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DUANE TATRO: DUANE TATROS JAZZ FOR MODERNS (Contemporary/Original
Jazz Classics OJCCD-1878-2) [1956]
So did the music, when I brought the LP home and played it. Here was the absolute quintessence of modern
jazz horns locked in counterpoint, tone-rows, polyphony, the works. Indeed, what I did not then realize was that Tatros
album was the full flowering of the seeds planted by Gil Evans and Stan Kenton in the
40s, and by the Miles Davis-led Birth of the Cool arrangers band
of the late 40s. Id never before heard of Duane Tatro, but that was
hardly surprising. His name was virtually
unknown in jazz circles at the time of his albums release and it has hardly
become better-known since then. This album
was Tatros only release. I dont normally quote jacket blurbs, but the one of the
back of the CD release of this album is worth quoting in full: There has been precious little of Duane
Tatros music available in recent years one composition each on Music to
Listen to Red Norvo By (OJC-155) and Art Peppers Smack Up (OJC-176), to
be exact. Yet listeners lucky enough to have
heard the present album have long cited Tatro as one of the most challenging and
imaginative writers of the Fifties. A
precocious talent who played tenor sax with Stan Kenton while still in his teens, Tatro
grew into a visionary composer who effectively blends advanced compositional techniques
with the swing and expressiveness of jazz. He
does it with a striking octet of three brass, three saxophones, bass, and drums; and with
a cast of talented musicians (including such prominent fellow writers as Lennie Niehaus,
Bill Holman, and Jimmy Giuffre) who perfectly understood the weight and colors of Tatros
scores. Tatro became a professional musician (playing clarinet and
sax) at 15, his first job with Mel
Tormes band. At 16 he joined Stan
Kentons band. It was the middle of
World War II and after touring with Kenton Tatro returned to high school. After high school Tatro played with dance bands
and then joined the Navy. After playing with
Navy bands he used his GI Bill to study composition in Paris with Arthur Honegger. Tatro took a day job in a California electronics plant where
he came a production manager, while pursuing a Bachelor of Music degree from USC. In 1953 Contemporary Records commissioned four
pieces from Tatro. These were begun in April
1953, but not finished and recorded until September 1954 (Backlash, Multiplicity,
Turbulence and Folly).
Four additional pieces were then commissioned (Low Clearance,
Outpost, Maybe Next Year and Conversation Piece) and
recorded in April 1955. Finally three slightly
longer compositions (Minor Incident, Dollar Day and Easy
Terms) were recorded in November of that year.
Together, these eleven pieces comprise the album. (No bonus tracks.) Stu Williamson (trumpet), Bob Enevoldsen (valve trombone),
Bill Holman (tenor sax), Ralph Pena (bass) and Shelly Manne (drums) played on all the
sessions. Additionally, Joe Eger played
French horn on the first and third sessions while Vincent de Rosa played French horn on
the second session. Lennie Niehaus played
alto sax on the first two sessions while Joe Maini Jr. held that chair on the third
session. Jimmy Giuffre played baritone sax on
the first and third sessions and Bob Gordon played that instrument on the second
session. If you know anything about 50s West Coast jazz youll
recognize most, if not all of those names; these were all-star sessions Tatro
put together to record his music. And what music! Listening
to this album nearly 50 years later, Im impressed by how well it holds up. (The mono recording is exemplary as was
typical of Contemporarys albums of that era despite the albums short
running time of 34:21.) Tatros own
notes for the album (reprinted along with those of label owner Lester Koenig) are succinct
and to the point: With the exception
of Dollar Day which is 52 bars, all the pieces use the standard 32-bar chorus. He means the popular song form. The departures from conventional writing are
melodic and harmonic. For example, only
Multiplicity has a key signature. The
development of each piece is derived from the material introduced in the first chorus. Individual pieces use a melody set in a
Phrygian mode, a theme built on a 12-tone row, a simple melody
written over a polychordal structure, or intervals of a fourth with interplay
of unison lines and ensemble, to quote a few examples. This was startling music in 1956 (and no less so during the
previous three years of composition and recording), but it is not nearly so startling now
to ears which have grown accustomed to the evolution of polyphony and dissonance in
modern music. What remains remarkable are the
plaintive melodies and airy harmonies reminiscent of 20th century French wind music
(hardly surprising, given Tatros studies with Honegger). What Tatro did was to take not only the Birth of the Cool
advances of the late 40s but Gerry Mulligans subsequent explorations (with
piano-less groups) and he used and built on these to create a fully-formed and mature
music which at once epitomizes West Coast jazz and also goes beyond it into
territory occasionally explored by Teddy
Charles, Jimmy Giuffre and
Bill Russo. It remains much closer to
melodicism and jazz than the music of Robert
Graettinger, but shares Graettingers sophisticated use of modern, 20th century
compositional devices. As such, the album, now available as part of the Limited
Edition Series by Fantasys Original Jazz Classics on CD, is highly
recommended. The CD was released in 1996 and
will not remain in print too much longer. [09-13-01] |
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