Home » Jazz Articles » Album Review » Don Rendell / Ian Carr Quintet: Blue Beginnings
Don Rendell / Ian Carr Quintet: Blue Beginnings
ByThe key to placing Blue Beginnings in its historical context is a quote from a contemporary review of the

Don Rendell
saxophoneb.1926

Ian Carr
trumpet1933 - 2009
Until the mid 1960s, British jazz was regarded by some, probably most, British jazz fans as being inferior to its American parent, at best a copycat version. Understandably, British musicians were narked about that. But with a handful of exceptions, it was trueand only to be expected since jazz was created in America and British musicians had to learn the language from scratch before they could wax poetical in it. By the mid 1960s, however, the musicians had acquired fluency, as the YouTube clip below of Blue Beginnings' "Blue Doom" proves. But as the clip also suggests, British jazz was in the mid 1960s only just emerging from its copycat phase. "Blue Doom" is hard bop en pointe, but the truth is that there is nothing peculiarly British about it.
Blue Beginnings' liner notes assert that what we are listening to is American jazz "filtered through five very English sensibilities." This claim also needs to be unpicked. Putting aside the fact that one of those sensibilities was Scottish not English (that of trumpeter Ian Carr), this, frankly, is wishful thinking on the part of the writer. It is a get out of jail free card which has frequently been offered up to avoid the offence which would otherwise be given to the musicians concerned by stating the unvarnished truth (and offered also in an attempt to disguise the less than objective partisanship of the writer).
To hear British jazz that is both technically en pointe and conceptually British it is necessary to scroll forward a few years. The Don Rendell / Ian Carr Quintet itself became culturally singular on albums such as Dusk Fire (Columbia, 1966) and yet more so on Phase 111 (Columbia, 1968). By the start of the 1970s British jazz in general had hit its first historic peak of perfection, with albums by Ian Carr's Nucleus,

Michael Gibbs
tromboneb.1937

Michael Garrick
piano1933 - 2011

Mike Westbrook
composer / conductorb.1936

John Surman
saxophoneb.1944
Track Listing
Blue Doom; Autumn Leaves; Garrison ’64; Shades Of Blue; Sailin’; Latin Blue; You’ll Never Know; Big City Strut.
Personnel
Don Rendell
saxophoneIan Carr
trumpetColin Purbrook
pianoDave Green
bass, acousticTrevor Tomkins
percussionAdditional Instrumentation
Don Rendell: tenor and soprano saxophone; Ian Carr: trumpet; Colin Purbrook: piano; Dave Green: bass; Trevor Tomkins: drums.
Album information
Title: Blue Beginnings | Year Released: 2021 | Record Label: Jazz In Britain
Tags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
