Ellington
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Al Jarreau & NDR Bigband — Ellington
Release date : Nov. 01, 2024
Label : ACT
Tracklist:
  1. Drop Me Off in Harlem
  2. I Let a Song Go Out of My Heart
  3. Lush Life
  4. In a Mellow Tone
  5. Take the “A” Train
  6. I’m Beginning to See the Light
  7. Sophisticated Lady
  8. I Ain’t Got Nothing but the Blues
  9. I Got It Bad (and that Ain’t Good)
  10. Satin Doll

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Al Jarreau always said he sang Al Jarreau music, and he truly was one of a kind: his six Grammy awards and nineteen nominations as ‘Best Vocalist’ cover no fewer than three categories – jazz, pop and R&B – in other words, musical genres didn’t really con- cern him. “Music may well fall into categories for other people, and I understand that,” he said, “but for me, if I like a song, I have to do it, and that’s that. If you come to my concerts, I sit on your shoulder and whisper in your ear. I open minds and walk through many doors.” This kind of rich, descriptive imagery evokes the flights of vo- cal fantasy which his singing was capable of at any mo- ment. He could suddenly take a song in new and unex- pected directions. He used to explain it thus: “If there is a backbone to what I do, it’s the jazz vernacular.”

Music, sounds and rhythm seemed to flow through him, and no wonder. Born in 1940 into a musical fam- ily, he was an above-average student, graduating with a Bachelor Of Science degree in Psychology and subse- quently a Master’s Degree in Vocational Rehabilitation. And yet music was never far from him. Joining a trio led by pianist George Duke by the late 1960s, he was work- ing towards making singing a full-time vocation in Los Angeles nightspots such as Dino’s and the Troubadour.

It was at this point that Siggi Loch, who back then was a high-flying executive at Warner Brothers Rec- ords (WEA), and who later went on to found ACT Records, first heard him. “I saw Al Jarreau for the first time in the Troubadour in Los Angeles in 1974 and was instantly hooked by his voice and his stage presence,” he recalls. “The next day I went to see Mo Ostin, President of Warner Bros. Records, to convince him to sign him.” After encountering initial resistance, Loch was given the go-ahead and Jarreau’s debut album for WEA, “We Got By”, was released in 1975. “I brought Al over to Germany before he had any success in the U.S.,” continues Loch. “Al performed for three nights at the legendary club “Onkel Pö” in Hamburg and I managed to convince Mi- chael Naura, the head of jazz at NDR to record the third night for live TV broadcast.” That show made Al famous in Germany overnight, and ever since that moment, he has always had a special place in the hearts of German audiences.

“We Got By” won the German Record Critics’ Award and his first German tour sold out large con- cert halls. It was followed by “Glow” (1976), which again was well-received in Europe, winning a second German Record Critics’ Award, but did not do so well in the United States, “That was aimed at ‘smooth jazz’ audi- ences,” said Loch. “It didn’t capture Al in front of a live audience. So I requested that his next release had to be a live album. Mo Ostin reluctantly agreed,” and “Look to the Rainbow” was a huge success in Europe, “When it was released in the US it became Al’s breakthrough al- bum and won him his first Grammy, so it really is right to say that his career took off first of all in Germany!” says Loch.

Al Jarreau’s long association with NDR prompted Jörg Achim Keller, chief conductor of the NDR Bigband, to suggest a collaboration with the singer in 2016, “Doing a production with Al and Ellington’s mu- sic was something I had wanted to do since the early 2000 ́s,” he remembers. “Al’s reaction was very positive from the start.” Jörg prepared a list of some hundred El- lington titles and, as Jarreau later recalled, “We just went down the list, and it was a case of, ‘Oh, that one works for me,’ and ‘Let’s do this one as an old gut-bucket blues – what was important for me was to find myself in- side the music and maybe make a different kind of state- ment about Ellington so people could hear the music in a different way from anything they had heard before.”

In writing the charts, Jörg was careful to respect Jar- reau’s approach to the material by giving him space. Tracks such as ‘I’m Beginning to See the Light’ or ‘I Got It Bad (and that Ain’t Good)’ also give the band’s soloists headroom to give of their very best. “These are highly evolved, intelligent soloists who can play with anybody in the world,” said Jarreau. “They’re pushing me, and I love the push, and they’re making me sound like a real singer!”

Jarreau and the band toured the music during the latter part of 2016, “There was still some fine-tuning going on during the tour, from concert to concert,” Jörg added with a smile. “He loved doing those ballads – and each one had a different feel. ‘Come Sunday’ was very important to him, though. That chart was reworked twice before he was finally happy with it! On some songs, he went for a pure ballad style – ‘I Got It Bad (and that Ain’t Good),’ some tunes were put into a pop/R&B-bag (‘Lush Life,’ ‘Come Sunday’) and he loved that ‘old gutbucket blues’ feel of ‘I Ain’t Got Nothing but the Blues.’” Look- ing back on those sessions and tour, Jörg says, “It was Al’s style and personality that held it all together. The whole thing was a true combination of Jarreau’s and El- lington’s musical mastery – it appealed to audiences all over Europe, they loved the programme.” This feeling is echoed by Siggi Loch, who caught Jarreau with the NDR Bigband in Paris, “It was obvious that he really enjoyed performing this music and he did it with so much energy and emotion, it was a joy to see and hear. Sadly, Al was to pass away only a few months later.”

In many ways, “Ellington” closes a circle: it feels very right that Jarreau’s final album should be released on ACT, the label founded by Siggi Loch whose strong and unwavering advocacy for the singer originally set him on the road to superstardom. And the fact that it was rec- orded by broadcaster NDR and their in-house big band is a fitting reminder that this was the very broadcaster whose TV programme had once made Jarreau famous in Germany overnight. Furthermore, just like “Look to the Rainbow” which was Jarreau’s international breakthrough album, “Ellington” was also recorded live. Sometimes there are threads of connection between events which at first appear to be unrelated, and the result turns out to be not just special and magical, but also meaningful and deeply affecting. It certainly has done here.
STUART NICHOLSON

Al Jarreau vocals
NDR Bigband
Trumpets & flugelhorns Thorsten Benkenstein, Ingolf Burkhardt, Nicolas Boysen, Reiner Winterschladen
Saxophones Fiete Felsch, Björn Berger, Christof Lauer, Frank Delle, Tini Thomsen
Trombones Dan Gottshall, Günter Bollmann, Klaus Heidenreich, Stefan Lottermann, Ingo Lahme
Tuba Ingo Lahme
Piano, rhodes Hans Vroomans
E+A guitar Peter Tiehuis
E+A bass Christian Diener
Drums Wolfgang Haffner
Conductor & arranger Jörg Achim Keller Vocals arranger Joe Turano
European Tour 31.10. – 01.12.2016 produced by Karsten Jahnke
Recorded at Paradiso in Amsterdam, Netherlands, on 26 November 2016 and at the Opera Garnier in Monte Carlo, Monaco, on 29 No- vember 2016
Recorded by Stephan Leppkes and Jens Kunze
Recording Producer NDR: Oliver Bergner
Mixed by Oliver Bergner, Sven Kohlwage and Marc Schettler Mastered by Klaus Scheuermann
Al Jarreau featured courtesy of Craft Recordings
Photo by Dietmar Vogel
Cover art by Manfred Bockelmann
Executive producer NDR: Axel Dürr, Stefan Gerdes, Michael Dreyer All tracks arranged by Jörg Achim Keller