Jump to content

George Shearing (1919-2011)


BillF

Recommended Posts

When I was a kid, the Shearing vibes-piano-guitar block chord sound represented an idealized vision of suave, post-war adulthood. I thought the vibes were ice cubes being dropped into a glass.

Yes, around 1950 when I was 10 the BBC Light Programme (forerunner of Radio 2) churned out hours of that Shearing-type sound. There was a factory near my school full of young women operatives and that sound came out of the windows all day. (This was also the era of "Workers' Playtime".)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I recall going with my friend John Norris to hear Shearing in the mid 90's at The Montreal Bistro in Toronto. George had Reg Schwager on guitar, Neil Swainson on bass, (don't remember the name of the drummer).

The room was packed and we had to stand during the set. The music was , as one expects from Shearing, well arranged and with a delicate, yet swinging chamber music feeling.

I enjoyed the set very much. The audience responded to the music with great enthusiasm.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

What a coincidence - I had ordered the Birdland Broadcasts CD a few weeks ago and only today it arrived - great stuff. I was listening to Shearing only during the 500 km I had to drive today. There is a hilarious moment in the second broadcast when Shearing imitates a handful of famous pianists to real perfection, the last being Erroll Garner, after which the MC introduces him as "Erroll Garfinkle" ...

61xjgUT0ENL._SS500_.jpg

Edited by mikeweil
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shearing does his Erroll Garner routine on "Shearing On Stage," from 1958 - and the college audience seems to get it (as well as the crack about Randy Weston and Thelonius Monk)! 1958 - truly another age. (Of course, with a Capitol "live" album, you never know...) Anyway, you can't get much classier than George Shearing.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is it correct that the early 90s "The Swingin's Mutual" was one of these botched jobs where the album running order was changed and bonus tracks added in the midst (the latter I do know)? Was the 2004 or so reissue a major improval? It was a copycrapsh*t thingie over here so I never even looked at it, but I might try and get one from the US if it's worth.

Just playing "Jazz Moments" for the very fist time as I'm typing - good one!

Fournier is on some of the Capitol live material, but having Crosby in with him, too, is a thrill!

EDIT: another question: there's this Japanese edition of "Jazz Moments" with several bonus tracks - anyone knows what these are?

Edited by king ubu
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Is it correct that the early 90s "The Swingin's Mutual" was one of these botched jobs where the album running order was changed and bonus tracks added in the midst (the latter I do know)? Was the 2004 or so reissue a major improval? It was a copycrapsh*t thingie over here so I never even looked at it, but I might try and get one from the US if it's worth.

They added a few bonus tracks from the sessions, both vocal and instrumental - good music. As I never heard the original LP sequence, I didn't mind.

Just playing "Jazz Moments" for the very fist time as I'm typing - good one!

Fournier is on some of the Capitol live material, but having Crosby in with him, too, is a thrill!

EDIT: another question: there's this Japanese edition of "Jazz Moments" with several bonus tracks - anyone knows what these are?

This was not Crosby's last recording session! The last one was three tracks for Sam Jones' Down Home LP on Riverside on June 25, 1962, Fournier was playing, too.

No idea about the bonus tracks, though ....

Edited by mikeweil
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks Mike!

I've got that Sam Jones album (why, of course! all three of his Riversides are good!).

The 2004 reissue of "The Swingin's Mutual seems to have added even more tracks - there are 20 on the 2004 reissue, and #1-12 there restores the original LP sequence.

From the 8 bonus tracks on the 2004 release, the first two and the last one (Stablemates, Ghost of Yesterday and Silk) were not on the 1992 CD.

Not sure all of that is enough to replace it, but this looks like a botched job on the 1992 CD to me... similar (though not nearly as bad) as when they did June Christy's "Something Cool" the first time (there I do have both CD reissues, though most of the bonus tracks from the earlier reissue are also available elsewhere).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The 2004 reissue of "The Swingin's Mutual seems to have added even more tracks - there are 20 on the 2004 reissue, and #1-12 there restores the original LP sequence.

From the 8 bonus tracks on the 2004 release, the first two and the last one (Stablemates, Ghost of Yesterday and Silk) were not on the 1992 CD.

Oh! I didn't know about that, and since my copy of the Shearing/Wilson is nowhere to be found ... ^_^ ... thanks for pointing this out!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Shearing's harmonization of "Over The Rainbow," realized by an unidentified pianist:

Also, tonight I was listening to his "Velvet Carpet" (Capitol), apparently the first quintet with strings album, charts by Shearing and Dennis Farnon. The harmonization of "'Round Midnight" (for one) is quite something. Also, those walking-ballad grooves that Shearing seemed to have a patent on, with Al McKibbon (I assume) putting "one" right on top of the beat and playing his ass off. Makes me wonder again if Jamal was a Shearing fan.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

He must have been watching Jamal's career - when Jamal disbanded his trio with Israel Crosby and Vernel Fournier, he hired the two on the spot!

But the question is whether Jamal (b. 1930) dug Shearing in his formative years. Certainly possible time-wise, and I think style-wise, too, up to a point. Shearing's hiring of Crosby and Fournier could have been because of that (possible) underlying musical kinship.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I think Jamal's and Shearing's conceptions are much too different - except for the trio LP Jazz Moments with Crosby, Shearing never left as much space in his music which Jamal did all the time. The way they shape solos is very different, methinks.

I hear lots of linear bop in Shearing, as though he had dug Tristano just as muich as Bud Powell - a trait which I rarely hear in Jamal.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

I got me some more Shearing - seems I should have checked out his Capitol albums more thoroughly.

51jZNqoaI%2BL._SS400_.jpg

This is a real classic. I never before heard a pianist so authentically merging his classical grounds with standard material and various jazz piano stylistics as personally as Shearing does on this album. I didn't get the idea when this was first released on CD and passed it on, but now ... Hearing influences of Tatum, Wilson and Waller side by side with Poulenc and Satie without getting the impression of an endless series of quotes, that's quite an achievement. This transcends categories and simply is great piano playing!

512QHvQ%2BqqL._SS400_.jpg

Another classic - I'm deeply impressed. The way they render Everything Happens to Me is unreal!

One nasty sidenote: They could have titled this album Black & Blind .....hide.gif

Edited by mikeweil
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 8 months later...

I just read his Biography, "Lullaby of Birdland" written in 2004. Had not known he was divorced from his first wife. The book mentioned that she died but did not say how, when. They had a daughter but the book contains no pictures of her. He does not go into what happened to her. The book overall was disappointing because it did not reveal a lot of personal things that a reader would be interested in knowing.

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...