Home » Jazz Articles » My Blue Note Obsession » Jutta Hipp: Jutta Hipp With Zoot Sims – Blue Note 1530
Jutta Hipp: Jutta Hipp With Zoot Sims – Blue Note 1530
ByJutta Hipp
piano1925 - 2003

Zoot Sims
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1985
Except she really is overshadowed by Zoot Sims, who is a non-stop dynamo on every single track. He's one of those rare tenors who play equally well on speedy bop numbers and smoky ballads. It's not that Hipp isn't interesting; it's that Sims is more so. He dominates the album, partly because he takes the lead solo every time, and therefore sets the pace, and partly because he's a whirlwind of interesting sounds.
Hipp was a virtual unknown at the time, and a raritya German and a woman who could play bluesy piano like Horace Silver. Sims, by contrast, was famous from various big bands and as one of

Woody Herman
band / ensemble / orchestra1913 - 1987
The album starts with a generic blues jam called, appropriately, "Just Blues." The credits say Sims wrote this, but it sounds entirely improvised to melike one of those Jazz at Philharmonic things, where everyone riffs on the same blues chords for 10 minutes. It's fun.
The CD continues with Sims on a smoldering version of the ballad "Violets for Your Furs." It says something that he's equally captivating on the blues and ballads. An upbeat bop number called "Down Home" follows, and then, two cuts later, a wonderful take on "Wee Dot," the ultimate hard bop tune recorded definitively by the


Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Clifford Brown
trumpetb.1930
The only down side? The weak performance of trumpeter
Jerry Lloyd
b.1920The CD ends with a fast romp on the

George Gershwin
composer / conductor1898 - 1937
Anyway, get this CD. I don't know if it's Zoot Sims best ever, but I can't imagine there are many better than this.
Rating: 5 stars (out of 5)
Availability: Once rare, now with oodles of copies, new and used
Cost: $6 used
Tags
Jutta Hipp
My Blue Note Obsession
Marc Davis
Zoot Sims
Woody Herman
Jazz Messengers
Art Blakey
Clifford Brown
Jerry Lloyd
George Gershwin
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
