Blue Note. A Story of Modern Jazz (BBC)
- Year:
- 1997
- 154 Views
1
Well, you know, I was a young boy
and I used to go skating and...
roller-skating in a place called
the Admiralspalast, I think it was,
and, one day, I went there
with my skates
and they told me there was no skating
today.
They had a dance there
and I saw a poster on the wall
and it said Sam Wooding
and his Chocolate Dandies
and I didn't know anything about it
but it looked strange to me,
different, you know?
TRAIN RUMBLES:
MUSIC:
Sam Woodingand his Chocolate Dandies
And I went in, checked out my skates
and sat down
and there was Sam Wooding.
It was the first time I saw
coloured musicians, you know,
and all the music
and I was flabbergasted.
I couldn't, you know...
It was something brand-new,
but it registered with me
right away, you know?
I couldn't really put my fingers
on it, but it was the beat.
You know, it was the beat.
That beat, you know,
I got it in my bones!
For those of you who come in late,
we are now having a little
cooking session for Blue Note
right here on the scene.
Putting the pot on in here
and we'd like for you to join in
with us and have a ball.
APPLAUSE:
This is the story of Alfred Lion
and Francis Wolff,
two German immigrants who founded
a jazz record company in 1939
that became very famous
in its genre.
Unlike any other jazz label,
Blue Note Records influenced
the revolution of music and sound,
style and technical standards.
Each of the Blue Note
recording sessions
was documented by the photographs
of Francis Wolff.
Alfred Lion's vision of music
and Francis Wolff's clear view
of the recording sessions
are a legacy of the unique
creative achievement
that continues to this very day.
Hello, there. This is
Freddie Hubbard,
trumpet man.
Blue Note.
Alfred Lion and Frank Wolff.
My men.
He realised that he was a catalyst,
a walking, living human catalyst.
You get him hearing artists like
Thelonious Monk or Bud Powell
and he instinctively knew
that they had it down deep
and he could draw that ability out
of them and get it on a record
and he did it by not talking about
record sales and commercialism
and who the big names on the date,
he never got into that.
He was interested in you
and your thoughts
and getting you to have an
unrestricted flow of your ideas
in his recordings.
Not many people have that and he
never made a mistake.
Out of over 1,000 records
that Alfred produced
in the years that he had Blue Note,
easily 900-950 of them are classics.
MUSIC:
Cantaloupe Islandby Herbie Hancock
'Ladies and gentlemen...'
I'm Herbie Hancock
and I'm a musician.
Oh, boy.
A jazz musician.
When I was a child and I first came
to San Francisco,
Lee Morgan, Sidewinder, and
Horace Silver, Song for My Father...
We call it Song for my father.
And, so, the music was like a diary
of what was going on.
My name is Horace Silver
and I've recorded for the Blue Note
record label for about 28 years
for Alfred Lions and Frank Wolff.
And on and on, you know,
Wayne Shorter and Herbie Hancock
and all the people who recorded
in Blue Note.
They would play on the radio along
with Willie Nelson or Chuck Berry.
Empyrean Isles, Herbie Hancock.
The Un Poco Loco.
Lee-Way, Lee Morgan.
Oh, Un Poco Loco. Bum-bum-ba!
Inventions & Dimensions.
..Sonny Rollins to you.
One Step Beyond, Jackie McLean.
..et Johnny Griffin aussi.
I am authentic.
John Arnold Griffin III.
Otherwise known as Volcano,
Vesuvius
or the Little Giant.
You know what they recognised?
They could recognise when something
was grooving and when it wasn't.
The band must shring.
They couldn't dance.
They both had two left feet.
We must have shring-ing.
If something was grooving, you know,
Frank would go like...
He would start doing
his little two-step thing.
You know, and if he wasn't doing
his dance, it wasn't grooving.
Yeah, I knew it from the beginning.
When I first saw Alfred,
I was a disc-jockey on WLV
in New York
and I walked into this place
where I worked
and he was sitting there eating
a hot sausage sandwich
and I said, "There's my life,"
and he wouldn't look at me, hardly,
for 11 years.
11 years. That was what he was doing,
was that Blue Note
and it hurt, because I knew,
you know,
but I spoke with a lot of musicians
about it.
Women will not be, ever,
as important as the music
and, if a woman thinks she can,
she's kidding herself
because a guy who really
loves the music,
that's where he's going to be.
MUSIC:
Cantaloupe IslandAPPLAUSE:
When Hitler arrived on the scene,
Alfred disappeared
because he was smart
and he knew
there was trouble, abroad,
and so he left.
He came to this country,
barely spoke English,
he was alone and he was
self-sufficient
and he struggled,
but he was terrific.
He brought Frank over later,
after he had arrived here.
MUSIC:
La Meshaby Joe Henderson
The negro
with the trumpet at his lips
has a head of vibrant hair,
tamed down, down,
patent-leathered now,
until it gleams like jet,
were jet a crown.
The music from the trumpet
at his lips
is honey mixed with liquid fire.
The rhythm through the trumpet
at his lips
is ecstasy
distilled from old desire.
Desire that is longing for the moon
where the moonlight's but
a spotlight in his eyes,
desire that is longing for the sea
where the sea's a bar-glass
sucker size.
The negro with the trumpet
at his lips
whose jacket has a fine
one-button roll
does not know upon what riff
the music slips
its hypodermic needle to his soul,
but, softly, as the tune
comes from his throat,
trouble mellows in a golden note.
# Dee-bee di-bi
Bi-dee-dee-doo-dee.
Yes.
Baby, huh, what can happen?
I think Alfred started right when
he recorded Ammons and Lewis.
He was just sort of like going
with the trends
and he happened to discover two
really quintessential musicians
in the process and that led him into
a thing of capturing musicians
whose prime had been passed
but yet were still vibrant
and moving forward.
Bechet, George Lewis,
The Port of Harlem Jazzmen,
were sort of his first groups
that represented a kind of
modernist approach,
and the Meade Lux Lewis
Celeste Quartet.
It wasn't until he really, you know,
was able to develop a following
with the label that he could take
This is the original recording,
original pressing,
Sidney Bechet, Summertime,
from 1940.
This was their first hit.
This is what created the cash flow
that allowed Blue Note to continue.
It was like blood, like water,
like air, you know? I mean...
'We'd like to do a brand-new thing
for you, at this time,
'from our most recent
Blue Note album.'
That's got it.
There was a whole thing...
That whole thing,
that funky piano thing
that went down there for a minute,
you know?
Freddie Hubbard. Clifford Brown.
Oh, Un Poco Loco. Bum-bum-ba!
I don't know that Alfred was an
everyday, garden-variety German.
Unadulterated. Undiluted. Pure.
The real deal is all Alfred Lion and
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