RLP12-455
CANNONBALL’S BOSSA NOVA
CANNONBALL ADDERLEY AND THE BOSSA RIO SEXTET
Julian “Cannonball” Adderley (as) with Sergio Mendes (p) Durval Ferreira (g) Octavio Bailly, Jr. (b)
Don Um Romao (drs) Pedro Paulo (tp) Paulo Moura (as)
(Paulo and Moura do not play on Clouds, Corcovado and Groovy Samba)
Plaza Sound Studio, NYC; December 1962
SIDE 1
Clouds (4:49) (Durva Ferreira)
Minha Saudade (2:20) (Joao Donato)
Corcovado (6:42) (Antonio Carlos Jobim)
Batida Diferente (3:25) (Mauricio Einhorn)
SIDE 2
Joyce’s Samba (3:10) (Ferreira and Einhorn)
Groovy Samba (4:58) (Sergio Mendes)
O Amor Em, Paz (7:46) (Antonio Carlos Jobim)
Sambop (3:32) (Ferreira and Paulo Moura)
This album, which uniquely combines the talents of an outstanding jazz star with those of an exciting group young Brazilians, is not only a most fascinating presentation of that irresistible Latin music known as bossa nova. It is also something truly unusual.
Considering how many different combinations and variations have been offered to the public since this latest South American rhythm came surging northward, unusualness is no small claim to make for a bossa nova recording. A great many North American instrumentalists and singers have tried their hands at it (one of the first and most successful, incidentally, being Riverside guitarist Charlie Byrd). South American records have been issued here; individual Brazilian guest stars have been feature with strictly-U.S.A. groups; and so on. Nevertheless, it seems quite accurate to state that there is nothing like this particular album, on which the brilliant alto saxophone of Cannonball Adderley is so ably supported by Sergio Mendes’ Bossa Rio Group.
From the evidence on this record – beginning with Cannonball’s first soaring notes on the haunting Clouds – it would almost seem that bossa nova was created to be played by Adderley. Or at least to be played by him with the accompaniment he has here. And the key to the success of this intriguing merger is – from both directions – jazz. One notable feature of the vast popularity of bossa nova in this country has been the way in which it has been adopted by jazz artists, who have been its most effective exponents. On the other hand, as musicians who have toured in South America have discovered, the recent influence of our jazz on the music of that continent (and especially in Brazil) has been extremely strong. One result of this has been the emergence of such a group as the highly jazz-indoctorinated Bossa Rio.
So, one night at Birdland when I found Cannonball surrounded by a half-dozen eager young men, they turned out to be not (as it first seemed) local fans, but Brazilian musicians. The Bossa Rio had come to New York only for a single concert appearance, but their enthusiasm for his music led Cannon to quickly arrange for a private hearing of their music. He was immediately taken with the idea of recording with them, a suggestion that they welcomed wildly.
Adderley’s approach here is to deal entirely with Brazilian material – he swiftly rejected as artificial any thought of twisting either pop standards or jazz originals into a bossa nova format. However, jazz is obviously and happily implicit throughout the album – not only because of the presence of Cannonball but also because of the musical nature of the Bossa Rio group, which includes a drummer who had a lot of New York drummers talking to themselves and is led by a pianist who would seem to have done a lot of valuable listening to Horace Silver discs (and who kept asking me for copies of Bill Evans albums).
Thus the two elements involved in this merger found their highly effective common meeting ground: Adderley moving towards the young Brazilians by utilizing their kind of material (especially, five of the numbers are partly or entirely written by members of the band), and they moving towards him through their admiration for him and through their own rather remarkable jazz spirit and ability. It comes closest to a “pure” jazz feeling on a tune like Mendes’ soulfully swinging Groovy Samba; it reaches a universally appealing lyricism on selections like guitarist Ferreira’s Clouds and Antonio Carlos Jobim’s Corcovado. And at all times it offers thoroughly enjoyable examples of the adventure described by the title of another of Ferreira’s compositions: and intriguing encounter with a “Batida difference” – a truly “different beat”.
ORRIN KEEPNEWS
Cannonball can be heard with his own celebrated group on such Riverside albums as –
Jazz Workshop Revisited (containing The Jive Samba) (444; Stereo 9444)
Cannonball Adderley Sestet in New York (401; Stereo 9401)
Cannonball Adderley Quintet – Plus (388; Stereo 9388)
Cannonball Adderley Quintet at The Lighthouse (344; Stereo 9344)
Them Dirty Blues (322; Stereo 1170)
Cannonball Adderley Quintet in San Francisco (311; Stereo 1157)
Other outstanding Addreley LPs include –
Know What I Mean? – with Bill Evans (433; Stereo 9433)
African Waltz (377; Stereo 9377)
This recording is available in Stereophonic (RS 9455) and Monaural (RM 455) form
A Junat Production
Recording Engineer: RAY FOWLER
Recorded at Plaza Sound Studios (New York City)
Album Design: KEN DEARDOFF
Back-liner photo by RON KASS
RIVERSIDE RECORDS are produced by BILL GRAUER PRODUCTIONS, Inc.
235 West 46th Street New York City 36, New York