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Paul Desmond
Easy Living
featuring
Jim Hall
Cover: Good (*)...with original sleeve
Record: VG...tracks well...no noise...$18.00
SIDE 1
1) When Joanna Loved Me - Robert Wells/Jack Segal...5:36
2) That Old Feeling - S. Faith/L. Brown...5:43
3) Polka Dots and Moonbeams - Johnny Burke/James Van Heusen...5:47
4) Here's That Rainy Day - Johnny Burke/James Van Heusen...5:22
SIDE 2
1) Easy Living - Leo Rubin/Ralph Rainger...6:59
2) I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face - Alan Jay Lerner/Fredrick Loewe...4:14
3) Bewitched - Richard Rodgers/Lorenz Hart...6:19
4) Blues for Fun - Paul Desmond...6:20
Easy living is what you think somebody else has because he's loaded with money and has a
nice pad and stereo speakers and a complete set of Paul Desmond's
albums and good booze in the pantry and a beautiful girl who's madly in love with him and
tissues handy in case he sneezes.
Except he owes the bank; the rent is murder for penthouses; the guy who installed the stereo
has to come up once a month to adjust something; everybody's always "borrowing" his Desmond
records; hangovers get him down; the girl doesn't look so great without eye shadow and
lately keeps saying she's got to spend the weekend with her mother in the country and he
always sneezes faster than he can reach for the tissue box.
In fact, he knows that easy living is what you've got because you're listening to a Desmond
album right now. So easy living "is—a frame of mind.
The good life and the cool, sinuous sound of Paul Desmond's alto
saxophone are a matchless pair. Elegance "and refinement can make living that much easier
to take. They are an ever present part of the Desmond expression. Some musicians may convey
musical emotion with rawness, even violence. Paul is no less intense, but when he exults
there's a touch of gentlemanly polish and restraint. When he's down you raally know it,
but he doesn't drown his sorrows in beer—not even the best imported. No, it's the finest
Napoleon brandy, savored and sipped from a liter-sized crystal snifter.
Most of the songs in this collection have a torchy touch. A bit of sentiment, a hint of
sadness (bittersweet, but sweet) leaven the richness and beauty which mark the Desmond sound.
Easy living becomes that old feeling when Joanna loved you—or was it Audrey? No matter; the
feeling is there. The sadness of that inevitable, predicted rainy day or the bewilderment
that goes with bewitchment—these are part of the same sensation of nostalgia with a twinge
that time has not quite healed. It may have seemed unbearable then, but now it's easier to
take.
The memories of good things float comfortably on the velvety lushness of Paul's saxophone.
The soft-focus recollection of Polka Dots and Moonbeams is obviously longer ago than
the remembrance of one's beloved soon after parting, but the sentiment is the same. The
device of a key change for every chorus of I've Grown Accustomed to Her Face
parallels the step-by-step mental searching that one goes through in trying to recall the
image of one he loves.
A jaunty outlook goes with the easy life. The musicians, in the course of making these
recordings, had themselves a ball with a bouncy up-tempo blues. Blues for Fun, Paul calls it.
That it is—a happy counterpoint to the reflective moodiness of most of the other selections
in this album.
Jim Hall, the nonpareil of the guitar, and the equally tasteful Connie Kay on
drums are perfection as the mainstays of the Paul Desmond Quartet.
Aided on different occasions by bassists Gene Wright (of the
Paul Desmond Quartet), Gene Cherico (who was with
Stan Getz at the time of this recording session) and Percy Heath
(Connie's colleague in the Modern Jazz Quartet), they are as one
with Paul's conceptions and with each other.
Particularly in the interplay between Jim and Paul, there is a quality of mutual enhancement
which is rare, even in so interactional a music as jazz. Jim Hall, someone once said,
caresses a guitar like it'll caress back. The solo voices of the Quartet enjoy this kind of
musical sensitivity to each other. It's all part of why the living is easy around
Paul Desmond and Jim Hall, no matter what musical mood it
might be.
EASY LIVING Paul Desmond featuring Jim
Hall On RCA Victor Records Mono LPM-3480 Stereo LSP-3480
Produced by: George Avakian
Personnel:
Paul Desmond, alto sax/Jim Hall, guitar/Gene Wright, bass (on When Joanna Loved Me,
That Old Feeling and Easy Living); Gene Cherico, bass (on Polka Dots and Moonbeams and
Blues for Fun); Percy Heath, bass (on Here's That Rainy Day, I've Grown Accustomed to Her
Face and Bewitched) Connie Kay, drums
Recording Engineer: Ray Hall.
(*) Front/Back dingy with some water marks on back lower rear seam (left corner) slip but not broken -still solid
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