Home » Jazz Articles » Building a Jazz Library » Eddie Sauter: A Wider Focus
Eddie Sauter: A Wider Focus

Courtesy William P. Gottlieb
Creed Taylor didn't want me there, he didn’t want me associated with Verve. He said stop, so I stopped. A few weeks later, Stan called and said, ‘How's it going?’ I told him they said to stop. He must have gotten on to Creed and had him reverse the decision, because a day or two later Focus was on again.
Eddie Sauter
Eddie Sauter
composer / conductor1914 - 1981

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991
Born in Brooklyn in 1914, Sauter studied trumpet and composition at the Juilliard School. After Juilliard, he joined vibraphonist

Red Norvo
vibraphone1908 - 1999

Artie Shaw
clarinet1910 - 2004

Woody Herman
band / ensemble / orchestra1913 - 1987

Benny Goodman
clarinet1909 - 1986
In 1945, Sauter enjoyed resounding peer-group succès d'estime with an arrangement for Artie Shaw of George Gershwin's "Summertime," which he transformed into a small-scale, programmatic, symphonic poem. "It was issued on a 12-inch 78 and you couldn't dance to it," Sauter said in a 1980 interview for Coda magazine. "It was doomed commercially. But the audience is an irrelevancy as far as I'm concerned." (You can check the track out on the YouTube clip below. The trumpeter is

Roy Eldridge
trumpet1911 - 1989
By the mid 1940s, Sauter was well established amongst the royalty of American big band arrangers. William P. Gottlieb's photo, taken in New York City in 1947, shows (left to right) Sauter and fellow arrangers George Handy, Edwin Finckel,

Ralph Burns
piano1922 - 2001

Neal Hefti
trumpet1922 - 2008
In 1952, keen to take his work further out, Sauter teamed up with another big-band backroom boy, the onetime

Glenn Miller
trombone1904 - 1944

Bill Finegan
arranger1917 - 2008
''We agreed that it would not be brass and saxophones all over again,'' Sauter told Coda. ''We'd had that. We wanted a different combination of instruments. We came up with one that gave us lots of latitudefrom piccolo to tuba. It gave us space to make the lines come out so you don't always have a wad of sound thrown at you.'' Originally a studio band, in 1953 RCA Victor persuaded Sauter and Finegan to form a touring orchestra for promotional purposes. It was poor advice. The twenty-one-piece outfit racked up huge debts and had to stop touring in 1955.
By the late 1950s, with the continuing decline of big bands, Sauter was making a living writing TV jingles and arranging Broadway shows. And then, out of blue, Stan Getz commissioned him to compose the music for what would become Focus.
"I played his arrangements when I was on Benny Goodman's band in 1945," said Getz in a 1970 interview with The New York Times. "But by 1961 he seemed so neglected. He was writing music for jingles and television programs. I thought, 'Why should a man this great have to do something like that?' So I asked him to write something for me. He said, 'What?' I said, 'I don't want any arrangements of jazz classics. I want it to be all your own original musicsomething that you really believe in.'"
Sauter passed in 1981, from a heart attack. But his music continues to delight....
EDDIE SAUTER: SIX ESSENTIAL ALBUMS AND ONE LEFTFIELD TRIBUTE

Benny Goodman Plays Eddie Sauter
Hep, 1996
This well-remastered twenty-three track collection of material recorded between 1939 and 1946 is the best of several Goodman / Sauter compilations. It includes many of Sauter's most memorable charts for the band, including "Moonlight On The Ganges," which was recorded while Stan Getz was in the saxophone section. Other highlights include Sauter's own "Benny Rides Again," "Clarinet A La King" and the swaggering "Superman," a showcase for trumpeter

Cootie Williams
trumpet1911 - 1985

Charlie Christian
guitar, electric1916 - 1942

Inside Sauter-Finegan
RCA Victor, 1954
In their quest to create new instrumental colours, Sauter and Finegan sometimes moved beyond jazz into areas which are, most of the time, solid Third Stream experiments, but which, at others, border on the kitschkazoos and toy trumpets, for instance, soon outstay their welcome. Inside Sauter-Finegan, however, which inhabits the intersection of cool and so-called West Coast jazz, is solid gold. The lineup, performing a mixture of originals and standards, includes a woodwind section of multiple doubles ranging from saxophones to piccolos, flutes, oboes, English horn, fifes and recorders, an expanded percussion section, three trumpets, three trombones, tuba, harp, guitar, piano, celeste, bass and drums. Some of the players are well knowntrumpeter

Nick Travis
trumpet1925 - 1964

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996

Al Cohn
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1988

Zoot Sims
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1985
Gene Allen
woodwindsb.1928

Bob Brookmeyer
trombone1929 - 2011

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975

Johnny Smith
guitar1922 - 2013

Don Redman
arranger1900 - 1964

Bix Beiderbecke
cornet1903 - 1931

Borderline
Savoy, 1955
When drummer Ray McKinley stopped trying to have novelty hits and concentrated on playing jazzas he does on Borderlinehe is worth listening to. The album is a collection of little-big-band tracks recorded in 1946 and 1947 by

Rudy Van Gelder
various1924 - 2016

Bud Freeman
saxophone, tenor1906 - 1991

Peanuts Hucko
clarinet1918 - 2003

Mundell Lowe
guitar1922 - 2017

Jelly Roll Morton
piano1890 - 1941

Focus
Verve, 1962
What is there left to say about Focus other than to repeat that it is one of the great masterpieces of mid-twentieth century jazz, its stature unsullied by the passing years? Perhaps only that in a 1980 interview, Sauter suggested that the album was almost stymied at birth by Verve's director,

Creed Taylor
producer1929 - 2022

Roy Haynes
drums1926 - 2024

Mickey One
MGM, 1965
Five years after Focus, Getz and Sauter reunited for the soundtrack of director Arthur Penn's dissection of urban paranoia, Mickey One, starring Warren Beatty. Getz had made a suicide attempt a few weeks before the recording sessionswhich, as a consequence, were like those for Focus preceded by precious little rehearsaland it may be that his frame of mind contributed to the intensity of his performance: Getz was often a passionate player but he rarely played with such ferocity as here. "What is the sound of terror? The sound of loneliness, fear in the city?" said Penn in an interview coinciding with the film's release. "For me it would be the sound created by Stan Getz." Along with edgy jazz and classical-contemporary, Sauter's big-band-plus-strings score also includes Polish polkas and old school rock 'n' roll.

At Tanglewood
RCA Victor, 1967
Stan Getz and the Boston Pops? It sounds like it might be a cheeser. Contrariwise. The live-in-concert At Tanglewood is a serious affair. Its closest comparator is not the borderline easy listening of What The World Needs Now: Stan Getz Plays Burt Bacharach And Hal David (Verve, 1968), on which Getz plays beautifully over Richard Evans and

Claus Ogerman
composer / conductor1930 - 2016

Gary Burton
vibraphoneb.1943

Steve Swallow
bassb.1940

Jim Hall
guitar1930 - 2013

Antonio Carlos Jobim
piano1927 - 1994

Concerto For Orchestra / Focus
Sony, 2010
Few saxophonists have attempted to cover

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Jukka Perko
saxophoneTags
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
