Jump to content

Doug Watkins


Soul Stream

Recommended Posts

Just Happen to be listening to the Transition Sessions with Byrd right Now!

:tup

Is that the one with "Watkin's Blues" or something to that effect? The one that just starts off with Doug walkin' the blues for quite some time. His lines are terriffic on that.

Yep it sure is: Doug's Blues Track 1

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have to admit I always like Doug Watkins a lot more than his cousin Paul Chambers. Too bad he died so early. One of the few to be elected to play behind Charles Mingus' piano. Borrowed a cello for his own Prestige LP, played it for a day and had better intonation than some others had after years of playing. A real great talent.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mmm-hmm -- what a linear singer. There is, or should be (if they used the ones I wrote for the Japanese LP issue in the mid-1980s), a fond Red Garland encomium to Watkins in the "Minor Move" liner notes.

Larry, I didn't check the notes until you mentioned them. Wonderful job you did. Wondered if you had any other information on Brooks that you didn't have a chance to share in your liners. Did you get a chance to talk to Oliver Beener?

Also, is the Ray Charles concert the only footage of Tina Brooks now known to be in existence (Have you seen it yet?!).

In relation to "Nutville," too bad they edited Doug's solo (and a bad edit at that, sounds very disturbing to me at least.) But does Watkins walk on that one or what! Beautiful.

Edited by Soul Stream
Link to comment
Share on other sites

If my memory is working, that quote about Brooks was from a phone conversation I had with Oliver Beener. I think Cuscuna put me in touch with him. All I know (or remember) was in the liner notes.

I did see some of that Charles footage when it was playing in the Jazz Record Mart one day, but I was in a hurry and couldn't linger.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was lucky to catch him a couple of times (wish I could have gone there every night) when he played with the Donald Byrd/Bobby Jaspar quintet at the Chat Qui Peche back in 1958. Some of the music is still available on the two CDs 'Byrd in Paris' released in the Jazz in Paris series.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...

Bumping this thread up again!

I love Doug Watkins a lot! In fact he's one of my very favourite bassists active in the years of hardbop, his sound and lines contribute greatly to many a Prestige session he's on. I think I first heard him on "The Cats" by Flanagan/Burrell/Coltrane/Sulieman, but of course he's on more than just a bunch of my CDs... many james by Coltrane, Gene Ammons and others, and most notably he's great on a couple of Savoy albums, too, one that comes to mind being "Introducing Lee Morgan".

Anyway, I just recently bought his sole leader entry in the OJC/Fantasy catalogue, "Soulnik". Watkins is playing cello there exclusively, with Yusef Lateef (mostly on flute, but he does some great blues playing on oboe - no tenor for a change), Hugh Lawson, Herman Wright and Lex Humphries (so actually it's a Lateef group hired by Watkins).

Watkins - so speak the liners - had just played a cello for the first time in his life three days prior to the session and sounds quite good on it (some intonation problems/weirdnesses here and there... fingerings aren't the same as on double bass, it seems).

soulnik.jpg

This most definitely is one to get fast (I assume the other bassist-led dates too: the one by Wilbur Ware and the three by Sam Jones - I got them all by now, the Ware is great, with Griffin & John Jenkins on saxes), before OJCs have all disappeared. Ron Carter's "Where" with Dolphy is somewhat similar (cello with flute/bass clarinet) and comes recommended, too - it's also part of the 9CD Complete Prestige box of Dolphy's.

While I like this album (the Watkins, that is), it's also kind of a lost opportunity, or rather a memento of how short Watkins' life and career have been, since he never did a similar album as a leader where he was completely in charge of things, and playing his great bass... (the Transition album is rather kind of a Silver/Blakey/Byrd thing to me - not bad, but it goes along with plenty of similar dates from the mid fifties)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ubu, what are your thoughs on the cello as a solo instrument? I can't really stand Ron Carter on cello (though it may have more to do with his choice of notes to play; it sounds pointless to me)... I can understand it gives a bassist the opportunity to step into the role of a solo horn, but I tend to prefer the sound of a bass over a plucked cello.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I quite like the cello - O.P. is fine, but most notable would be, I think, Erik Friedlander (great solo disc "Maldoror"), but that's a whole different area than Watkins or Carter... I quite like the Dolphy dates with cello, for sure. There's a weirdness that gets otherworldly in some spots (think "Weird Nightmare" or some of the early 50s Gil Mellé sides from his very first 10 incher on Blue Note).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks! OP probably would be my choice, but I admit that I haven't heard that much jazz cello.

There's a whole thread here:

http://www.organissimo.org/forum/index.php...54&hl=cello

A great cello player I saw live recently is Vincent Courtois (he has played with Louis Sclavis, but I've seen him in trio with Sylvie Courvoisier and Ellery Eskelin).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

A word for Art Blakey's 'The Jazz Messengers' on Columbia and the Transition 'Watkins at Large' (or the 2cd Conn. w/ Byrd). Watkins was a major talent that had the potential of being something really great, if his life wasn't cut short. That seems to happen way too often in jazz: Scott LaFaro, Clifford Brown, Richie Powell, Tina Brooks, Sonny Clark and on and on.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ordered SOULNIK several days ago & just now noticed this thread--the Watkins popped up on Amazon as I was ordering another OJC & I went for it, given that I like the TRANSITION sessions so much, and that OJCs of this sort are headed the way of the dodo. Didn't Ray Brown's JAZZ CELLO get reissued a couple of years ago?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...