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Metropolitan Jazz Octet featuring Dee Alexander
It’s Too Hot For Words celebrating Billie Holiday
Delmark DE 5032
Too Hot For Words blends the tight-knit swing of the Metropolitan Jazz Octet with the unerring musicianship of Dee Alexander to mark the 60th anniversary of Billie Holiday's departure from the planet. Mixing Holiday classics with some of Lady Day's lesser-known repertoire the arrangements sparkle and Alexander shines as bright as ever. At no point does Alexander attempt to mimic Holiday. Neither do the MJO’s arrangements attempt to mimic the similarly sized septets and octets that backed Holiday’s early work. Instead, the album becomes a multi-generational time capsule: sterling musicians of the 21st century, building upon an octet sound crafted 60 years earlier, to revitalize songs that Holiday began recording in the 1930s.
Notes by Neil Tesser.
1. Ain’t Nobody’s Business 5:08
2. Things Are Looking Up 5:39
3. You’re So Desirable 5:32
4. The Blues Are Brewin’ 5:14
5. Somebody’s On My Mind 5:49
6. Strange Fruit 4:53
7. I Wished On The Moon 4:45
8. It’s Too Hot For Words 4:10
9. I’m A Fool To Want You 5:49
10. Twenty Four Hours A Day 2:39
The Metropolitan Jazz Octet
John Kornegay - alto saxophone, clarinet
Jim Gailloreto - tenor saxophone, flute
Peter Brusen - baritone saxophone, bass clarinet Doug Scharf - trumpet
Russ Phillips - trombone
Bob Sutter - piano
Doug Bistrow - bass
Bob Rummage - drums
special guest
Dee Alexander - vocals
strings (tracks 2, 6, 8, 9)
Lisa Fako, Jeff Yang, Michèle Lekas , Jeri-Lou Zike, Wendy Benner, Sarah Kim
Arranger credits: 1,2,5,6 by Gailloreto; 3,9 by Kornegay; 4,10 by Scharf; 7 by Thomas Matta; 8 by Kornegay and Sutter
Your choice as to whether to go song by song or the review at the end of the songs section.
1. Ain’t Nobody’s Business 5:08 (Grainger/Robbins, P.D.)
Arranged by Jim Gailloreto with solos by Doug Scharf, trumpet; Russ Phillips, trombone; Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone
2. Things Are Looking Up 5:39 (George & Ira Gershwin, Frankie G. Songs/Ira Gershwin Music/Nokawi Music/WB Music Corp., ASCAP)
Arranged by Jim Gailloreto with solos by Bob Sutter, piano; Doug Scharf, trumpet
3. You’re So Desirable 5:32 (Ray Noble, WB Music Corp., ASCAP)
Arranged by John Kornegay with solos by Doug Scharf, trumpet; Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone; Russ Phillips, trombone
4. The Blues Are Brewin’ 5:14 (Alter/DeLange, Louis Alter Music Publ./Scarsdale Music Corp., ASCAP)
Arranged by Doug Scharf with solo by Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone
5. Somebody’s On My Mind 5:49 (Holiday/Herzog, Louis Armstrong Music Publ. Co. Inc., ASCAP)
Arranged by Jim Gailloreto with solos by Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone; Bob Sutter, piano
6. Strange Fruit 4:53 (Allan Lewis, Music Sales Corp., ASCAP)
Arranged by Jim Gailloreto with solos by Bob Sutter, piano; Russ Phillips, trombone; Doug Scharf, trumpet
7. I Wished On The Moon 4:45 (Parker/Rainger, Sony/ATV Harmony, ASCAP)
Arranged by Thomas Matta with solo by Russ Phillips, trombone
8. It’s Too Hot For Words 4:10 (Samuels/Whitcup/Powell, Crisscott Music Co./Leonard Whitcup Inc./Chappell-Co. Inc., ASCAP)
Arranged by John Kornegay and Bob Sutter with solo by Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone
9. I’m A Fool To Want You 5:49 (Wolf/Herron/Sinatra, WB Music Corp./Barton Music Corp./MPCA Lehsem Music, ASCAP)
Arranged by John Kornegay with solo by Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone
10. Twenty Four Hours A Day 2:39 (Hanley/Swanstrom, Warner Bros. Inc., ASCAP)
Arranged by Doug Scharf with solos by Jim Gailloreto, tenor saxophone; Russ Phillips, trombone
Album Production and Supervision: Julia A. Miller and Elbio Barilari
Producers: Jim Gailloreto, John Kornegay and Bob Sutter
Session Conductor: Andy Baker
Recording and mastering: Engineer: Steve Wagner
Mixing Engineer: John McCortney (Airwave Recording Studio)
Photos: Harvey Tillis
Graphic Design: Al Brantner
Recorded at Delmark Records’ Riverside Studio on April 9 &16, 2019
Special thanks to our friend Andy Cohn at Andy’s Music, Jazz Artists Resource
You won’t need to get very far into this disc – about 75 seconds, I’d say – to know why the Metropolitan Jazz Octet and Dee Alexander seem made for each other. After the rarely heard verse to “Ain’t Nobody’s Business,” Jim Gailloreto’s arrangement swirls the horns together into a bebop Dixieland of collective improvisation; and yet, each one emerges with high-def clarity. So does Alexander when she re-enters; she becomes another instrument in the mix.
I think Tom Hilliard would approve.
Hilliard was the Chicago saxophonist and arranger who formed the original Metropolitan Jazz Octet in the 1950s and later taught at DePaul University, where his students included three musicians on this disc: saxophonists Gailloreto and John Kornegay, and pianist Bob Sutter. When Hilliard’s health began to fail in the early 2000s, he bequeathed his MJO charts to Gailloreto, who revived the concept to create the current band. (Call it MJO 2.0.) At first, they assembled just to play through Hilliard’s arrangements. But by the time they recorded The Road to Your Place (their 2018 debut), they had new music, written by Gailloreto, Kornegay, and trumpeter Doug Scharf – all inspired by Hilliard’s work.
The octet format is something unique: in the jazz zoography, it counts as neither fish nor fowl. Hilliard departed from some earlier bands of similar size (led by Miles Davis and Shorty Rogers) by eliminating the lower brass instruments that made those bands more “orchestral”; instead, he reveled in the translucent textures he could weave from a more traditional array of trumpet, trombone, and saxes. Bob Sutter describes it as “both a big small band and a small big band. It’s more like a ‘chamber big band.’ Tom used to rave about the octet,” which recorded just one album, recalls Sutter; when he finally got to play some of Hilliard’s charts, he understood why.
But the truest measure of artistic respect doesn’t lie in repeating previous innovations. It comes from building upon and extending those concepts, as the MJO has done here – not only in the use of updated harmonies and more sophisticated rhythms, but also in the addition of strings on several tracks, expanding the range of colors and textures at the arrangers’ disposal. Gailloreto uses these for appropriate gravitas in his masterful take on ”Strange Fruit” – which Alexander sings with appropriate drama. On the other hand, he combines the strings with gorgeous woodwind writing to craft a spring-day setting for “Things Are Looking Up” (marked by Alexander’s breezy paraphrases); meanwhile, in Kornegay’s chart for “I’m a Fool to Want You,” they provide sweet, sweet romance.
Even without violinistic augmentation, the MJO remains potent and intoxicating, at too many junctures to fully describe here. The delightful “Twenty-Four Hours a Day” has a music-box piano intro that fits the lyric, and Alexander luxuriates in its tango-tinged bridge. “I Wished on the Moon” highlights Peter Brusen’s baritone sax in the opening chorale, and later, Russ Phillips’ dancing trombone solo. “Somebody’s On My Mind,” an obscure torcher, blooms with counterpoint; and on the title track, Gailloreto solos over a surging montuno, as Alexander’s scatting transforms a saucy trifle into a sumptuous dessert.
The decision to add Alexander – the pitch-perfect, improbably versatile Chicago vocalist, who works in settings that run from intimate trios playing the Great American Songbook to jazz orchestras presenting the Great Black Music of the AACM – came easy. Like most arrangers who encounter Alexander, Gailloreto knew immediately that he wanted to work with her. Only later did he realize that 2019 marks the 60th anniversary of Billie Holiday’s departure from the planet; that’s when he suggested they pay homage with a mix of Holiday classics and lesser-known items from her expansive repertoire. Alexander, whose work as a nationally syndicated jazz radio host has put her in touch with lots of back catalog, jumped at the chance. And when the studio sessions began, the members of the MJO quickly fell in love with their guest, an ego-free diva who relishes at the chance to place her voice in service to a larger concept.
Alexander never considered imitating the timbre or phrasing that still make Holiday so instantly recognizable. “I would be a laughingstock if I tried to sound like her,” she says. (I’m not so sure about that, since she has reliably imitated birds, trumpets, monkeys, insects, and even a didgeridoo on previous occasions). Neither do the MJO’s arrangements attempt to mimic the similarly sized septets and octets that backed Holiday’s early work. Instead, the album becomes a multi-generational time capsule: sterling musicians of the 21stcentury, building upon an octet sound crafted 60 years earlier, to revitalize songs that Holiday began recording in the 1930s.
It also serves as a springboard for the one aspect of Holiday’s work that Alexander does mimic. Sutter puts it this way: “Dee does what 90 percent of singers don’t do: instead of just singing the song, she tells a story – like Billie.” And all the while, the MJO spins evocative stories of their own: wordless but equally literate narratives to complement the human instrument invited into their midst.
-Neil Tesser