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Alan Skidmore: Naima/Live in Berlin
ByAlan Skidmore
saxophoneb.1942

Alexis Korner
guitar1928 - 1984

John Mayall
harmonica1933 - 2024

Eric Clapton
guitar and vocalsb.1945

Georgie Fame
piano and vocalsb.1943

Sonny Boy Williamson II
harmonica1897 - 1965

Stan Tracey
piano1926 - 2013

Mike Westbrook
composer / conductorb.1936
Mike Gibbs
composer / conductor
Van Morrison
vocalsb.1945

Colin Towns
piano
John Surman
saxophoneb.1944

Harry Beckett
flugelhorn1935 - 2010

George Gruntz
piano1932 - 2013

Norma Winstone
vocalsb.1941
Along the way there have been some fine albums in his own name from the debut Once Upon a Time(1969 Deram), through TCB (1970 Phillips), El Skid with

Elton Dean
saxophone1945 - 2006
This double CD with two very different groups finds him paying tribute to

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Mike Gorman
organ, Hammond B3
Aidan O'Donnell
bassIf there is a difference between the two sets, it would be that Naima, with its cover photo of Skid's grand-daughter Naima, has a more relaxed, collegial feel. Skidmore, pianist

Steve Melling
pianob.1959

Geoff Gascoyne
bass
Tony Levin
bassb.1946
Anyone familiar with Skidmore's work will want this record. For the unfamiliar, it sure ain't a bad place to start.
Alan Skidmore talked to author Duncan Heining about Naima.
All About Jazz: You saw John Coltrane on his only visit to the UK. What were your impressions (!) of what you heard and saw back then?
Alan Skidmore: Although I was fairly young at the time, about 18/19, I remember the concert so well. I think the venue was the Walthamstow Granada. My father took me to see the

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Reggie Workman
bassb.1937

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
Up until that time, I had been listening to

Paul Gonsalves
saxophone, tenor1920 - 1974

Dexter Gordon
saxophone, tenor1923 - 1990
AAJ: You knew and played with 'Trane's drummer

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004
AS: I had worked with Elvin in the

George Gruntz
piano1932 - 2013
He was a joy to work with because of his time and feeling, which are legendary. It was a truly wonderful experience. By that time I had been listening to the John Coltrane Quartet and had decided that he was in my opinion the greatest drummer I had ever heard, and still is to this day. Not only that, he was one of the kindest, nicest, courteous, gracious people that I have ever known. One night during the period I worked with him at Ronnie Scott's Club, we finished the first set and I went downstairs and to get myself a beer. When I came back up to the dressing room, there were three drummers in the roomElvin,

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Max Roach
drums1925 - 2007
AAJ: Given that Elvin must be a hard act to follow, what do you look for in a drummer? On 'Naima' you have the great, late Tony Levin and on 'Live in Berlin' Ian Palmer. There's quite a contrast between them.
AS: I look for passion, feeling, rhythm and time combined with a driving force. In my view the job of the drummer is to kick the soloist 'up the arse.' The kind of music I play, demands intensity, spirit and energy, witnessed if you listen to John Coltrane and Elvin Jones. Tony and Ian in their own way, provided all these qualities.
AAJ: How did the two different sections affect your own approach to the music?
AS: The two rhythm sections didn't really affect my approach to the music. It was more the case that they were hand-picked by me to do the job they did so eloquently.
AAJ: You remain justly a committed fan of Coltrane and his legacy. What is it for you that makes his music so very important in the history of jazz?
AS: I have been a devotee of John Coltrane for more than 50 years for many reasons, not least of all his sound, feeling and technique. In my opinion he changed the course of jazz history with his composition 'Giant Steps.' I grew up in a household listening to the music of

Lester Young
saxophone1909 - 1959

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969
Track Listing
Naima: Giant Steps; Naima; Some Other Blues; After the Rain; Transition; Ascension. (recorded UK 2011) Live in Berlin: But Not For Me; Say It; Resolution; Impressions; Take the Coltrane. (recorded Berlin 2007)
Personnel
Alan Skidmore
saxophoneNaima: Alan Skidmore: tenor saxophone; Steve Melling: piano; Geoff Gascoyne: bass; Tony Levin: drums. Live in Berlin: Alan Skidmore: tenor saxophone; Mike Gorman: piano; Aidan O’Donnell: drums; Ian Palmer: drums.
Album information
Title: Naima/Live in Berlin | Year Released: 2018 | Record Label: Jazzwerkstatt
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