Friday, April 01, 2022

Listening to Prestige 623: Shirley Scott and Stanley Turrentine


LISTEN TO ONE: The Funky Fox

 By this time Shirley Scott and Stanley Turrentine are as blissfully united musically as we hope they are in their marriage life, though their marriage was destined not to last beyond 1971. But hey, you never know with marriages, and the music they recorded together remains an enduring testament to the best days of their relationship.

But just because they're perfectly attuned to each other, that doesn't mean they're slipping into too-familiar grooves. They're playing soul jazz to appeal to anyone with a pulse, but the way they play off each other gives each of them the opportunity for creativity and new discoveries. Scott, in particular, is always going to find new ways of approaching, and taking off from, a solid swinging musical idea.



Bob Cranshaw makes his Prestige debut here. He's best known for his five-decade association with Sonny Rollins, beginning in 1959, but he was always in demand for other sessions, including a number for Prestige throughout the decade with a variety of artists. One of his first recording gigs had been with Scott on a 1959 album for Impulse!, and although this is only Prestige session with her, he played with her on other albums for Impulse! and Atlantic.

"Flamingo" was first recorded by Duke Ellington in 1941, and taken to the top of the rhythm and blues charts in 1951. It became a crowd pleaser for club dates, and in fact was part of the Willis Jackson night that Prestige recorded live. "A Night at the Five Spot," a tribute to the great New York jazz club, was written by Benny Golson and recorded by Curtis Fuller and Art Farmer separately, and then by Golson, Farmer and Fuller together as the Jazztet in 1961. Scott and Turrentine made the next recording of it three years later, and after that it entered into the jazz standard repertoire. Bob Cranshaw may have brought along Sonny Rollins's "Grand Street."

The other tunes are by Scott, and they do an excellent job of showcasing the great organist and her talented husband. I particularly liked "The Funky Fox" -- perhaps a self-reference?

The album was released by Prestige as Blue Flames. Ozzie Cadena produced.



2 comments:

Russ said...

Thanx for this, Tad. Turrentine---another saxophonist w/ a distinctive sound. Van Gelder was probably THE most in demand engineer during this era. Question: Was he already recording in Englewood, not Hackensack, back in '54? His nephew, Gregg, who runs a music store in Monroe, N.Y. might know the answer.

The Magnificent Goldberg said...

Er... Duke Ellington had no hit singles in 1951 - either on the pop or R&B charts. "Flamingo" got to #11 on the pop charts in 1941. There was no R&B chart in 1941.

MG