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Fifty Years to Swing Ya Mother...
Published: June 7, 2004
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Two artists who appeared at the first Newport in 1954 will return five decades later for featured spotlights: Saxophonist Lee Konitz will lead a trio with bassist Drew Gress and drummer Billy Drummond, and bassist Percy Heath will appear with brothers Albert (a/k/a “Tootie,” drums) and tenor Jimmy, plus pianist Jeb Patton, as the Heath Brothers. Dave Brubeck will open the Festival, performing “The Gates of Justice” to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the passage of the US civil rights bill. Brubeck has performed at more Newports than any other artist. There IS one person who has seen more Newports than Brubeck, Festival founder and producer George Wein. In addition to overseeing the Festival events, Wein has also compiled and annotated, with an introductory essay, the three-CD anniversary retrospective Happy Birthday Newport: 50 Swinging Years! with Columbia / Legacy. Fortunate to be reflecting on his life’s work while still engaged in it, Wein’s perspective on the music on Happy Birthday Newport! is both personal and historical: Through Wein’s foresight, persistence, hard work and good fortune, this chronology of Newport circumscribes the history of jazz through the second half of the 20th century. Disc one presents the legendary 1956 Duke Ellington & His Orchestra performance that remains one of Newport’s most famous moments, Paul Gonsalves’ 27 chorus tenor saxophone solo that transitions “Diminuendo in Blue” into “Crescendo in Blue.” Here’s what “27 choruses” means: Gonsalves jumps in about four minutes into “Diminuendo” and stops soloing at about ten minutes (way) out in “Crescendo”…and THEN he jumps back in for the closing choruses! This really must have been amazing to witness in person. Count Basie & Orchestra, most notably saxophonists Frank Foster and Frank Wess and guitarist Freddie Green, rock “One o’Clock Jump” hard and fast but pause just long enough to pick up featured guests Roy Eldridge, Lester Young and Illinois Jacquet, and Jo Jones for the ride. Muddy Waters closes disc one where Pops opened it, with the primal blues – “Tiger in Your Tank” led by pianist Otis Spann and harmonica howler James Cotton. (You can also hear George Wein on disc one, as pianist with Ruby Braff, Bud Freeman, Wendell Marshall and Roy Haynes as the Newport All-Stars, on “Just You, Just Me.”)
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Among these special events: Clark Terry, Phil Woods, James Moody, Ken Peplowski, Ron Carter and Jackie McLean will join the Jon Faddis Jazz Orchestra salute to Dizzy Gillespie, Charlie Parker, Benny Goodman and Count Basie; Terry will also join James Carter, Gary Burton, Regina Carter and Nicholas Payton for a salute to Duke Ellington, Thelonious Monk and Louis Armstrong from the Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra, directed by Wynton Marsalis; and “John Coltrane Remembered,” led by Michael Brecker, Roy Haynes, Christian McBride, ‘Trane’s son Ravi Coltrane and ‘Trane’s longtime pianist McCoy Tyner.
Louis Armstrong dominates this first disc. He sings “Mack the Knife” and “On the Sunny Side of the Street” gloriously and opens the compilation with the staggeringly slow instrumental “Tin Roof Blues,” which he carves up with his trumpet like a surgeon wielding a white-hot scalpel.

