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RLP12-377
CANNONBALL ADDERLEY: AFRICAN WALTZ

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The personnel of the Cannonball Addderley Orchestra consists of –

Nat Adderley (tp) Clark Terry (tp) Ernie Royal (tp) Nick Travis (tp) Bob Brookmeyer (tb) Melba Liston (tb) Jimmy Cleveland (tb) Paul Fulise (tb) Cannon all Adderley (as) George Dorsey (as, fl) Jerome Richardson (ts) Oliver Nelson (ts, fl) Arthur Clarke (brs) Don Butterfield (tuba) Wynton Kelly (p) Sam Jones (b) Charlie Persip (drs) or Louis Hayes (drs) Ray Barretto ( cng)

On African Waltz and Kelly Blue

George Matthews (tb) Arnett Sparrow (tb) in place of Brookmeyer and Miss Liston Joe Newman (tp) in place of Travis Michael Olatunji (African drs) in place of Barretto Orchestra conducted by Ernie Wilkins

I’ll Close My Eyes and Stockholm Sweetnin’ arranged by Brookmeyer; all others by Wilkins

(Brookmeyer solos on West Coast Blues, Nelson on Blue Brass Groove, Richardson – on piccolo – on Letter From Home. All other solos are by the Adderley brothers and Wynton Kelly


SIDE 1

  1. Something Different (2:59) (Chuck Mangione)

  2. West Coast Blues (4:02) (Wes Montgomery)

  3. Smoke gets in Your Eyes (3:00) (Jerome Kern)

  4. The Uptown (2:12) (Junior Mance)

  5. Stockholm Sweetnin’ (3:37) (Quincy Jones)

SIDE 2

  1. African Waltz (2:08) (Galt MacDermott)

  2. Blue Brass Groove (4:46) (Nat Adderley)

  3. Kelly Blue (3:46) (Wynton Kelly)

  4. Letter From Home (1:55) (Hunior Mance)

  5. I’ll Close My Eyes (3:39) (Kaye – Reid)


   If you’re looking for today’s music in its biggest and most exciting form, this unique album is strictly for you.

   The surging, compelling, thoroughly earthy sound of this orchestra, led by CANNONBALL ADDERLEY and including as impressive a roster of jazz stars as has ever been assembled, has already been responsible for a major breakthrough on the musical front.

   In march of 1961m the issuance on a 45-rpm single record of the rip-snorting Adderley performance of African Waltz caused a swift and totally unlooked—for upheaval. Quickly and enthusiastically accepted by a wide public, it leaped almost overnight into the bestseller category. For the first time in many a year, a jazz instrumental charged onto the “charts” of big-gest-selling records compiled by the key weekly publications of the music business: Billboard and The Cash Box. In an era when it is customary to bemoan the absence of anything other than superficial gimmicks and noise on the popular music scene, it was particularly startling to see a disc bearing the name of a top-ranked jazz artist moving up towards the top end of the lists of the nation’s hits, and to hear the powerful big-band beat of African Waltz sharing radio time across the country with the latest efforts of Presley, Darin, Connie Francis and all those brand-new groups whose names we didn’t quite catch.

   Now this very different kind of waltz makes its initial appearance in album form, as part of a most impressive array of rich and rousing big-band arrangements, each conveying that same distinctive feeling of foot-stomping excitement and urgency.

   These recordings represent Julian “Cannoball” Adderley’s first venture into the big-band area. But the combination of swinging, earthy jazz and widespread popular appeal is nothing new for the number-one alto sax star. Ever since the Fall of 1959, when he left his featured spot with Miles Davis’ group to form his own quintet, Cannonball has met with a most gratifying series of successes. His gyoup’s first album, “The Cannonball Adderley Quintet in San Francisco,” which included Bobby Timmons’ memorable soul-tune, This Here, was an immediate and overwhelming hit. The quintet – which co-features the cornet of Cannnonball’s brother Nat, who can also be heard on this LP – has gone on to produce two other best-selling albums to date. It has played to enthusiastic and overflowing crowds in clubs and at concerts from, for examples, New York to Los Angeles and Boston to Dallas, and has made two thoroughly triumphant European tours.

   Much of the credit for the unusual and rich-textured sound of this album must go t Ernie Wilkins, one of the very best of today’s arrangers, whose credits include many scores featured by the orchestras of Count Basie, Quincy Jones and Harry James, among others. African Waltz and seven more here are his work, with Bobby Brookmeyer responsible for the others.

   Fittingly enough, the composer credits on this album are also highlighted by the names of some of the brightest young artists on today’s jazz scene, men like Nat Adderley, poll-winning guitarist Wes Montgomery, and pianists Wynton Kelly and Junior Mance. A number such as Quincy Jones’ Stockholm Sweetnin’ is well on its way to becoming a jazz standard, and several of the other, newer tunes here are not going to be far behind.

   Back in its good-old-days in New Orleans early in this century, jazz was unquestionably a thoroughly “popular” music. In the Swing Era of the e1930s, the widely acclaimed bands of Benny Goodman, Artie Shaw, Glenn Miller and the like produced many of the biggest hits of the day. It may well be that the stage is again set for the re-emergence of jazz into the spotlight of full-scale public acceptance. If that is to be the case, this album – with Cannonball’s inventive, swinging and soulful alto soaring over the brilliant sound of the full band – is certainly an excellent way to celebrate that return and to get it under way.

ORRIN KEEPNEWS


   Other Cannonball albums include –

The Cannonball Adderley Quintet in San Francisco (RLP 311; Stereo RLP 1157)

Them Dirty Blues (RLP 322; Stereo RLP 1170)

The Cannonball Adderley Quintet at the Lighthouse (RLP 344; Stereo RLP 9344)

Things Are Getting Better – with Milt Jackson (RLP 286; Stereo RLP 1128)

Cannonball Adderley and the Poll-Winners–Ray Brown, Wes Montgomery (RLP 355; Stereo RLP 9355)

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Produced by ORRIN KEEPNEWS

Album design: KEN DEARDOFF

Cover photograph by HUGH BELL; back-liner photos by STEVE SCHAPIRO

Recording Engineer: RAY FOWLER, recorded at Plaza Sound Studios, Feb. 28 & May 9 and 15, 1961


RIVERSIDE RECORDS are produced by BILL GRAUER PRODUCTIONS, Inc.

235 West 46th Street New York 36, New York

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