Ophelia
I seem to be in an unaccountably nostalgic mood this Saturday morning so as a consequence I’m going to post a musical blast from the past that I hope at least some of you will enjoy.
I first heard the following track on Humphrey Lyttelton’s Radio 2 show The Best of Jazz, which I used to listen to every Monday night when I was at School. I must have heard this sometime around 1981, i.e. about thirty years ago. From the moment I heard the first achingly beautiful phrases of theme of this tune, called Ophelia, I was entranced and it did more than any other single record to fill me with a love of modern jazz. Although I’d always loved jazz, I had tended to think of it as music “of the past” – even the “modern” jazz of e.g. Charlie Parker fell into that category – and usually made in a recording studio. This sounded so new, so exciting, and indeed so beautiful, that it filled me with the urge to hear live jazz whenever and wherever I could. It cost me a lot of money and a lot of late nights, but I think it was worth it.
The performance was recorded live at Ronnie Scott’s Club in London in June 1980 and released on the small British record label Mole Jazz, an offshoot of the famous (and sadly now defunct) record shop of the same name that used to be on Gray’s Inn Road. I loved the track Humph played so much I got the album Blues for the Fisherman straight away (by mail order) and, although I still have it, I have almost worn it away by playing it so much. It’s a brilliant, brilliant album, with the intense atmosphere of a live performance adding to the superb playing of the musicians.
The band is listed as the “Milcho Leviev Quartet featuring Art Pepper”, although that was probably for contractual reasons, as this was the same band that toured extensively as “The Art Pepper Quartet”: Art Pepper on alto saxophone, Milcho Leviev on piano, Tony Dumas on bass and Carl Burnett on drums. I was lucky enough to see this band play live at the Newcastle Jazz festival not long after I got the record and they were great then too. Art Pepper sadly passed away in 1982.
As far as I’m aware this record wasn’t released on CD until very recently and, fortunately, a public-spirited person has put the tracks from the original album and some previous unreleased material on Youtube, so I’ve seized the opportunity to post the track which did so much to inspire me about jazz when I was 18 years old. There’s so much to enjoy in this piece, including the superb drumming of Carl Burnett and virtuosic piano of Milcho Leviev, but the star of the performance for me is Art Pepper (who also wrote the tune). His playing is at times lyrical and at times agonized, but always compelling and this band was especially good at spontaneous transitions of mood and dynamic. I love this performance, and I hope some of you will too.
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March 11, 2012 at 9:54 pm
Hi Man
Great to “meet” a fellow Art Pepper fan…..
What a player…….I saw him at ronnies on the night before the Blues for the fisherman was recorded….they were checking the levels etc and blew the place away…
Sad loss greatly missed by those who love the jazz………
March 24, 2012 at 12:10 pm
Stumbled across the blog entry – Blues for the Fisherman is probably my favorite jazz album. Just by chance on the day I read your blog I went into Ray’s Jazz shop in Foyles London and found the second volume from the concert. This has some great stuff on it to. I then searched the web about the concert and found that Art Pepper’s widow has realased a 4 CD set from week at Ronnie Scott including the complete last two nights. I have just ordered it from CDBaby – see http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/artpepper13 Really looking forward to this coming through the door.
Thanks for the reminder of just how wonderful this record is and if you are ever in the York area pop in to hear it on my wonderful “time machine” vinyl hi-fi system, the nearest you will ever get to saying you were there.
Regards
David
August 17, 2021 at 8:28 pm
[…] back over the blog I discover that it was almost exactly ten years ago that I wrote about the very same album so I thought I’d post it again, in slightly amended […]