Sonny Simmons: Manhattan Egos-1969 Arhoolie First Pressing Stereo 12" Record

Sold Date: August 5, 2020
Start Date: August 5, 2020
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1969 Arhoolie "25 Cents for a Catalog" on Back Cover Stereo Release of Bandleader/Composer/Alto Saxophonist Sonny Simmons Entitled Manhattan Egos, Produced by Sonny Simmons & Chris Stratchwitz, Album Recorded at Sierra Sound Studios in Berkeley, California on February 10 in 1969, All Compositions Written by Sonny Simmons - "Altoist  made a strong impression in the 1960s as one of the most promising avant-garde players. He grew up in Oakland, California, started playing English horn, and then at 16 took up the alto. Stints with  and  and some time spent playing bebop preceded  finding his own sound in free jazz. In 1961, he spent some time with  and then, in 1962, he formed a group with flutist . After they recorded ,  moved to New York, recorded with  and , and then in 1965 he returned to the Bay Area.  met and married the powerful trumpeter , recorded for ESP, and the duo performed and recorded in several settings. However, by the mid-'70s  largely dropped out of music, the marriage broke up, and the altoist was forgotten for nearly 20 years. In 1994,  (who had apparently played on the streets and been scuffling) suddenly re-emerged in peak form and as adventurous as ever, recording a brilliant trio album () for Qwest/Warner Bros. that earned him long overdue recognition and launched the beginning of his second career.  then recorded additional sets for Qwest and CIMP, including  (1996),  (1997), and  (1999). In the 2000s,  continued his latter-career resurgence with several well-received albums including  (2004),  (2005),  (2006), and  (2007). In 2014, he paired with the French psychedelic outfit  for the album . The archival 1991 live album , featuring  performing with trumpeter  (who passed away in 2013), appeared on Arhoolie in 2015." - "Chris Strachwitz, the founder and producer of Arhoolie Records is well known for issuing blues, Cajun, Tex-Mex, Tejano, zydeco, Mexican folk, country, folk, and world musics of every kind. His musical appetite is restless and his vision relentless. He is not, however, a known fan of out jazz. These two dates featuring the great, underappreciated sax of  are evidence to the contrary.  features two sessions from February 1969 and a live date from October of 1970. The studio session was the original LP issue, and the live date, as raw as it is, is additional, previously unreleased material. The music on ' two sets is deeply indebted to  and , but then almost everyone breaking new ground in jazz at the time -- with the exception of , , and  -- owed it too. The  band on the first five tracks is comprised of totally unknown musicians, with the possible exception of , who played in the California free scene awhile before hooking up with , eventually marrying him and bearing him two children. The rest, Juma, , and "Voodoo Bember," who makes a conga appearance, were not players who had gigged with anyone before . It doesn't matter though, because  and Donald -- whose style is equal parts Don Ayler, , and  -- create a such a dominant frontline there is little else for the rhythm section to do but find a way to create rhythm and harmony from the interplay of the horns. On the title track, while Juma bows his bass aleatorically to create a harmonic wall of mode and timbre, Donald and  trade lines almost instinctually, overlapping each other with ribbons of such mellifluous intensity it is actually possible to hear them singing to one another through the horns. The harmonic bridge created by Juma is an elastic one;  is able to stretch both modes and intervals on a scalar level while engaging in a kind of chromatic exchange of pitches with Donald. Smith is keeping up, but barely, trying to continually double and triple time the band to make up for what he doesn't know, but the cracks show, making the date seem that much more organic. Listen to his interval crossovers in "Coltrane in Paradise," amid the long, slowly drawn out morphing of the improvisation as it changes meter three times in less than a minute, and you'll hear the evidence. The live session from late '70 is a different matter altogether because the band is stellar. Michael White, with his encyclopedic knowledge of counterpoint is a perfect foil for , who is primarily as player concerned with the development of thematic material based on harmonic exchange. On "Beings of Light," the frontline resembles something from the / band in the first six measures. When ' alto moves into the solo, Kenny Jenkins' bass and Eddie Marshall's drumming follow him right to the overtonal edge and push him over. ' playing here is less lyrical but far more confident and fiery. He reaches deep into the middle and lower registers of the horn for arpeggios that are slurred, bent, and angular rather than gliding or scalar. He sounds like a leader because he has a band that can take any of his ideas and extend them seemingly infinitely. When White solos, we can hear the entire history of the 20th century in his playing, from old-timey fiddle tunes to serialism and bebop. He constructs a contrapuntal system that moves against itself with drones and pitch shifting fluidity. When the two lay against each other, the dialogue is rooted to nothing but rhythm, there are no boundaries holding either to the melody, though it comes through anyway. By the time they reach the end of the set with "The Beauty of Ibis," it is as if a band had been formed, rehearsed and solidified in the course of the concert. If this is a finale there are no more beginnings. Things kick off with ' solo moving ever outward from there. Each member of this quartet has the ability to take his desires to the limits of jazz expression with the confidence that everyone else covers his back. ' solo is guttural, singing and centered on the overtonal possibilities inherent in atonal improvisation as it relates to mode and interval. White and Marshall play counterpoint to one another, slipping through the same patches at twice the time and trading eights on the dime. Jenkins refuses to anchor anything, he pushes the envelope far past the role of the bassist and into orbit forming a launching pad for everyone else's ideas and his own solo is as furious as fire on old wood. The piece ends with a lilting melodic modal exploration of D minor, and whispers to a close confusing everyone in the audience. No matter. They were present to history in the making. Thank God  had his tape recorder on." - Sensational Personnel for the Quartet Features Living Legend Sonny Simmons on Alto Saxophone and English horn, the Amazing Barbara Donald on Trumpet, Juma on Bass & Conga Drums and Paul Smith on Drums! - Additional Musician is Voodoo Bembe with Conga Drums on "Seven Dances of Salome" - Selections on Side A Are Coltrane in Paradise at 11 Minutes 46 Seconds & the Prober - Tracks for Side B Consist of Manhattan Egos at 8 Minutes 22 Seconds, Seven Dances of Salome and Visions - Used Copy, Front Cover Has Right Side Slightly Peeling at Opening, Back Cover Is Slightly Faded with Slight Peeling at Top Left Corner, Side A Has some Surface Wear & a Couple of very Light Scuffs, Side B Has some Light Surface Wear - Stereo Recording, Product Code 8003 - California Residents Add 9.75% Sales Tax - International S & H Extra -