Any love for Art Farmer?
Posted: September 1st, 2015, 12:43 pm
I've been listening to the Complete Live Recordings of the Art Farmer & Jim Hall Quartet, recorded in New York and London in Dec. 1963 and June 1964 respectively. Steve Swallow on the stand-up bass and Walter Perkins (NY) or Pete LaRoca (London) on drums.
What a great group. Farmer's Jazztet with Benny Golson had disbanded after several years. Swallow and Hall had both been members of Jimmy Giuffre's chamber-jazz groups by then; a year earlier Hall had been with Sonny Rollins' quartet. Starting with this group, the mid-60's were a period of open, lyrical, small-group interaction for Farmer that doesn't get enough recognition. Prior to these live recordings this quartet, with Perkins, recorded "Interaction" in the summer of 1963, and in between the New York and London live dates recorded "To Sweden with Love." Later in 1964 Farmer returned to a more straight-ahead sound with "The Many Faces of Art Farmer," a quintet with Charles McPherson. In March 1965, the quartet with Paul Bley replacing Hall recorded the beautiful "Sing Me Softly of the Blues," with the title tune composed by Carla Bley.
Throughout that period, Miles was reaching heights of sophistication, Freddie Hubbard was blowing the house down with Art Blakey, and Don Cherry was a pillar of the avant-garde. Farmer was conservative by comparison, and his calm classicism didn't excite as much as the fire of hard bop or the thrill of experiment. But what a consummate player he was, and what a rewarding vein he mined during those few years.
Farmer was an exceptionally consistent artist. His early work as a kind of moderate hard-bopper with Gigi Gryce or Golson was never less than very solid and enjoyable, and later he would go on to make fine records with Cedar Walton's trio, quintets with Clifford Jordan, and many more. What are your recommendations?
What a great group. Farmer's Jazztet with Benny Golson had disbanded after several years. Swallow and Hall had both been members of Jimmy Giuffre's chamber-jazz groups by then; a year earlier Hall had been with Sonny Rollins' quartet. Starting with this group, the mid-60's were a period of open, lyrical, small-group interaction for Farmer that doesn't get enough recognition. Prior to these live recordings this quartet, with Perkins, recorded "Interaction" in the summer of 1963, and in between the New York and London live dates recorded "To Sweden with Love." Later in 1964 Farmer returned to a more straight-ahead sound with "The Many Faces of Art Farmer," a quintet with Charles McPherson. In March 1965, the quartet with Paul Bley replacing Hall recorded the beautiful "Sing Me Softly of the Blues," with the title tune composed by Carla Bley.
Throughout that period, Miles was reaching heights of sophistication, Freddie Hubbard was blowing the house down with Art Blakey, and Don Cherry was a pillar of the avant-garde. Farmer was conservative by comparison, and his calm classicism didn't excite as much as the fire of hard bop or the thrill of experiment. But what a consummate player he was, and what a rewarding vein he mined during those few years.
Farmer was an exceptionally consistent artist. His early work as a kind of moderate hard-bopper with Gigi Gryce or Golson was never less than very solid and enjoyable, and later he would go on to make fine records with Cedar Walton's trio, quintets with Clifford Jordan, and many more. What are your recommendations?