Old November-24th-2004, 11:08 AM   #1
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Clark Terry: Keep On Keepin' On

I can't remember where I snagged this from, so apologies to the author/source, but I thought it such an inspiring piece that I decided to it post anyway.

Clark Terry: Keep On Keepin' On

At a time in life when most musicians would be sitting back and enjoying elder statesman status, there seems to be no stopping trumpet and flugelhorn giant Clark Terry. He helped celebrate the Newport Jazz Festival's 50th anniversary in August, and followed that up last month with a week at the Blue Note in New York with guest vocalist Jon Hendricks. Following that, it was off to Washington, D.C. for the Thelonious Monk Institute's vocal competition. Not bad for someone who turns 84 in December.

On top of that, Terry's already noteworthy recording career continues unabated, most recently with a revisiting of the Gil Evans-Miles Davis collaboration on the Gershwin brothers' Porgy & Bess (A440 Music), done with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra conducted by Jeff Lindberg.

Terry's playing over the Lindberg transcriptions of the Evans charts amounts to a tour de force for the venerable hornman, ironically tackling a piece that was performed by Davis, a onetime protégé, some 45 years ago. As good as the new recording sounds, it was not without its pitfalls, Terry pointed out last month between sets at the Blue Note. For one thing, his wife Gwen and the conductor Jeff Lindberg had to talk him into re-exploring the classic Evans-Davis recording.

”It took my wife a whole lot of convincing, because my eyesight is very, very bad. After cancer, I can't see very much,” Terry said. “ So they brought the music into my house and I looked at it and I said, 'I can't see this.' So she said, 'I will teach you.' She's a good musician. So she spoon-fed me through some of the parts from Miles' and Gil's record. I learned to like it after digging it every day and trying to get with it. So I said, 'OK, I'll give it a crack.'”

Even after that, though, there were problems. While Terry was willing to tackle the work, his eyesight still had other ideas.

”So we went out to Chicago to do the first performance with the Chicago Jazz Orchestra and of course, I couldn't see. I had hired my good buddy [trumpeter] Art Hoyle to go through with me on the reading part of it and so forth,” he recalled. “We walked through the rehearsal and he read the parts because I couldn't see them. We got a couple of things done that were a little bit visible for me. When we got through it, I wanted him to play a duo with me, so that's on it. 'Gone'.”

The Chicago recording session produced just three takes with Terry and the orchestra when Lindberg devised an alternate plan, he said.

”Jeff Lindberg said, 'I have an idea...' He had it [the music] put on huge placards, but like two feet wide, two feet, three feet high. The quarter notes were bigger than my fists. I had a better opportunity to see it. We did about two or three dates here in New York with the cans on and went through that way and it turned out beautiful,” Terry said.

”It turned out Jeff was happy and I was pretty well satisfied with it. I was proud that I had managed to do something with this historical thing, Porgy and Bess, and the record is a tribute to my little buddy Miles,” he added.

Was it daunting to tackle a work that already had obtained the status of jazz classic?

”It has nothing to do with it,” Terry said. “It feels good. The idea is that the music is here to stay. It's great compositions, great music by [George] Gershwin. All the tunes are great compositions by Gershwin. Gil Evans is such a fantastic writer. So the combination of Gershwin's music, Gil Evans' arrangements and Miles Davis' performance made it a classic, a thing that's here forever... It was his [Jeff Lindberg] idea to do the piece again.”

The Terry-Davis relationship goes back years before the classic recording, he pointed out.

”Miles was practically like a student of mine. His teacher, Elwood Buchanan, one of my beer-drinkin' buddies, used to say to me, 'Man, you've go to come over to the school' - he taught over in East St. Louis - 'and hear Dewey Davis.'

”I went over to see this little dude that was about as big as this cane. If he'd had turned sideways, they'd have marked him absent,” he said.

Terry said Buchanan had one complaint about young Davis. “He said: 'The only thing I hate about him - we all like Harry James, and he loves Harry James - he tries to play everything with Harry James vibrato.'”

”Buch' had a big ruler... and every time he shakes a note, he'd hit him on the knuckles with it and say: 'Stop shakin' that note. You're going to shake enough when you get old,'” Terry said.

Filling out Terry's already busy schedule is his work as a clinician, teaching youngsters around the country. An upcoming Chiaroscuro CD will feature a youth big band featuring past and present students.

Terry said he enjoys teaching youngsters because “they're very sincere about doing what they want to do,” something that wasn't always true.

Once, he said, “the majority of them used to couldn't care less about what happened in the past, but now we've gotten them to realize that they don't know what happened in the past and they need to know. It's like putting up a building: in order to go up high, you have to dig deep. The more they learn about what's going on in the profession, then the better it is.”

Lost in all of his activities is the fact that Terry has one of the longest working regular small groups in jazz, the newest member being with the quintet some nine years, the longest-serving about 40 years.

”We've got one person, [pianist] Don Friedman; we've been together for 40 years off and on. [Bassist] Marcus [McLaurine] and I have been together 27 years. The drummer [Sylvia Cuenca] came in about... 15 years ago and sat in with us one night at the Village Vanguard. She's been there ever since. The new guy in the band, [saxophonist] David Glasser, he's only been with the band [about] ten years.”

The band may not be constantly touring, but its members always seem to be available for Terry.

”When you treat people like human beings, as you yourself would like to be treated, you command a lot of respect that way. They give preference. The priorities are there, whenever there's a choice, even if it's a matter of a little less money, they prefer to go with your group,” he said. “They're very compatible. We love each other and we love to play together.”

Working with Terry “is an amazing experience,” said Cuenca. “I feel really honored to be sharing the bandstand with a master like Clark. I'm very lucky to get that experience. He's an innovator and master of the music.

”He's so consistent every night. Seeing a master like him always on a certain level. He's great to be around. It's inspiring,” she said. “Playing with Clark all these years, I've got to meet a lot of great musicians that have been around for years and it's really a valuable experience.

I just feel happy for the opportunity. Very happy. I've learned a lot. I'm still learning,” she added.

”My first gig was actually here at the Blue Note back in 1981,” McLaurine recalled. “He kept calling me back, so I figured I certainly had a shot in the band. So here I sit, 23 years later. There was no audition at all. The audition was like the first night that I played. I was very nervous. I was very green.

”He was very patient and was very in terms of helping me, in terms of developing my sound and my feeling. That's one thing that's good about Clark. He's very helpful with young players. If he sees sincerity in your playing and your attitude, then he's very open in terms of trying to help you develop. That's one of his real gifts,” McLaurine said.

”It's a spontaneous music. Clark sets the thing up and we can play what we feel like playing,” said Friedman, who estimated he has been playing with Terry in various settings from small group to big band about 40 years. “The music always swings and Clark's a great player. It really feels like you're playing with one of the greatest players in jazz.

”He's a great leader because he... doesn't tell you how to play or anything like that. He just leads by example. That's the best way to teach or lead or something like that, rather than try to explain something,” Friedman said. “We've never really talked about how to play or what to play. You just do it. You just feel it and you do it. That's jazz.”

With all this work, are there any mornings Terry wakes up tired? ”Almost every morning - evening, actually,” he said with his characteristic laugh.

”You have to be determined that you're going to keep at it and keep doing it 'til you get it right. And it takes a long time to get it right,” he said. “So, I'm still trying to get it right.”

Recent Releases from CT:

• Clark Terry: "Porgy & Bess" (A440 Music, 2004)
• Clark Terry Quintet: "Chilled & Remixed" (Vivicom, 2004)
• Clark Terry & Max Roach - "Friendship" (Eighty Eight's-Columbia, 2003)
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Old November-24th-2004, 11:34 AM   #2
jazzy mary
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The CJO's "Porgy & Bess" CD w/ Clark Terry

Wow, this is really timely!! I just received the Porgy & Bess cd Clark talks about above.

I want to review it soon, but I'm leaving for vacation tomorrow and just haven't had time to do this FABULOUS cd justice. But, now I'm all worked up about it, so here I go...

Let me summarize, my daughter's Liz best friend, Ashley's (she's in Liz's band) Mom (got all that?) asked me what would I recommend to get her brother, Jeff Lindberg's cd out in the jazz world's radar? So, we talked and I told her to have him send me the cd and I'd see about reviewing it. She had told me that her brother was the Artistic Director of the Chicago Jazz Orchestra and that the CD was Gil Evans' arrangments of "Porgy & Bess" w/ Clark Terry. In the spirit of total disclosure I'm telling you all this. My first milli-second reaction was "do we need another Gil Evans Porgy & Bess?" "What if I don't like it??!!" "This is the brother of the mom of my daughter's best friend!! "Yikes!"

Well, Mr. Lindberg sent me the cd and I have NOT TAKEN it off my cd player. I am happy and relieved to say that this CD is truly wonderful!!

Clark Terry is utterly amazing and plays with such sensitivity, range and depth that he brings a whole 'nother tone, sound and feel to the work. There is no feeling AT ALL of comparision to Miles Davis or anything. This is a "Porgy & Bess" that stands high on its own shoulders.

I'm not sure how Jeff Lindberg achieved this but I do know he transcribed the score. The story above is very interesting regarding some of the backstory to this recording. It's the Gil Evans' arrangments yet it sounds utterly new. I also think it was *genius* to think of Clark Terry. Mr. Terry is made for this work. His whole being is emeshed with the feel and the story of the music. That, combined with wonderful chops and a great orchestra behind him, make this album a wonderful, fullfilling listening experience. I have no doubt most of you reading this already have Miles Davis' "Porgy & Bess" in your collection. Get this one too!! It's fantastic having both. Truth to tell, although I love Miles' version, I actually think this one is better. DO NOT think "I already have Miles' version, that's enough." Please believe me when I tell you this--this is a totally fresh, new, "you gotta hear Clark Terry and the CJO doing this work" cd. I truly feel it's a welcome addition to my cd collection and I don't feel that way about every cd I review, as you all know.

The musicians in the CJO who are on this album are all fantastic musicians and play beautifully together. The sound on this album is great. Part of it was recorded in a concert hall at Northwestern Univ. and the rest at Clinton Studios in NYC. I have to give kudos to the sound engineers-the sound is so good--all the musicians can be heard--and I've heard things in this score that I just didn't "get" before. It would be so wonderful to hear this live in a concert hall. I wish Clark and the CJO would come to NYC and play this! THAT would be an EVENT. Paging, Jazz@LC!!

I cannot believe that Mr. Terry is 84 years old!! He plays like an angel on this cd. That man is amazing!!

I understand that you can buy this cd at Amazon and Borders and Christmas is coming up... I can't imagine anyone not loving this cd.

Last edited by jazzy mary; November-24th-2004 at 12:05 PM. Reason: typos
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Old November-24th-2004, 11:50 AM   #3
jazzy mary
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Lois and/ or Mone, is there any way you can cut & paste my review to the "record review" section too? Or, can I do that? Maybe someone (paging BN or Ron) can pm to tell me how to do that? thanks.
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Old November-24th-2004, 04:46 PM   #4
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Wow, JM, what a nice, energetic review! You sold me -- I was gonna wait until after the holidays, but... just ordered my copy (along with the Remixed CD -- although from listening to the samples I'm not sure I can speak as highly of the sound engineering on that one -- sounds a little over processed to me -- wish they had left the first CD entirely acoustic, but oh, well...)

Anyway, Lois, you should forward JM's review to Clark -- bet he'd get a kick out of it -- and maybe put JM on the promo team!
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Old November-27th-2004, 03:33 PM   #5
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I saw Clark a couple months ago and made this photograph. He still plays pretty well!

Mark
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Old November-28th-2004, 12:29 AM   #6
Valerie
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just received an invite to a celebration of the opening of the clark terry archive at william paterson university on wed., dec. 8, from 12:30 to 2pm at the shea center for performing arts.

wish i could be there.

forgive me if this was already posted elsewhere on this board.
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Old December-3rd-2004, 12:08 AM   #7
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Yeah, Valerie, we received the invite, too. Not going to work out for us to get down to NJ, unfortunately.

Marla
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