Category Archives: Jazz

A Short History of Trombone and Saxophone

So I have this gig coming up with my killin’ bari-sax-playing sweetie, Kathy Olson, which was partially inspired by the legendary Gerry Mulligan/Bob Brookmeyer quartet.  And it got me thinking about the history of great trombone-saxophone pairings throughout jazz.

Let me first say that playing with a saxophone player poses unique aesthetic questions to the trombone player, and it’s something that I’ve had to think a lot about in the past few years.  Think about it this way: imagine you are the trombonist Dickey Wells, in Count Basie’s big band in the 1930’s.  Herschal Evans and Lester Young are dueling every night, re-inventing the jazz vocabulary on the band stand right before your eyes.  When it’s time for the trombone solo after choruses of brilliant saxophonics what can you play that won’t be instantly forgettable?  What can you play that will convince an audience that you have something valuable to add to the conversation?  It’s a musical mindbender that persists to this day – when I’m on a jazz gig, and there is a tenor saxist who shreds right before my solo, I think to myself as I step up to the mic: “whelp, here’s old Dickey Wells standing up to take his little solo”.  Dickey Wells’ victory is that he managed to find his own vocabulary amid all the saxophone posturing, and he was able to play solos that weren’t instantly forgettable.

So there’s the rub.  How can saxophonists and trombonists ever get along?  Well, fortunately there are a couple of examples in the history that lead the way.  The ones that pop out immediately to my mind (one for each voice in the saxophone family):

Curtis Fuller & Benny Golson
Bob Brookmeyer & Gerry Mulligan
Roswell Rudd & Steve Lacy
George Lewis & Anthony Braxton*

Each pair dealt with the issues in their own ways: Curtis Fuller played it cool against Benny Golson’s heat.  Brookmeyer and Mulligan shared vocabulary and a similar sensibility about timbre, and they embraced counterpoint.  Lacy’s clever terseness matched well with Rudd’s humorous generosity.  And Braxton and Lewis were such monsters that they could make anything work.

Anyways, that is what’s been on my mind recently.  It’s a pleasure to work with Kathy on it, and you should check out the gig we are playing at La Luna Cafe in Cambridge, MA on August 21st at 10 PM.  I will, as always, put recordings on this site as soon as they’re available.

 

*And there are also a few pairs in newer music.  Like:

Wolter Weirbos & Frank Gratkowski
Nils Wogram & Hayden Chisholm

Can you come up with any other examples?  I’m having trouble thinking of current long-standing pairs in more conventional genres, but I’m sure that they’re around.

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Filed under Appreciations, Jazz

New Audio – with the Kathy Olson Quartet

cafeluna

Live at La Luna Cafe in Cambridge, MA – June 20th 2009

Tea for Two

Deed I Do

On the D.L.

Smoochin’

Featuring:
Kathy Olson – bari sax
Randy Pingrey – trombone
Keigo Hirakawa – piano
Brad Barrett – bass

All of these songs are transcribed and arranged (and, for On the D.L., composed) by Randy Pingrey, except for Smoochin’, which was composed and arranged by Kathy Olson.  Special thanks goes to Kathy for recording and editing these tracks, and for giving me permission to put them up here.  And also to La Luna for supporting live jazz!

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Duet with Joe Moffett

emerson

Recorded on July 12th, 2009 at a house party concert in Brookline, MA

Enjoy Your Symptom!

 Several Short Pieces/Just A Little Something

Joe Moffett: trumpet, tapes
Randy Pingrey: trombone, tapes

Recorded by Ben Stepner

Enjoy Your Symptom! and the short tunes are improvisations.  Just a Little Something (sheet music, for those who are interested, is here) is a composition that I wrote for the occasion.

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Jazz in our Postmodern Times

Right now it’s 10:30 and the Bill McHenry Quintet is between sets at the Village Vanguard in New York. 

Performing are:
Bill McHenry: tenor sax
Duane Eubanks: trumpet
Andrew D’Angelo: alto sax
Ben Street: bass
Paul Motion: drums

I’m not sure which is more amazing:

1) I’m watching it from Boston, and the audio is excellent.
2) There are records (famous, famous records we all have) with Paul Motion playing there in 1961 with Bill Evans and Scott LaFaro and he’s still playing there!  And he sounds good.  And he has developed his own concept for almost 50 years.
3) Andrew D’Angelo sounds killing.  That guy had cancer – brain cancer – and he’s still with us.

There was also a chat room where you could interact with the radio hosts and other viewers in real time, if that’s your thing.  And no one drink minimum at my house.  And I don’t have to figure out how to get home after the show. Thinking back to when I was back in high school, this sort of technology would have been almost totally unimaginable to me.  It would have all seemed like something out of Star Trek, yet here we are.

Did you miss it?  Bummer!  Fortunately, you can download (or stream or whatever) the audio from NPR’s website.  I’ll post the links in an update tomorrow.  Also, I’d recommend following Live at the Village Vanguard and the NPR jazz blog ( A Blog Supreme).  Next month they’re going to be broadcasting a set by the Fred Hirsch trio.  Hot damn!  There’s also a corresponding Flickr site

And what about the music?  It was fantastic!  I’m a big fan of Roses, Bill McHenry’s latest effort, and the most original moments of the broadcast – the new McHenry tunes – were the next logical step in that language.  Rubato, post-free jazz, which has unique forms and very thoughtful improvisation.  Maybe I’ll write more about this later, when I have more time.

Bill McHenry

Bill McHenry Live at the Village Vanguard

Ok – the 11 o’clock set is starting!  Gotta go!

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