Although Maynard Ferguson's induction this year into
the Canadian Music Hall of Fame (announced last year but formally
presented at the recent Juno Awards) didn't attract a lot of
newfound attention to the Montreal-born trumpet player, it did
inspire this hastily put together compilation of his late 50s and
early 60s post-big band jazz.
That's not to say that there's anything but some of Ferguson's
best playing on this disc. In fact, tunes like Slide Hampton's Frame
for the Blues (from the 1968 album A Message From Newport)
and Lester Young's Stella by Starlight swing hard and
allow Ferguson to show off his upper-register talents.
For the most part the playing is tight, with Ferguson leading
several variations of his 13-piece band from the period, with the
likes of trombonist Slide Hampton, trumpeter Don Ellis and tenor
saxophonist Willie Maiden backing him up. A couple of tunes, for
example Leonard Bernstein's Maria and the Rodgers and
Hammerstein title track, even let Ferguson show some subtleties
in his playing without the constant competition for louder and
higher playing of the scores.
But this compilation seems less about showing a Maynard
Ferguson before Gonna Fly Now (you must have seen Rocky)
and more about getting out some music that would show Ferguson
closer to his Canadian roots. In fact, it seems a fairly blatant
attempt to capitalize on the Juno award by highlighting
Ferguson's brief Canadian career in relatively extensive liner
notes.
Clearly Ferguson's exposure to music at the tail end of the
big band era in Canada (he started playing lead trumpet in his
teens and even played in a group with Oscar Peterson at 13)
influenced his playing later on. But by the age of 21 Ferguson
departed for the United States, never to return and without a
surviving Canadian recording. The liner notes can't wait to jump
ahead to Ferguson's collaborations with band leaders like Jimmy
Dorsey and Stan Kenton.
Even Ferguson seemed surprised, in a thank-you note that
prefaces the liner notes of the disc, by the recognition from
this side of the border: "I have been very fortunate to have
won my share of musical awards, but it always has occurred to me,
nothing from Canada, where I grew up and received all of my
musical education - but maybe this makes this award all the
sweeter."
|