ghost of miles Posted December 11, 2006 Report Posted December 11, 2006 I'm working on a program about J.R. Monterose and am trying to find a copy of the interview he did with Coda back in late 1974, possibly January 1975... the IU School of Music library does not have any issues prior to 1981. If anybody has this, could they PM me about possibly faxing a copy? It's a longshot, but thanks much in advance. Quote
ghost of miles Posted December 11, 2006 Author Report Posted December 11, 2006 Also--does anybody know of any interviews J.R. did in Downbeat, etc.? The Jazz Institut sent me an article bibliography, but it was for Jack Montrose... they are great folks but have not yet responded to my reply asking for a corrected list. I've checked New Grove, but they basically reference only the Coda piece. Quote
Chuck Nessa Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 J.R. screwed a chippy in my living room around 1965 and forced me to lie about it. He used to pick me up at 10 am, drive to the Airliner bar for bloody marys and then watch chicks walking on the street while he sipped on a bottle of cough syrip. "Those were the days". Quote
sidewinder Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 J.R. screwed a chippy in my living room around 1965 and forced me to lie about it. chippy/chippie - slang term for a fish and chip shop and also for a carpenter. Quote
danasgoodstuff Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 It's also archaic(sp?) American slang for bimbo, maybe a little less insulting... Quote
chewy-chew-chew-bean-benitez Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 !?!??!?!?!?!? did u say: He used to pick me up at 10 am, drive to the Airliner bar for bloody marys and then watch chicks walking on the street while he sipped on a bottle of cough syrip. SEE, THIS IS JUST ANOTHER EXOMPLE OF WHY W. COAST JAZZ IS THE BEST ! THIS GUY REALLY KNOWS HOW TO ENJOY LIFE. U MUST OF HAD A GOOD TIME CHILLIN W/ HIM Quote
Niko Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 !?!??!?!?!?!? did u say: He used to pick me up at 10 am, drive to the Airliner bar for bloody marys and then watch chicks walking on the street while he sipped on a bottle of cough syrip. SEE, THIS IS JUST ANOTHER EXOMPLE OF WHY W. COAST JAZZ IS THE BEST ! THIS GUY REALLY KNOWS HOW TO ENJOY LIFE. U MUST OF HAD A GOOD TIME CHILLIN W/ HIM West Coast? Frank Anthony Monterose Jr. ("J.R." is simply a corruption of the Junior) is a native of Detroit, where he was born in 1927. He is not, however, a Detroiter by any other token than the accident of birth, for before he was old enough to talk, let alone blow a horn, he was transplanted by his family to Utica, N.Y., which has been home base ever since. J.R.'s musical studies were centered mainly on the clarinet; he had very little formal saxophone training. The first great influences were Coleman Hawkins and the late Chu Berry; but "the real inspiration that decided me to take up tenor seriously rather than clarinet or alto was, believe it or not, Tex Beneke." J.R. was still in his early teens when his extra-scholastic musical experiences began to broaden, all the way from the Utica Junior Symphony to a nearby strip joint. Meanwhile he was learning a few things about modern harmony. "Most of my influences in learning chord changes were piano players. I dig pure harmonies; I'm for the Bud Powell school. Sam Mancuso, a guitarist and pianist with a real natural talent helped me find the way." After working with various territory bands in 1948 and '49, J.R. caught his first taste of the big time, in a somewhat distilled form, when he was invited to tour with an orchestra led by the late Henry "Hot Lips" Busse in 1950. "There was some good young fellows in the band," he recalls, "and once in a while there was an opportunity for a few solo bars." But after a long tour that wound up in California he felt sated with enough shuffle rhythm to last him for the rest of his life. Back home, he worked locally around Utica and Syracuse through most of 1951 before spending six months with Buddy Rich--"That was when Buddy had a big band, with Davey Schildkraut, Allen Eager, and Philly Joe Jones playing second drums. But you just don't get enough blowing to do in a big band. After six months I was drugged with my own playing, and I went back home and spent the next couple of years working in little joints but with good men." The next opportunity to display himself came in the Claude Thornhill band. Again, there were distinguished colleagues, among them Gene Quill and Dick Sherman, but again there was the frustration of big band limitations, and after a couple of months he decided he couldn't make it. Next came a steady gig for a solid year at the Nut Club in Greenwich Village with Nick Stabulas, under a liberal arrangement that allowed him to send subs in anytime he liked. This offered him chances for gigs with such intrepid modern jazzmen as Teddy Charles and Charles Mingus. "I learned something from those associations; I didn't go about it the same way they did, from studying; I got it all from listeneing, but I guess I was doing what they wanted and they seemed to dig it." --LEONARD FEATHER, from the liner notes, J.R. Monterose, Blue Note. Quote
medjuck Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 You may already know this, but Coda finally has a wesite and they seem to have access to back issues. If you contact them and perhaps promise to give them a plug I presume they could send you at least a copy of the interview. They're at: http://coda1958.com/ Quote
BruceH Posted December 14, 2006 Report Posted December 14, 2006 J.R. screwed a chippy in my living room around 1965 and forced me to lie about it. Gee, thanks for sharing that. Nothing like too much information. Quote
ghost of miles Posted December 14, 2006 Author Report Posted December 14, 2006 You may already know this, but Coda finally has a wesite and they seem to have access to back issues. If you contact them and perhaps promise to give them a plug I presume they could send you at least a copy of the interview. They're at: http://coda1958.com/ Thanks much, I'll try that... and Clem, you're right... I just got the corrected list from Jazz Institut and it lists a Sept. 1983 interview w/JR in Cadence. Tried to order Rene Thomas' GUITAR GROOVE and my friend who runs Landlocked said it's OOP. I found a copy online; seems readily available there, but it might possibly be another Concord casualty. I doubt if any of those "limited edition" OJCs have much longer to go under the new roof. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.