And His Orchestra 1957-1958 (2-CD)
  • Savoy MG-12101
    Savoy MG-12101
  • Savoy MG-12123
    Savoy MG-12123
  • Savoy MG-12121
    Savoy MG-12121
  • World Wide MGS-20003
    World Wide MGS-20003
  • World Wide MGS-20002
    World Wide MGS-20002
  • Billy Ver Planck
    Billy Ver Planck

Billy Ver Planck

And His Orchestra 1957-1958 (2-CD)

Fresh Sound Records

Personnel:
Billy Ver Planck (dir, arr, tb), Bernie Glow, Joe Wilder, Phil Sunkel, Clyde Reasinger (tp), Frank Rehak, Bill Harris (tb), Phil Woods (as), Frank Wess (fl), Bobby Jaspar, Seldon Powell (ts, fl), Buzzy Brauner (ts), Pepper Adams, Gene Allen, Sol Schlinger (bs), Eddie Costa (p, vib), Wendell Marshall, George Duvivier (b), Bobby Donaldson, Gus Johnson, Art Taylor (d)

Reference: FSRCD 934

Bar code: 8427328609340

Trombonist Billy Ver Planck (1930-2009) wrote for all the big bands of his generation and was among the busiest studio arrangers/conductors on the New York scene. This CD set contains his only albums as leader, recorded in 1957-1958. His debut album Dancing Jazz, produced a scored jazz date for a nonet that combined the dancing sound and rhythm of the big band with the freedom of expression in solos available to the improvising combo, while Jazz for Play Girls took a modern-sounding group through an effective string of Basieinfluenced arrangements. On both albums the solos stand on their own merit; Wilder is tasteful throughout, Woods strong and assertive, and Harris, idiosyncratically imaginative, is best of all.

A mood album, The Spirit of Charlie Parker, slightly alters course, with three flutes (Wess, Jaspar and Powell), one trombone (Rehak), and a rhythm section with the dazzling Eddie Costa on piano and vibes to record four great Bird tunes. The Soul of Jazz, finds Ver Planck in a collection of songs old and new from the Gospel idiom—the final track excluded—delivered by a group of top-ranking jazzmen who “preach” their Jazz gospel. Pepper Adams is fierily effective throughout, and all involved cover the jazz spectrum from late swing to neo-modern period, depending on their stylistic allegiances.



CD 1
01. Summer Evening (Ozzie Cadena) 5:58
02. On Top of Old Mountie (Billy Ver Planck) 4:19
03. I’ll Keep Loving You (Ozzie Cadena) 6:05
04. Day by Day (Stordhal-Cahn) 3:32
05. Oh Gee, Oh Me, Oh My (Ozzie Cadena) 4:50
06. Embraceable You (G. & I. Gershwin) 8:30
07. Jan-Cee Brown (Ozzie Cadena) 4:43
08. Walkin’ (Richard Carpenter) 7:37
09. Play Girl Stroll (Ozzie Cadena) 3:30
10. Señor Blues (Horace Silver) 6:25
11. Aw, C’Mon Sugah! (Ozzie Cadena) 7:18
12. Whoo-Ee! (Ozzie Cadena) 3:17
13. Miss Spring Blues (Billy Ver Planck) 5:54

CD 2
01. Duh-Udah-Udah (Billy Ver Planck) 5:56
02. Winds (Ver Planck-Cadena) 4:20
03. Parker’s Mood (Charlie Parker) 5:57
04. Marmaduke (Charlie Parker) 9:37
05. Now’s the Time (Charlie Parker) 8:05
06. Ah Leu-Cha (Charlie Parker) 7:51
07. You Gotta Be A Good Man (Billy Ver Planck) 8:45
08. Each Side of the River (Billy Ver Planck) 4:49
09. Where You Gonna Run To? (Billy Ver Planck) 5:09
10. I Can’t Believe It (Roberts) 6:34
11. What Could I Do (Billy Ver Planck) 3:57
12. Royal Garden Blues (Clarence Williams) 6:28

Album details

Sources CD 1:
Tracks #1-6, from the album “Dancing Jazz” (Savoy MG-12101)
Tracks #7 & 8, from the album “Jazz Is Busting Out All Over” (Savoy MG-12123)
Tracks #9-13, from the album “Jazz for Play Girls” (Savoy MG-12121)

Sources CD 2:
Tracks #1 & 2, from the album “Jazz for Play Girls” (Savoy MG-12121)
Tracks #3-6, from the album “The Spirit of Charlie Parker” (World Wide MGS-20003)
Tracks #7-12, from the album “The Soul of Jazz” (World Wide MGS-20002)

Personnel on "Dancing Jazz":
Bernie Glow, Joe Wilder, trumpets; Frank Rehak, trombone; Phil Woods, alto sax; Buzzy Brauner, tenor sax; Gene Allen, baritone sax; Eddie Costa, piano & vibes; Wendell Marshall, bass; Bobby Donaldson, drums.
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ, March 26, 1957

Personnel on "Jazz Is Busting Out All Over":
Bernie Glow, Phil Sunkel, trumpets; Bill Harris, trombone; Phil Woods, alto sax; Seldon Powell, flute & tenor sax; Sol Schlinger, baritone sax; Eddie Costa, piano; Wendell Marshall, bass; Gus Johnson, drums.
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ, July 30, 1957

Personnel on "Jazz For Play Girls":
Clyde Reasinger, Joe Wilder, trumpets; Bill Harris, trombone; Phil Woods, alto sax & clarinet; Seldon Powell, tenor sax; Gene Allen, baritone sax & clarinet; Eddie Costa, piano & vibes; George Duvivier, bass; Bobby Donaldson, drums.
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ, November 17, 1957

Personnel on "The Spirit of Charlie Parker":
Frank Rehak, trombone; Frank Wess, flute; Bobby Jaspar, flute & clarinet; Seldon Powell, flute & tenor sax; Eddie Costa, piano & vibes; George Duvivier, bass; Bobby Donaldson, drums.
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ, March 27, 1958

Personnel on "The Soul of Jazz":
Joe Wilder, trumpet; Bill Harris, trombone; Bobby Jaspar, tenor sax; Pepper Adams, baritone sax; Eddie Costa, piano; George Duvivier, bass; Art Taylor, drums.
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, NJ, May 5, 1958

Recording engineer: Rudy Van Gelder
Original backliner notes: H. Alan Stein
Photography (World Wide): Hank Schneider
Design (World Wide): Levy A. Agency

Original recordings supervised by Ozzie Cadena
Produced for CD release by Jordi Pujol

Hi Fi / Stereo · 24-Bit Digitally Remastered

Press reviews

"Most NJJS members are familiar with the name Billy Ver Planck as the husband of vocalist Marlene Ver Planck. In fact, he was a fabulous arranger who had started his career by playing trombone on the bands of Claude Thornhill, Tommy Dorsey and Charlie Spivak, among others. Ultimately he concentrated on the arranging side of his talent, and that also included his considerable talent for composing original melodies.

In the 1950s he had an association with Savoy Records. It was there that he made a series of four albums for the label, and they were the only ones that were ever released with his name as leader. These albums are compiled on Billy Ver Planck and His Orchestra 1957-1958 (FSRCD 934), and it contains a treasure trove of superb arrangements played by some of the top cats on the scene at the time like trumpeters Joe Wilder, Bernie Glow, Phil Sunkel and Clyde Reasinger; trombonists Bill Harris and Frank Rehak; reedmen Phil Woods, Seldon Powell, Gene Allen, Frank Wess, Bobby Jaspar and Pepper Adams; pianist/vibist Eddie Costa; bassists Wendell Marshall and George Duvivier; and drummers Bobby Donaldson, Gus Johnson and Art Taylor.

The albums were titled Dancing Jazz, Jazz for Play Girls, The Spirit of Charlie Parker and The Soul of Jazz. The groups varied in size from a nonet on the first two to a septet on the latter two. Much of the music on all but The Spirit of Charlie Parker, which contained four compositions by Parker,was composed by VerPlanck. All of the arrangements are by Ver Planck, they are swinging and inventive, and made the groups sound like larger ensembles than they actually were. It is nice to have this material gathered onto a two-CD set that enables listeners to revisit these wonderful sounds, or more likely, to introduce some special sounds to a new audience."

Joe Lang (November, 2017)
New Jersey Jazz Society
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"If it was a personal matter I’d give this six stars. When I first heard these tracks more than half a century ago I was inspired to get in touch with the very amiable and talented Mr VerPlanck and we had many enjoyable phone conversations. Billy, even more so than I, was a Bill Harris nut and here he built a temple to his idol. He also wails out a very passable attempt at replicating him on Duh-Udah (Billy’s only fault was his love of silly titles). Sadly, you won’t find any reference to Billy in the encyclopedias. He was married to the equally delightful Marlene who to this day remains one of the best singers in the business.

There are inspiring and early performances from Wilder, Woods, Costa and Adams and, when he couldn’t get Bill, Billy used the greatest of the unsung trombonists, Frank Rehak, who hands out lessons on 10 of these tracks. Needless to say this is essential for Harris fans. The great man, who’s playing influenced every jazz trombonist from the 40s on, had just returned to Herman from a self-inflicted exile in Florida. He had entered the second stage of his playing - less robust but endlessly twitchy. VerPlanck made sure that he was heavily featured but still left plenty of space for his other giants to solo.

Billy wrote the non-standards although, as was his wont, producer Ozzie Cadena slaps his name on seven of them. They’re good, clean and functional and the idea of scoring Bird’s Mood solo for three flutes was most imaginative (Rehak’s good here). This was some of Powell’s and Jaspar’s earliest work and they both play with great fire, as does the young Pepper Adams. Winds is an attractive gently swung Ill Winds. I still don’t know how Billy managed to assemble such great bands. Now go away and let me listen to it all again."

Steve Voce (September, 2017)
Jazz Journal Magazine

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14,95 €  (tax incl.)

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