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The Ten Most Essential Art Farmer Albums

Keter Betts
bass, acousticb.1928
At 25 years of age, Farmer was given the opportunity to travel Europe with Lionel Hampton's jazz band. He had spent the past few years wandering Los Angeles as a struggling musician with

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Gigi Gryce
saxophone1927 - 1983

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996

Horace Silver
piano1928 - 2014

Hank Mobley
saxophone, tenor1930 - 1986

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024
Although it's true that he did in fact write over a dozen of his own songs, he was never known for them. To Farmer, being a great musician had little in common with the ability or drive to compose.
So what was Art Farmer known for?
That would depend upon who was asked. Those he worked with would describe him as ambitious and committed. "I had developed this reputation," he said, "of being a guy who would take care of business: be on the gig on time, take the music home and really work on it, and hang in there. If people had something that was out of the ordinary, they would call me to do it. It was not because I was the best trumpet player around, but I would give it my best."
To the many listeners who bought his records, Farmer was known simply for his warm lyricism; a trait which allowed him to conquer melodic form in any context, be it ballad or bombast.
Once he switched to the flugelhorn in the mid-sixties, his smooth, mellow blowing during occasionally sparse arrangements became a calling card. His understanding of talent had less to do with tackling excess, and was more about what one could do with restraint. He once stated, "you know, that's what you got to watch out for-these guys that can tell you something with one note. If they can tell you something with one note...well, then, watch out when they start playing more notes than that. That's the essence of jazz, I think."
It is imperative to note that the recordings contained here all feature Art Farmer as bandleader; his name clearly listed on the cover. The wonderful music he made as part of the Jazztet, or with other groups or artists, could fill a list twice this size, and is worth pursuing. The ten albums presented here however, will serve to paint a broad picture of one of jazz's legendary horn players, hopefully spurring continued interest in his work among not only the generation who grew up listening to him, but with those who succeed them.

Farmer's Market
Prestige
1956
Wisdom comes not from foreseeing the future, but from understanding the past. Although Art Farmer had enjoyed some success with his breakthrough Early Art (Prestige, 1954), it was Farmer's Market in which the then-trumpeter laid a lofty foundation to build upon in the following decades leading up to his death in 1999.
Farmer was never much of a composer, preferring instead to play in other musicians' sandboxes. He explained this theory best in 1995, during an interview for the Smithsonian Jazz Oral History Project; "I would classify myself as, being an interpreter, basically, of what other people have written. I find something that I feel comfortable inthat I can put myself intoand that's what I do, play it. I express myself through the music that someone else wrote. With the availability of so much good music, there's no reason to play mediocre music just because you wrote it yourself, which some people do."
He did compose a couple dozen songs, among them were "Kayin,'" "Mox Nix," and the title track to this album. "Farmer's Market" is appealingly up-tempo, brimming with carefully measured exuberance. Art Farmer allows a moderately slack leash for his pianist and band in general, and the result is a well structured composition he would continue to attack from different angles throughout his life, on numerous live and studio albums.
That band consisted of a handful of fifties legends, including Hank Mobley,

Kenny Drew
piano1928 - 1993

Elvin Jones
drums1927 - 2004

The Summer Knows
East Wind Records
1976
For the majority of the 1970s, Art Farmer enjoyed the accompaniment of what was objectively his strongest rhythm section. Pianist

Cedar Walton
piano1934 - 2013

Sam Jones
bass, acoustic1924 - 1981

Billy Higgins
drums1936 - 2001
The flugelhornist would eschew those sub-genres, favoring tradition and perfecting his approach to it. The Summer Knows stands out as not only his most underrated album, but his most accomplished. This classic's only weakness is a structural one; the placement of the title track as its opener. Here, Art Farmer recorded the definitive version of

Michel Legrand
piano1932 - 2019
This isn't to disparage their talent; the four musicians presented here are exemplary. Much as it is the case with a fine glass of rum, one can easily pick out each individual flavor with concentration. With a relaxed mindset however, the sum of their parts easily eclipses those which would otherwise merit great praise. Listeners who enjoy The Summer Knows would do well to further explore the catalogues of Walton and Higgins, as they present a rabbit hole of indeterminate depth for those inclined to jump in with abandon.

When Farmer Met Gryce
Prestige Records
1955
Altoist Gigi Gryce was one of the musicians Art Farmer played with in his early twenties, touring Europe together as part of Lionel Hampton's band. They were both relative newcomers to the jazz scene, Farmer more than Gryce. When Hampton's group disbanded after returning to New York, the duo would spend a year playing live shows together, often appearing nights at Birdland.
During May and October of 1955, Farmer and Gryce met at the Van Gelder studio in Hackensack, New Jersey, to record enough music to furnish two albums for the Prestige label. The first, When Farmer Met Gryce, was released later that same year. Recording was spread over two dates in May, with differing rhythm sections for each. The autumn session provided music which would hit shelves the following year, as Art Farmer Quintet Featuring Gigi Gryce.
Farmer never played down the fact that he wasn't much of a writer. He felt that in order to do it well, one had to do it consistently. As complementary as the two musicians were to each other, their approach to music and to their careers differed widely. "Gigi said if he didn't write a song every day, it was a day wasted. That's a composer," he stated during the Smithsonian interview.
The weak point of any jazz album recorded with different sidemen is inconsistency, and there's no doubt that out of the two he recorded with Gryce, the latter is a more logical choice for this list. In spite of this, When Farmer Met Gryce proves to be the more compelling effort. Farmer's unusually up-tempo selections and youthful spirit give this album an edgy contrast to the rest of his discography. Although Gryce inexplicably retired in 1965, Art Farmer would continue to make use of his compositions for many years after.

Perception
Argo Records
1961
Perception is the first album on which Art Farmer played solely the flugelhorn. Often paired with his previous 1961 release Art (Argo), hearing both together allows for some perspective of this defining event. The flugelhorn's warm tones better suit his lyrical, sensitive approach to music, and with it he found an instrument capable of carrying the style he'd spend the next thirty-eight years honing.
Interestingly enough, Farmer felt that the recording of Art was less laborious. "Sometimes things gel, and sometimes things that should gel don't, and nobody can really anticipate it. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't work. In this case, it worked."
Both Art and Perception were recorded at the Nola Penthouse Studio in Manhattan. Though he declared the former to be his favorite album, Perception stands as a turning point in his career, separating the youthful trumpeter from the thoughtful, experienced flugelhornist.
Still buried in golden-age sensibilities, none of the eight songs included hit the six minute mark; most are under five. But the fluid confidence he and pianist Harold Mabern (who would briefly join The Jazztet a year later) brought to such tunes as "Nobody's Heart" and "Lullaby Of The Leaves" is a rarity even for Farmer. Also included are a couple rare originals; "Punsu" and "Kayin.'" He would build on those compositions much later, but Perception is where they, and Art Farmer as he is remembered really began.

Warm Valley
Concord
1982
It might be an overstatement to refer to Warm Valley as a concept album, but it certainly is a thematic one. The quartet, aside from Art Farmer, is made up of pianist

Fred Hersch
pianob.1955

Ray Drummond
bassb.1946

Akira Tana
drumsb.1952
The passionate, exotic tones and wistful, bittersweet recollections of "And Now There's You" and "Three Little Words" contribute a great deal to that aesthetic. Sultry shadows cast by these pieces lay heavy over the entirety of Farmer's effort, set into place by its gorgeous cover art.
Simple as it would have been to use the flugelhorn's mellow tones to meander through Benny Golson's doleful "Sad To Say," Farmer instead decided to shake things up, utilizing a mute for the song. Those little touches, much like the deliberate caribbean undertones of "Eclypso," carry the momentum of Warm Valley through to its title track, which serves as a curtain call. The quartet furnishes

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974

Yesterday's Thoughts
East Wind Records
1975
The same quartet heard on The Summer Knows first convened at Vanguard Studios in New York City to record Yesterday's Thoughts. They would form for a third album (second chronologically) as well, titled To Duke With Love (East Wind, 1976). The strict Ellington theme of that album however, led to the players sounding more cramped. Their performances on Yesterday's Thoughts fit equally with its successor, albeit lacking such a masterpiece track as "The Summer Knows."
The quartet format gave Farmer the opportunity to take control of each song's tempo and temperament. His lyrical bent took off when he was alone at the stage front, and one can't help but feel that his propensity to surround himself with top-tier talent wasn't to some extent a double-edged sword.
Yesterday's Thoughts is a well-balanced 45-minute album full of little touches that have substantial impact. When Billy Higgins' cymbals drop out prior to Cedar Walton's piano solo during "What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life?," the effect is stirring. Placed within a more inexact recording, this method could easily prove amateurish or worse, jarring. With Higgins seated at the drum set however, a seemingly effortless use of silence offers more resonance than any of the wilder, more pulse-pounding moments he enjoys on the record.
The 1970s saw Art Farmer increasingly uninhibited by the outdated need for sub-four minute songs. Much as it was on The Summer Knows, he used the extra time to build atmosphere and gravity within his songs, rather than adhering to bland structure or ostentatious showmanship.

On The Road
Contemporary Records
1976
Sometimes there is no explaining why two perfectly capable musicians don't sound well together. Take Art Farmer and Steve Kuhn in the former's Sing Me Softly Of The Blues (Atlantic, 1965) for instance. Kuhn's piano seemed to be at odds with the flugelhornist, fighting him through tonal shifts throughout the album.
If a pair of musicians ever existed who should not sound well together, it is Art Farmer and

Art Pepper
saxophone, alto1925 - 1982
One can't help but wonder if Pepper brought pianist

Hampton Hawes
piano1928 - 1977

Ray Brown
bass, acoustic1926 - 2002

Shelly Manne
drums1920 - 1984
The album does have its share of faults. Art Pepper behaves himself far more than Art Pepper ever should, and there is some initial sense of anticipatory letdown when "Will You Still Be Mine?" closes On The Road and the usually explosive altoist quietly fades. Although Farmer's song choices are a bit too common, he does place some unique twists in his selections. After opening the album with "Downwind," a Hawes original, he and the pianist attack "My Funny Valentine" as a duet. Though usually one to own the melody in quartet performances, Farmer allows Hawes to amble through a rather orthodox rendition of the tired tune whilst his warm flugelhorn imbues it with some much needed murky atmosphere.
West coast musicians like Pepper, Hawes, and Manne offered an opportunity to hear Art Farmer in a slightly different context, as by this point in his life he split his time between New York and Europe. It's still Farmer, and he doesn't play up or down to anyone. But On The Road deserves more credit than it receives among his listeners.

Blame It On My Youth
Contemporary Records
1988
The late 1980s found Art Farmer just a little bit grayer but every bit the polished and perpetually reliable musician. The decade had seen some of his best output on numerous labels. He continued to seek connections which would challenge him, teaming up with european jazz groups, recording with string orchestras, and meeting his old friend, tenor saxophonist Clifford Jordan in the studio for five records. He and Jordan were an excellent team, and most of their work together manages to endure even through countless repetition.
Blame It On My Youth was the strongest outing Farmer had toward the end of his career. Aside from Jordan, the quintet was composed of then-rising stars of the era. Pianist

James Williams
piano1951 - 2004

Rufus Reid
bass, acousticb.1944

Victor Lewis
drumsb.1950
Fritz Pauer
pianob.1943
The album itself is captivating, At this point in their lives, Farmer and Jordan both had a firm grasp on their identities as musicians, and could structure their selections around the tone of their choosing. The flugelhornist later alluded to this in a 1995 interview when he stated "first comes the sound, and then you decide what you want to do with the sound...The identity is the individual, and that's what we start off with." It was evident that this outlook was second nature to these musicians, and Blame It On My Youth was as good as hard bop got in the 'eighties.

Art Farmer Quintet At Boomers
East Wind Records
1976
Art Farmer Quintet At Boomers may be the most contentious inclusion to this list, edging out nascent hard-bop era classics such as "Early Art" and "Modern Art." The flugelhornist wasn't particularly known for his live recordings, though he did record a handful. At Boomers is a rollicking good time, in an era when Art Farmer was better known for his balladry than fervent theatrics.
A caveat; At Boomers is a two piece set, recorded May 14 and 15, 1976 at the now-defunct Boomers jazz club on Bleeker Street in Manhattan.

Clifford Jordan
saxophone, tenor1931 - 1993
Depending upon the listeners viewpoint, At Boomers does share the same drawback as many live jazz albums. Due to the constraints of vinyl pressings, the two sets aren't presented in their entirety or in the order they likely were played in. Any banter from Farmer is absent. He was a reserved, soft-spoken artist, and likely said little more than the song titles and who composed them. Although unedited performances are somewhat rare, they present the clearest picture of what a jazz band was doing on any particular evening, placing listeners among the crowd rather than in their living rooms. Still, Art Farmer Quintet At Boomers is a fun jam session and a welcome reprieve from his more high-minded endeavors.

Silk Road
Arabesque Records
1996
In October of 1999, Art Farmer suffered heart failure, dying suddenly at the age of 71. As such, he could not have known that Silk Road (Arabesque, 1997) would be his final major work as a leader.
Farmer's studio recordings during the 1990s saw one very noteworthy change from his output of the previous decade. Dave Monette of Chicago had built him the first flumpet, a hybrid instrument combining the strengths of both a trumpet and flugelhorn. Farmer, upon being presented with this new instrument, would employ it exclusively during the remaining years of his life.
"It's a good horn," he stated simply. "It has a darker sound than the trumpet, but it has more projection than the flugelhorn does, so if you want to go up in the high register and really project, you can do it with the flumpet more than you can with the flugelhorn."
"But," he continued, "if you want to get a mellow sound like you can with the flugelhorn, you can do that with this, but you can't get a real mellow sound with the trumpet...It is demanding, but you get something for what you put into it. I like it better than the flugelhorn because of these qualities."
Silk Road is one of Farmer's longest studio albums, finishing in just under an hour. Despite the inclusion of two saxophonists, the production isn't a blowing session. The sextet instead focuses their efforts on the intimacy and intricacy of each piece, and are rewarded with such easygoing delights as "Ancient Evening" and

Don Braden
saxophone, tenorb.1963

Geoffrey Keezer
keyboardsb.1970

Hoagy Carmichael
piano1899 - 1981
Art Farmer was a reserved, stately gentleman; an artist whose contributions to the realm of jazz music couldn't possibly be counted on a discography or qualified with just a few eloquent words. His output spanned the full second half of the twentieth century, never waning in quality or commitment.
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