Charlie Rouse & Paul Quinichette
Charlie Rouse & Paul Quinichette
Charlie Rouse and Paul Quinichette : The chase is on
Charlie Rouse, Paul Rouse (tenor sax), Freddie Green (guitar), Wyton Kelly, Hank Jones (piano), Wendell Marchall (bass), Ed Thigpen (drums)
Bethlehem 6021
Pure Pleasure Records : LP 180 gram
Brand New and Sealed Record
A1 - The Chase Is On
A2 - When The Blues Come On
A3 - This Can't Be Love
A4 - Last Time For Love
B1 - You're Cheating Yourself
B2 - Knittin'
B3 - Tender Trap
B4 - The Things I Love
Recorded on August 29, 1957 in New York City : A1,3,4 & B2-4 with Wynton Kelly, piano.
and September 8, 1957 in New York City : A2 & B1 with Hank Jones, piano and Freddie Green, guitar.
The twin tenor sax tradition yielded grand pairings with the likes of Wardell Gray and Dexter Gordon, Arnett Cobb and Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, Gene Ammons and Sonny Stitt, and Al Cohn and Zoot Sims. This one-shot teaming of Charlie Rouse and Paul Quinichette brought forth a union of two distinctly different mannerisms within the mainstream jazz continuum.
Rouse, who would go on to prolific work with Thelonious Monk and was at this time working with French horn icon Julius Watkins, developed a fluid signature sound that came out of the more strident and chatty style heard here. By this time in 1957, Quinichette, nicknamed the Vice Prez for his similar approach to Lester Young, was well established in the short term with Count Basie. His liquid, full-bodied, soulful tone became an undeniable force, albeit briefly, before he dropped out of the scene shortly after this date to be an electrical engineer.
Working with standards, there's a tendency for them to play the head arrangements in unison, but then one of them on occasion plays an off-the-cuff short phrase that strays from the established melodic path. They also seem to do a hard bop jam, then a ballad, and back to hard swinging. The title track is simply a killer, a perfect fun romp of battling duelists, and one that you'd like to hear in any nightclub setting.
Some slight harmonic inserts set "This Can't Be Love" apart from the original and "The Things I Love" displays the two tenors at their conversational best, while the lone original, "Knittin'," is a fundamental 12-bar swing blues, straight up and simple but with some subtle harmonic nuances.
The rhythm section of pianist Wynton Kelly, bass player Wendell Marshall, and drummer Ed Thigpen do their usual yeoman job. But on two tracks, pianist Hank Jones and rhythm guitarist Freddie Green take over, and the sound of the band changes dramatically to the more sensitive side on a low-down version of "When the Blues Come On" and the good-old basic vintage swinger "You're Cheating Yourself."
"The combination of Rouse and Quinichette was a very satisfactory coupling of two talented and promising post-swing to bop individualists, who played to all of their strengths and differences on this worthy - and now legendary - session." - Michael G. Nastos, AllMusic.
The "golden age" of recordings was from 1955 to 1965, at the beginning of the LP and the stereo era, where pure vacuum tube amplification helped produce recordings demonstrating unparalleled fidelity and warmth, lifelike presence and illumination.
This Pure Pleasure LP was remastered using pure analogue components only, from the original analogue studio tapes through to the cutting head and was pressed with virgin vinyl at Pallas.