Home » Jazz Articles » Multiple Reviews » Vintage Dolphy
Vintage Dolphy
By

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Gunther Schuller
composer / conductor1925 - 2015

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955
These are important recordings that amount to much more than any number of radio shots from Dolphy's European tours. If anything, their relevance has been enhanced by the recent Resonance Records release of The Musical Prophet: The Expanded 1963 New York Studio Sessions. The tracks recorded by Alan Douglas in July 1963 and later released as Conversations (1963) and Iron Man (1968) connect in several ways with the Vintage Dolphy performances. Indeed, the latter informs and enhances our understanding and appreciation of the Resonance set.

..."to unite discerning and open-minded listeners with accomplished, innovative composers and musicians who might otherwise go unrecorded."
Schuller's championing of

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

George Russell
composer / conductor1923 - 2009

Charles Mingus
bass, acoustic1922 - 1979

Charlie Parker
saxophone, alto1920 - 1955

Dizzy Gillespie
trumpet1917 - 1993

Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone1927 - 1996

John Carisi
trumpet1922 - 1992
The Schuller recordings feature three of the tunes performed in quartet that would later feature strongly on the Douglas releases"Iron Man," "Ode to Charlie Parker" and "Half Note Triplets." The last of these was retitled as "Burning Spear" in tribute to Jomo Kenyatta, the newly appointed first Prime Minister of Kenya, an event that was a triumph for African nationalism. While these sides give far more assured and developed readings of these pieces, the Vintage Dolphy versions clearly informed the later versions. As to the Schuller pieces, these suggest possible links to the ways in which Dolphy approached the Resonance/Douglas numbers and the musical devices and approaches he used.
Beginning with the thirteen minute jam session, this is a perfectly acceptable example of the time-honoured format.

Phil Woods
saxophone, alto1931 - 2015

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Coleman Hawkins
saxophone, tenor1904 - 1969

Jimmy Knepper
trombone1927 - 2003

Don Ellis
trumpet1934 - 1978
Of the quartet tracks, "Half Note Triplets" is first up. It is a contained, structured piece of music-making featuring a beautifully concise bass clarinet solo from Dolphy and a good solo from trumpeter Edward Armour, whom Dolphy knew through Mingus' band. Though it feels like a work in progress, it is organized in three partsa two-part theme contrasting slow and fast passages, followed by the solos with their powerful sense of release and finally a return to the two themes. In this setting, its very succinctness and clearly-defined structure are what makes it work.
On the Musical Prophet performance, though only another four minutes longer and now titled "Burning Spear," it has become something much wilder but also more clearly compositional. It is not just the series of solosDolphy,

Woody Shaw
trumpet1944 - 1989

Bobby Hutcherson
vibraphone1941 - 2016
Eddie Khan
bass, acousticb.1935

Richard Davis
bass, acoustic1930 - 2023

That was in April 1963. By early July, "Ode to Charlie Parker" has been transformed into a flute/bass duet. This is one of four such duets on the Resonance release, though "Muses for Richard Davis" was until this point unissued. Incidentally, it is incorrectly attributed to Dolphy in the booklet accompanying the three CD set. Dolphy makes it quite clear in his announcement of the tune at Carnegie Hall that it is a tune by

Jaki Byard
piano1922 - 1999
That leaves "Iron Man." It opens with an eight bar introduction that is then repeated with variations from Dolphy. This by far the most confident of the Vintage Dolphy quartet tracks. Drummer
J.C. Moses
drumsb.1936


Woody Shaw
trumpet1944 - 1989

Bobby Hutcherson
vibraphone1941 - 2016
Eddie Khan
bass, acousticb.1935
However, Vintage Dolphy has other stories to tell and does so through the four third stream compositions from Schuller. These tell us a lot about Dolphy's talent is ability to work within situations devised by others. It is also possible that Schuller's use of Dolphy in this context might also have reflected the former's awareness of the young musician's wider musical potential.
Two of the Schuller pieces on Vintage Dolphy"Variations on a Theme by Thelonious Monk (Criss Cross)" and "Abstraction"had been recorded previously on Jazz Abstractions (Atlantic). That recording took place in December 1960 but both were premiered in New York in May of that year. The latter had featured Ornette Coleman, while the former had featured both Coleman and Dolphy. Martin Williams suggests in his sleevenotes to Vintage Dolphy that, with "Abstraction," Coleman "sensed" and "sized up" Schuller's composition and then "ran a parallel course to it" in his improvisation. Dolphy, on the other hand on Vintage Dolphy, gets inside the piece, his improvisation becoming an integral part of the composition. This same sense is apparent on the later of the two versions of "Variations on a Theme" and also on "Densities" and "Night Music." Dolphy's playing elaborates upon the composer's intentions fully realising its promise.
There are two particular techniques that Schuller deploys on "Variations on a Theme" that are relevant to consideration of the Alan Douglas sides. In "Variant I," Schuller has the soloists "overlapping" in a "Relay" format, so that "one soloist's last chorus is the next soloist's first chorus." Dolphy uses the same technique, most notably, on "Iron Man" and "Burning Spear." If anything, he even extends the sonic possibilities introduced by Schuller by prolonging the overlapping of the two improvisers, albeit with one shadowing the other. This is a good example of how, in jazz, the line between improvisation and composition is frequently blurred.
The other technique that Schuller uses that is also relevant to Musical Prophet occurs in "Variant III," when the composer has Dolphy on bass clarinet duet with

Scott LaFaro
bass1936 - 1961

Ron Carter
bassb.1937
However, it is also worth suggesting that Dolphy's use of vibes on the Douglas recordings and on his masterpiece, Out To Lunch, might have owed something to his experience playing the Schuller pieces on Jazz Abstractions and Vintage Dolphy, which featured

Eddie Costa
piano1930 - 1962

Warren Chiasson
vibraphoneb.1934
The use of Bobby Hutcherson on Conversations, Iron Man and Out To Lunch certainly gave Dolphy much more space and freedom as an improviser but also allowed for compositions that were more open and unpredictable. Whether or not the experience of vibes in the context of the Schuller performances, the decision to use Hutcherson certainly proved creatively fortuitous for Dolphy and it is worth considering the possibility of a connection.


Misha Mengelberg
piano1935 - 2017
Interestingly, Conversations and Iron Man feature only three Dolphy pieces. Listening to Out To Lunch after the Resonance box set and Vintage Dolphy, the sense that he was finally realising his potential as a composer is both heartening and saddening. The five Dolphy tunes on Out To Lunch reveal a composer truly reaching for something. One can certainly hear the influence of European Art Music on the recordnotably Kurt Weil, Stravinsky, Alban Bergbut these are integrated timbrally, harmonically and rhythmically in a jazz context that is quite profound. One might add, coming from a different perspective, that the discursive, narrative structure of these pieces owes much to African musical traditions, albeit refracted through African-American experience, and that Dolphy's success lay in the way he fashions something wholly new from such stimuli. In a way, Vintage Dolphy points the way to both The Musical Prophet and Out To Lunch. These three sets say that there should have been, could have been so much more. But let's be grateful for what there is.
* The title of the Varèse piece relates to the density of platinum and referred to the platinum flute of flautist George Barrère, who first performed it. I have no idea whether or how the title of Schuller's composition, "Densities," performed by Dolphy on Vintage Dolphy, relates to Varèse's piece. However, Varèse spoke of "Density 21.5" in terms of the emergence of "shapes of sound." I can think of no better description of Dolphy's playing on his three instruments.
Tags
Eric Dolphy
Extended Analysis
Duncan Heining
Vintage Dolphy
GM Recordings
Eric Dolphy
Gunther Schuller
Charlie Parker
Ornette Coleman
George Russell
Charles Mingus
Dizzy Gillespie
Gerry Mulligan
John Carisi
Phil Woods
benny golson
Coleman Hawkins
Jimmy Knepper
Don Ellis
Edward Armour
Woody Shaw
Bobby Hutcherson
Eddie Khan
Richard Davis
Jaki Byard
J.C. Moses
Eddie Khan
Scott LaFaro
Ron Carter
Eddie Costa
Warren Chiasson
Misha Mengelberg
Comments
PREVIOUS / NEXT
Support All About Jazz
