Wednesday, March 18, 2020

Listening to Prestige 463: The Latin Jazz Quintet

This is an unusual session for Juan Amalbert's Latin Jazz Quintet, in that the personnel hasn't changed from the group's last recording session. And in fact, the tunes from the two sessions mixed and matched over two different albums, and over two different imprints--Prestige and Tru-Sound.

Tru-Sound was a short-lived curiosity in the Prestige stable. I had described it earlier as a budget imprint, but that's not exactly right. Billboard, in chronicling the debut of a new label, describes as a
pop label [that] concentrates on what the company president, Bob Weinstock, calls modern r&b--that is, rhythm and blues with a strong modern jazz feeling.
This is, of course, nothing like the glossy pop which is passed off today as modern r&b, but the nomenclature didn't stick, and the label didn't, either. To some extent it lived up to Weinstock's initial salvo--King Curtis was its principal artist. But it also became the home for the small gospel catalog that Prestige assembled.

It would be a stretch to call the Latin Jazz Quintet modern r&b, but the title of the fruits of this session on New Jazz was Latin Soul, and that's not a bad description.

Latin jazz has always gotten the short end of the stick from the jazz establishment. Every year since I started this project, when I get to the year end review, I rail against the way the Down Beat readers' poll ignores the great Latin musicians--not even giving them votes for dance band, at a time when everyone in the world was doing the mambo and the cha-cha-cha!

So it's to Weinstock's credit that he gave the Latin Jazz Quintet as much of a chance as he did--albums on their own, with his new rising star Eric Dolphy, and later with his soul jazz superstar, Shirley Scott.

It's a more usual session for them in that they typically don't worry too much about how many people there are in a quintet, and I won't go over the personnel of the group here, because I just did that for their last session the past November. The selections are the kind of mix we've seen before: a pop standard, a jazz standard, and a bunch of originals from different members of the group. "Monk's Bread" is by Bill Ellington, "Mambo Bobbie" by Juan Amalbert. "Sunday Go to Meeting" is by Gene Casey, a sometime quintet member not along for this session.

"Milestones" is the Miles Davis tune, and the Latin edge serves it very nicely. "Out of This World" is the standard (Harold Arlen/Johnny Mercer), and it was the tune picked for a two-sided 45 RPM release.

I think I would have picked "Ain't Dat Right." It has a strong riff and that Latin soul feel that made hits out of  tunes like "Watermelon Man" and "Grazing in the Grass."

Hot Sauce was the Tru-Sound release, Latin Soul was New Jazz.

Listening to Prestige Vol 4 is now available! Order the paperback version here, and the Kindle here.




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