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Posted (edited)

I've heard that Miles was influenced by Freddie (or is it Freddy?) Webster, especially regarding his approach to the use of the harmon mute. Are there some decent FW recordings to check out? I seem to remember a Bud Powell date with FW on a couple cuts. I see a bunch of sideman dates on AMG, but I was wondering what the Organissimites might recommend.

Edited by Free For All
Posted

The Bud Powell date with Freddie Webster was actually a Frank Socolow Quintet date. It was reissued in the 'Bebop Revisited'

Volume 6 on the Xanadu 208 LP. Not sure the full session came out on CD. It's the one full record session where

Webster is featured.

Webster is heard in the 1946 version of Sarah Vaughan's 'You're Not the Kind'.

Posted

I may have mentioned this before, but on page 99 of Ira Gitler's "Swing To Bop," Benny Bailey is quoted as follows: "During Miles' early formative years, they shared an apartment in New York, and Freddie, being more experienced than Miles, was sort of schooling Miles. I happen to know for instance that on the recording of 'Billie's Bounce' that Miles made with Charlie Parker, his solo was exactly the one that Freddie played for this particular blues. Evidently, Miles said that he was nervous on the date and couldn't think of anything to play, so he did Freddie's solo note for note."

I'd add that both Bailey (b. 1925) and Webster (b. 1917) were from Cleveland, so there probably was some background there, and that that 'Billie's Bounce' solo is excellent and, IMO, not much like anything else that Miles played before or since.

Posted

There is a dynamite solo by Freddie Webster in the March 1945 Georgie Auld Orchestra version

of 'Co-Pilot'. Dizzy Gillespie was also in the trumpet section but Webster is the one who solos.

This was recorded for Musicraft and was last available on a Georgie Aiuld 'Handicap' Discovery CD reissue.

Just one solo. But a beauty!

Lawrence Kart already mentioned the Ira Gitler classic book 'Swing to Bop'! The book also includes a quote

from Art Pepper who was 18 at the time (1943):

'When I was in Benny Carter's band, I was with Freddie Webster, and we roomed together a lot. He had the

greatest, the most huge sound, and down low it was just gigantic. I never heard anybody who had a sound

that bid down low. He was just a little cat, too. He always carried a loaded gun with him in his pocket, always

- never without it'.

Posted

Freddie did a date with Sammy Price--I think it was '44. It's on Classics. And if memory serves Freddie played with Jimmie Lunceford in 1942, and cut a solo or 2 with the band, but I don't have the specifics.

He plays a great solo on the live Lunceford version of "Yesterdays" that's on the BIG BANDS JUBILEE SESSIONS box-set.

I'm working on a Webster CD-R for a couple of board members. Thanks to brownie for mention of the Auld solo--I'll have to try to run that down. Here are a couple of links that people might find useful:

jazzedincleveland

bestsound

There's a selected discography of solos at the end of the second one.

Posted

Given that all of this material is in the public domain in Europe, why doesn't some company do the jazz world a favor and make a single disk with all of Freddie Webster's recorded solos? That would be an extremely interesting and enlightening collection.

Posted

From all that read, I'd heard he was underrecorded, especially as mentioned in Gitler's book. He's also mentioned somewhat in Gitler's other book, The Masters of Bebop in which he said that he recorded some solos with Lucky Millinder's band (How About That Mess and Savoy) and Earl Hines' band (Yellow Fire and Windy City Jive). His best known work is on Sarah Vaughan's You're Not the Kind and If You Could See Me Now. Dizzy apparently called his sound "the best I ever heard". He was, according to Gitler, harmonically and in spirit one of the early players in modern jazz. He was only around 30 when he died.

BTW, if you have a chance to pick up any of the Xanadu Bebop Revisited series, don't miss the chance. They're fabulous records. As far as I know they have not been reissued on CD, although there was one on cd involving Bird, which I got outbid on unfortunately.

Posted

Freddie Webster is also heard - a few bars - in the 1942 Jimmie Lunceford record 'Knock Me a Kiss'. Have this on LP but is is also on the Classics CD Jimmie Lunceford 1941-1945

Posted

BTW, if you have a chance to pick up any of the Xanadu Bebop Revisited series, don't miss the chance. They're fabulous records. As far as I know they have not been reissued on CD, although there was one on cd involving Bird, which I got outbid on unfortunately.

A great series of LPs, indeed. One of the last things I completed before I stopped buying LPs. Some material has been issued on CD in the Chronological Clasics series, on Ocium or whereever it fit into place.

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