tenor albums for Blue Note in 1985. He was always a star to those in the know, and this collection of live performances is further proof. Recommended. 

Resonance HCD-2084; Joe Henderson (ts) Joanne Brackeen (p) Steve Rodby (b) Danny Spencer (d); Chicago, IL, February 1978; Disc 1 (80:00): Mr. P.C./ Inner Urge/ Invitation/ Relaxin’ at Camarillo. Disc 2 (79:31): Recorda Me/ ‘Round Midnight/ Good Morning Heartache/ Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise/ Isotope. resonancerecords.org

   Pianist Mal Waldron had a fascinating career. He was first heard on record as a house pianist for the Prestige label in the late Fifties. He was the regular accompanist for Billie Holiday from April 1957 until her untimely death in July 1959. In 1963, he suffered a breakdown from a heroin overdose which left him unable to play or remember any music. But the human brain is remarkable, and through hard work and perseverance, he relearned the piano and returned to the scene. He made a few records in Europe in the late Sixties, with a more obsessive and forceful style than he’d exhibited in the Prestige years. His philosophy was expressed in his ECM album Free At Last, the initial release of the iconic label. By the time of Stardust & Starlight At The Jazz Showcase, Waldron was splitting his time between Europe and the United States. A glance at his recordings in this period reveals that his repertoire on the two continents was equally divided. In February 1979, he recorded Mingus Lives, a solo piano concert in Belgium of original compositions. That April, he appeared at Jazzbuhne Berlin 1979 with European modernists like Manfred Schoof and Gerd Dudek, again playing his own tunes. By contrast, while back in the United States, he was playing standards plus a couple of older originals. On a piece like his much admired Fire Waltz, originally recorded in 1961, the link between his early playing and the freer, more hypnotic style he developed in the second half of his career becomes clear. Waldron was touring as a single, and Joe Segal hired Steve Rodby on bass and the well-established Wilber Campbell on drums. They get to relax for a long stretch of solo piano as Waldron explores the standards I Thought About You and It Could Happen to You, and Monk’s classic ‘Round Midnight. At times during Waldron’s week in Chicago, Sonny Stitt would step up for a couple of numbers, and after a swinging rendition of Stella By Starlight by the trio, Stitt takes over on the final two performances. Old Folks dates back to 1938; and Hoagy Carmichael’s Stardust is older still, composed in 1927. Waldron hadn’t recorded either one in decades, and he supports Stitt’s florid soloing with a minimal touch. Stardust & Starlight presents an almost mainstream side to Waldron’s playing, in contrast to the many European albums of the period, and to an avowed Waldron fan, this music is a true revelation. Liner notes are by the esteemed Howard Mandel, who must have witnessed dozens and dozens of shows at the Jazz Showcase, There’s also an appreciation of Waldron’s sound by pianist Lafayette Gilchrist, plus memories of the week with Waldron by bassist Rodby. Definitely recommended. 

Resonance HCD-2087; Mal Waldron (p) Steve Rodby (b) Wilber Campbell (d) Sonny Stitt (as); Chicago, IL, August 1979; All Alone/ All God’s Chillun Got Rhythm/ Fire Waltz/ I Thought About You/ It Could Happen to You/ ‘Round Midnight/ Stella By Starlight/ Old Folks*/ Stardust*; 67:37. resonancerecords.org
 

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