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Leo Parker: Rollin' With Leo
ByParker died in a hotel bathroom soon after, with the official cause of death given as a heart attack. My Heavens, one thinks. Was there no end to the havoc, no limit to the talent destroyed, or no end to the tears shed from swing to bop? Leo Parker, no kin to Charlie Parker, who died at 34, made it two years further than Bird. Put them together, and there is more than enough music for one life, even if they only had 70 years between them.
Leo Parker
saxophone, baritone1925 - 1962

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Fats Navarro
trumpet1923 - 1950
Parker was a contemporary of the now better known (or at least remembered)

Serge Chaloff
saxophone, baritoneb.1923
Osie Johnson
drums1923 - 1966

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Billy Eckstine
vocals1914 - 1993

Sonny Greer
drums1895 - 1982
John Malachi
b.1919He must have joined Eckstine's band soon after, switching from alto to baritone saxophone at Eckstine's behest. In the late 1940s, Parker played in several pioneering Savoy sessions with bandmates like
John Malachi
b.1919
Howard McGhee
trumpet1918 - 1987

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969
With Dexter Gordon, he always took a bit to get warmed up: once he hit his stride, he made the solo and then some. His recordings with Fats Navarro were excellent, especially "Ice Freezes Red," (1947) which left no doubt about the company he could keep. But then something happened. Nobody thought much of

Illinois Jacquet
saxophone, tenor1922 - 2004

Sir Charles Thompson
piano1918 - 2016

Cecil Payne
saxophone, baritone1922 - 2007

Pepper Adams
saxophone, baritone1930 - 1986

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996
Which brings us to the recording considered. In the 1960s, bop musicians who had receded from view because of drug problems were sometimes accorded a back-from-the-grave recording. Howard McGhee was one such beneficiary;

Hampton Hawes
piano1928 - 1977

Harry Carney
saxophone, baritone1910 - 1974
Dave Burns
trumpetb.1924

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993
On this recording, Parker really sounds better than ever. "The Lion's Roar" may not break any new ground, but Parker's sound is simply awesome, rolling and guttural, even for a baritone saxophone. On "Bad Girl," a Parker composition, a listener gets a whiff of

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979
A sentiment to close: this guy could play some. And, at 36, it was encouraging that he could manage recording with a new energy. But just like that, it all came to an end. Parker died in a hotel bathroom soon after, with the official cause of death given as a heart attack. My Heavens, one thinks. Was there no end to the havoc, no limit to the talent destroyed, or no end to the tears shed from swing to bop? Leo Parker, no kin to Charlie Parker, who died at 34, made it two years further than Bird. Put them together, and there was more than enough music for one life, even if they only had 70 years between them. ">
Track Listing
The Lion's Road; Bad Girl; Rollin With Leo; Music Hall Beat; Jumpin' Leo; Talkin' The Blues; Stuffy; Mad Lad Returns
Personnel
Leo Parker
saxophone, baritoneBill Swindell
saxophone, tenorJohnny Acea
pianoAl Lucas
bass, acousticStan Conover
bass, acousticWilbert Hogan
drumsPurnell Rice
drumsDave Burns
trumpetAlbum information
Title: Rollin' With Leo | Year Released: 1961 | Record Label: Blue Note Records
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