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 Count Basie
 A telling moment in this terrific Jazz Casual program occurs very early  on, when host Ralph J. Gleason asks Count Basie the name of the first piece that  the pianist-bandleader and his small group played. "I don't know," says Basie  with a laugh. He's not being flip. "I Don't Know," as it eventually became  known, is, like most of the other music Basie and company play here, nothing  more or less than a blues jam, improvised on the spot. The "casual" label has  never been more appropriate, as this 1968 performance finds Basie at his most  relaxed. He smokes a lot. He talks a lot: about the influence of Duke Ellington  and such legendary pianists as Fats Waller, Pete Johnson, and Meade Lux Lewis;  about the genesis of "One O'Clock Jump," the Basie band's signature tune; and  about his own playing style, which he self-effacingly calls "dated." And, best  of all, he plays a lot, accompanied by the superb rhythm section of Sonny Payne  on drums, Norman Keenan on bass, and the redoubtable Freddie Green on guitar. "I  never get tired of playing the blues," Basie tells Gleason, and in the hands of  these pros, you'll never get tired of listening to it. Basie's blues are  inimitable: effortlessly swinging, completely cool, at once laconic and driving,  danceable, humorous, just unmistakably right, with the rhythm players always on  the beat and Basie himself the master of what not to play. This is great stuff,  and highly recommended. --Sam Graham
   Dizzy GillespieJohn Birks "Dizzy" Gillespie--trumpeter, bandleader, entertainer--was 43 and  still at the peak of his powers when he appeared with his quintet on Ralph J.  Gleason's performance-interview TV program, Jazz Casual, in early 1961.  And while his style had become somewhat cooler since the days when he and  Charlie Parker led jazz's bebop revolution, this four-song set is as  identifiably Dizzy as his trademark up-tilted horn and ballooning cheeks. The  tunes, from Benny Golson's mid-tempo "Blues After Dark" to Dizzy's own  "Lorraine" (with an exotic, sinuous melody reminiscent of his more famous "Night  in Tunisia"), are invariably swinging, with fine solo turns by Gillespie,  saxophonist-flutist Leo Wright, and a pianist named Lalo Schifrin. That's the  same Lalo Schifrin who within a few short years would achieve pop music  immortality by composing the Mission: Impossible theme. --Sam  Graham
   John ColtraneIt might not seem like much: 30 minutes, three tunes, four musicians on a bare- bones soundstage. But this is John Coltrane, and any opportunity to see the  legendary saxophonist at work is something to be savored. That's especially true  with this January 1964 television performance. Some five years after his  membership in Miles Davis's immortal Kind of Blue group, he was well  past playing the usual standards and ballads; at the same time, he had yet to  explore the outer reaches of the avant-garde. Joined here by pianist McCoy  Tyner, bassist Jimmy Garrison, and drummer Elvin Jones--the classic Coltrane  quartet, and undoubtedly one of the most important and influential groups in  jazz history--he works his way through three numbers that were familiar  components of the Coltrane repertoire: Mongo Santamaria's "Afro Blue," which  finds Trane on soprano sax and features a typically dynamic Tyner solo;  "Alabama," a Coltrane original with a brooding, droning intro and conclusion  sandwiched around the middle section's slow, swinging groove; and "Impressions,"  the modal touchstone, which at nearly 14 minutes long gives all four musicians  plenty of room to stretch out.
   Playing the tenor horn here, Coltrane is typically restless and searching,  volcanic and commanding. It's not necessarily pretty, especially when he is  backed only by Jones's angry, explosive polyrhythms, but the power is  undeniable. The fact that Coltrane says nothing (all other Jazz Casual  guests were interviewed by host Ralph J. Gleason) is immaterial; what could he  say with his voice that he hadn't already said with his horn? --Sam  Graham
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