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LINER
NOTES ONE BRIGHT MORNING
This
year finally sees the fruition of a musical dream for
Toronto jazz guitarist and composer TONY
QUARRINGTON. Though as a producer he has so
far been responsible for about thirty albums by other
artists (including the Juno-Award-winning HEARTSTRINGS
by Willie P. Bennett), and has appeared as a sideman on
dozens more, it is only now that he makes his debut CD
as a jazz leader. "This is the album I've been meaning
to do for twenty years," he says, "and it's
come out better than I could have hoped. Really, the main
problem was picking material out of the hundreds of originals
I've written over the decades".
The
other players in the ensemble comprise a "Who's Who"
of Toronto first-call players. Kieran Overs on
bass and Barry Elmes (Time Warp) on drums, contribute
to the surging excitement and relentless grooves of all
the selections. "Of course I wanted a consistent
rhythm section on the two studio dates", says TONY,
" but after that I had some other criteria in mind.
I had worked many times with Bernie Senensky, so
I knew how well he would treat my original tunes. I put
him together with Kirk McDonald, who had just won
a Juno for his ATLANTIC SESSIONS, on some of the brighter,
bouncier tunes, and we got a great feeling on that date."
On three selections, including the title tune, the basic
quintet was enriched by the addition of Kevin Turcotte
on trumpet, and Terry Lukiwski on trombone. "
I just had a certain sound in mind for the heads of these
songs," TONY explains. "Probably my favourite
album of all time is John Coltrane's (1957) BLUE TRAIN,
with Lee Morgan and Curtis Fuller, and I wanted the surface
of my album to be like that. Unfortunately Kevin and Terry
didn't get to solo too much, or the whole thing would
have become too long…but what they did is great".
Indeed, check out Turcotte's incendiary choruses on ONE
BRIGHT MORNING, and Lukiwski's virtuoso contributions
to SAVANNAH/ FOR SOUTH AFRICA.
Both those tunes, incidentally, are first takes.
A
second session occurred a week after the first. "
Kieran and Barry and I came back", TONY says, "and
Brian Dickinson was on piano. For a while I had wanted
to get Shawn Nykwist recorded… I think he's got a great
sound and concept…so I had him on this album. I believe
this is the first time he's been featured to this extent."
Particularly interesting on this second set of tunes is
the fast Salsa/Latin treatment of Thelonius Monk's ROUND
MIDNIGHT, usually very slow and melancholy. QUARRINGTON
explains, "I heard in the changes that it would sound
good at a fair clip (I've done it this way for awhile,
actually,} and when I was arranging the parts for the
session it struck me it would be cool to split the melody
up into a two-bar back-and-forth dialogue….that's a very
Salsa thing".
The
eight songs of the recording comprise six QUARRINGTON
originals and two standards. The second standard came
about almost by accident. "There was time left over
after the second date, so Brian and I decided to play
the waltz HI LILY HI LO
just as a duo. This is the only take we did, it just fell
into place after a little discussion. I've always loved
this tune by Bronislau Kaper, and I've evolved a few little
extra chord things of my own…but the quote I did from
Cole Porter's TRUE LOVE was spontaneous, a free association".
Brian Dickinson also plays a wonderful, mysterious chorus
on the ballad PRINCESSE EN PROMENADE (a tune, TONY says,"
for all my nieces") and adds immeasurably to the
energy of the blues, ROUNDABOUT.
"
I would have to say I am aware of two big influences on
my playing," QUARRINGTON analyses. "First,
the guitarists that I got to hear most often live… Lenny
Breau, Ed Bickert, and Sonny Greenwich…and probably above
all, the musical spirit of John Coltrane, which I'm able
to capture for a bar or two, sometimes. ECLIPSE is a tune
that reflects that…it's chordally complicated, basically
it changes key every second measure.( It's similar to
GIANT STEPS, except… I can remember it! )And ONE
BRIGHT MORNING is certainly inspired mainly
by tunes like MOMENT'S NOTICE and LAZY BIRD, from the
BLUE TRAIN album. ECLIPSE, by the by, went by a couple
of different names until a session in 1994 when I was
recording it…at the end of one take, the engineer told
the band to go outside because there was a solar eclipse.
I thought, if that's not a hint, what is? -and changed
the title".
Other
selections include the hypnotic
SAVANNAH/FOR SOUTH AFRICA, a flowing and melodic
piece similar to Abdullah Ibrahim's QUIET VILLAGE. TONY
plays some guitar percussion behind the other soloists
on this. "I was inspired", he says, "by
the way Barry was varying his time feels in the different
sections, so at a certain point I just had to join in.
But I didn't want to clutter everything up with chords,
so I did a pitchless Stanley Jordan kind of accompaniment".
The final tune is the bouncy line that the entire band
plays in unison, which TONY calls, with a wry (rye?) humor,
YOU STEPPED OUT OF A DRINK.
"Of course it's based on the chords of YOU STEPPED
OUT OF A DREAM, and it's unusual for me because I
happened to write it down straight out of my head. I didn't
have a guitar or piano at the time, just a pencil and
paper. It's not an easy melody, and I was very impressed
with Kieran's doing it on the bass."
"Overall,"
TONY concludes, "I'm very pleased with this recording.
I wanted to make a happy, presentable album, and I hoped
I wouldn't sound too bad playing alongside these wonderfully
talented guys. And one of the better ideas that I had
was commissioning the cover painting from Colette French…every
time I look at it I'm aware of some further level of relation
to the music that I made…the whole concept fits together."
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