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Tubby Hayes: No Blues: The Complete Hopbine '65
ByRon Mathewson
bass, acousticb.1944
"I'm the bassist," said just turned twenty-one year old Mathewson, who had been booked to deputise for the Hopbine's regular bassist that night.
"Well, we'll see about that, won't we?" said Hayes.
So began a relationship in which Mathewson later became a permament member of Hayes' quartet and the bassist in all of his bands, large and small, up until Hayes passed in 1973.
The full story is told in an interview Mathewson gave, not long before he passed in 2020, to Hayes historian Simon Spillett, the author of the 24-page liner booklet accompanying the 2-CD live album No Blues: The Complete Hopbine '65. It is Mathewson's tape archive which we have to thank for this, the first complete recording of the gig, which has previously been released in bits and always with poor audio. Not only is the Jazz In Britain release the first complete recording, it is the only one on which sound restoration has raised the audio to a quality befitting the music.
And the music is superb. Many people consider Hayes to have been at his peak circa 1965, when, as Spillett observes, one hears the inspiration of Hayes' hero

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor1927 - 1991

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
Tommy Whittle
b.1926Once again, John Thurlow and his dedicated team at not-for-profit Jazz In Britain are to be thanked for bringing a chunk of immortal magic back into the public domain. ">
Track Listing
CD1: Night And Day; It Never Entered My Mind; I Remember You; On Green Dolphin Street. CD2: No Blues; What's New?; Have You Met Miss Jones?.
Personnel
Additional Instrumentation
Tubby Hayes: tenor saxophone (1:1, 1:2, 1:4, 2:1, 2:3). Tommy Whittle: tenor saxophone (1:4, 2:3).
Album information
Title: No Blues: The Complete Hopbine '65 | Year Released: 2023 | Record Label: Jazz In Britain
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