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LESTER YOUNG 'Lester Leaps Again' Original Recordings 1942-1944 Lester Young was a true individualist, in his tenor-saxophone playing, his lifestyle and his...
LESTER YOUNG
'Lester Leaps Again' Original Recordings 1942-1944
Lester Young was a true individualist, in his
tenor-saxophone playing, his lifestyle and his
vocabulary. Among the words he reportedly
introduced were bread (meaning money), cool
(not pertaining to the temperature) and groovy.
When Young was developing his playing style,
the dominant voice on tenor was Coleman
Hawkins. Hawkins had a large sound with a
hard tone, and a style that was harmonically
advanced, full of notes and powerful. Nearly
every other tenor-saxophonist sounded like a
close relative, except Young.
Born in Woodville, Mississippi on 27 August
1909, Lester Young grew up playing music in his
father's family band. He spent time playing
trumpet, alto, violin and drums before settling
on alto by 1920, around the time that his family
had moved to Minnesota. In 1927 when he was
eighteen he left the band because he did not
want to travel in the South. While with Art
Bronson's Bostonians, Young switched
permanently to the tenor-sax. After a few years
of freelancing, he joined the Original Blue Devils
in 1932, settled in Kansas City and worked
locally with Bennie Moten, Clarence Love, King
Oliver and Count Basie (1934). He was hired as
the first replacement for the recently departed
Coleman Hawkins with Fletcher Henderson's
orchestra. Unlike Hawkins, Young had a lighterthan-
air tone, he tended to float over bar lines
and he played one or two notes where other
saxophonists might play ten. He was technically
skilled and could read music easily, but his
sound was considered so revolutionary that the
other musicians felt that it did not fit in the
Henderson big band; Young only lasted three
months. He worked with Andy Kirk and Earl
Hines before rejoining Basie in 1936.
Lester Young's style was perfectly at home
with the Count Basie Orchestra, contrasting with
the more Hawkins-oriented sound of his fellow
tenor Herschel Evans and inspiring Basie's light
but hard-swinging rhythm section. Young was a
large part of Basie's success when the band
headed East later in 1936, and he was its key
soloist for the next four years. Not only did he
star on classic records with Basie but he was a
co-star on many of Billie Holiday's recordings
where his cool-toned sound echoed hers. He
dubbed her "Lady Day" and she in turn called
him "Pres," short for president.
In December 1940 Young left Basie's band
under mysterious circumstances, possibly
because he did not want to record on Friday the
13th. Surprisingly Pres did not have a major
solo career during the next few years, instead coleading
a mostly undocumented group with his
brother drummer Lee Young and working in Al
Sears' big band. Among the few recording dates
he made during the period are four titles on
15 July 1942 in a trio with the up-and-coming
Nat King Cole (who was better known at the
time as a pianist than as a singer) and bassist
Red Callender. A special aspect of these four
explorations of standards is that, because the
music was originally released on 12-inch rather
than 10-inch 78s, the performances are longer
than the usual three-minute limit, with Body
And Soul exceeding five minutes. Young sounds
relaxed on the two ballads (I Can't Get Started
and Body And Soul) while coming up with a
constant flow of appealing ideas on the mediumtempo
versions of Tea For Two and Indiana.
And throughout, Nat Cole shows that he really
was one of the top swing pianists of the era.
In October 1943, Lester Young rejoined the
Count Basie Orchestra after being absent nearly
three years. Because of the recording strike of
1942-44, he was not able to record with the full
Basie band (other than one date in which Count
was absent). But because he was signed to a
different label than Basie and one that settled
fairly early with the musicians union, by late-
1943 he was able to record as a leader. On 28
December 1943 Pres had one of his greatest
record dates. Joined by a top-notch rhythm
section comprised of pianist Johnny Guarnieri,
bassist Slam Stewart and drummer Sid Catlett,
Young is heard in peak form on Just You, Just
Me, I Never Knew and his uptempo blues
Afternoon Of a Basie-ite, playing with joy and
constant creativity. Stewart's bowed solos (to
which he hums along an octave higher) are witty
while Guarnieri, who could be a real musical
chameleon, mostly sticks to Count Basie and
Teddy Wilson in his solos. The classic of the
date, Sometimes I'm Happy, is one of those rare
performances where every note is perfect,
whether it be Stewart's charming solo or the way
Young ends the performance with a quote from
"My Sweetie Went Away."
The other two sessions on this collection
team Pres with key members of the Count Basie
Orchestra in combos. The three spirited
originals, After Theatre Jump, Six Cats And A
Prince and an exuberant Destination K.C, have
Young joined in the frontline by trumpeter Buck
Clayton and trombonist Dickie Wells, two
distinctive players who like Pres were part of
Basie's early successes. One can hear in Young's
solo on After Theatre Jump where Illinois
Jacquet came from and, through Jacquet, a full
generation of R&B tenors. Lester Leaps Again
is particularly special for it features Young as the
only horn, interacting at length with Basie and
the classic rhythm section in a blues groove
similar to One O'Clock Jump.
Forty days later, Young was back in the
studio with the Basie rhythm section for four
more numbers. Drummer Shadow Wilson had
taken Jo Jones' place when Jones was drafted
but the magic is still there as the quintet
performs two of Pres' originals, Ghost Of A
Chance and Indiana. A highpoint is Young's
lyrical Blue Lester although each of these
selections has its memorable moments.
1944 looked as if it were turning out to be
one of Lester Young's greatest years, particularly
after he was featured in the Academy Awardwinning
film short Jammin' The Blues. But the
draft board caught up with him in October and
the next year would be a horrible one for Young.
The quiet noncomformist could not adjust to
Army life or the institutionalized racism of the
period and he spent part of the time in a
military prison. When he was discharged in
late-1945, Young returned to his earlier playing
form but he was torn apart on the inside, both
emotionally and mentally. Over time both
depression and excessive drinking would ruin his
health and, although there were many musical
highpoints during the 1950s, Lester Young's
former zest for life was gone. After too little
eating and too much drinking, he passed away
on 15 March 1959 when he was only 49.
However some of Lester Young's happiest
moments on record are contained in this
definitive collection, taken from a musical
golden age when Young was truly the President
of the tenor-sax.
Scott Yanow
Author of 8 jazz books including Jazz On Film, Swing,
Bebop, Trumpet Kings and Jazz On Record 1917-76
Tea for 2 (more info)
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Tea For Two - 4:46
Ziegfeld Follies (more info)
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I Can't Get Started - 4:54
Body And Soul (more info)
Performed by:
Buddy Baker Orchestra
Billie Holiday Orchestra
Jack Teagarden Orchestra
Coleman Hawkins Orchestra
Composed by:
Johnny Green
Lester Young
Earl Hines
Teddy Wilson, piano
Billie Holiday, vocals
Django Reinhardt, guitar
Stephane Grappelli, violin
John Simmons, bass
Erroll Garner, piano
Alvin Stoller, drumset
Jack Teagarden, vocals
Larry Adler, harmonica
Gene Krupa, drumset
Benny Goodman, clarinet
Billy Eckstine, vocals
Recording date: 11 October 1939
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Body and Soul - 5:13
Indiana (more info)
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Indiana - 4:54
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Indiana - 2:56
Just You, Just Me (more info)
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Just You, Just Me - 3:16
I Never Knew (more info)
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I Never Knew - 3:14
Afternoon Of A Basie-ite (more info)
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Afternoon Of A Basie-ite - 3:14
Sometimes I'm Happy (more info)
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Sometimes I'm Happy - 3:12
After Theatre Jump (more info)
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After Theatre Jump - 4:50
6 Cats and a Prince (more info)
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Six Cats And A Prince - 4:16
Lester Leaps Again (more info)
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Lester Leaps Again - 4:31
Destination K. C. (more info)
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Destination K.C. - 4:57
Blue Lester (more info)
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Blue Lester - 3:22
(I Don't Stand A) Ghost Of A Chance (more info)
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(I Don't Stand A) Ghost Of A Chance - 3:20
Lester's Savoy Jump (more info)
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Lester's Savoy Jump - 3:17