Sunday, 4 November 2018

Ralph Sutton born 4 November 1922



Ralph Earl Sutton (November 4, 1922 – December 30, 2001) was an American jazz pianist born in Hamburg, Missouri.

Ralph Sutton was one of the greatest stride pianist to emerge since World War II, with his only close competitors being the late Dick Wellstood and the very versatile Dick Hyman. Nearly alone in his 
generation, Sutton kept alive the piano styles of Fats Waller and 
James P. Johnson, not as mere museum pieces but as devices for exciting improvisations. Although sticking within the boundaries of his predecessors, Sutton infused the music with his own personality; few could match his powerful left hand.

Raised in the tiny village of Howell, Missouri (later destroyed when the government took the land for a TNT plant), Sutton trained in classical piano and played the organ in the Presbyterian church as a young boy. By the age of 11 was playing in his builder father's country dance band. As a teenage he would 
listen to the Harlem Rhythm radio show which first introduced him to "stride" piano; the style he would play for the rest of his life.

Jack Teagarden heard Sutton play around 1940 at a college and recruited him for his band. Sutton played with Teagarden until he was drafted into the Army in 1943. After the conclusion of World War II, in 1945, Sutton returned to St. Louis and worked with the Joe Schirmer Trio. Sutton then journeyed to New York rejoining Jack Teagarden's band. When he opened at the Famous Door on New York's 52nd street with Teagarden it helped put Sutton on the map, leading to a regular slot on Rudi Blesh's famed This Is Jazz radio
show, and to the formation of Sutton's own trio, featuring the fine New Orleans clarinettist Albert Nicholas.

In 1948, Sutton took on the select gig of intermission pianist at Eddie Condon's Greenwich Village club, where he stayed for eight years, also taking part in Condon's radio and TV shows, recording regularly and attracting international interest. In 1952 Sutton was asked to London to play the Royal Festival Hall. This was the start of his many European tours which would continue until his death.


                            

By 1956 Sutton had moved his family to San Francisco, where he continued his work as an intermission pianist and combo performer, also subbing for Earl Hines when the latter was on tour in Britain. He joined trumpeter Bob Scobey's bright Dixieland band, recorded 
yet more albums and seemed destined for a steady if locally 
confined career until the impresario Dick Gibson invited him to Colorado to play at a jazz party.

Here he met his second wife Sunnie, who operated the Rendevous club in the ski resort of Aspen. With the help of bassist Milt Hinton and drummer Gus Johnson, Sutton turned it into a jazz centre, attracting star players like Ruby Braff, and appeared himself as part of the World's Greatest Jazz Band. While the WGJB's working title may have seemed over-blown to some, the all-star line-up produced a marvellous sound, bolstered by bassist Bob Haggart's superior arrangements, many of pop songs rather than of the usual Dixieland staples.

Sutton visited Britain several times with the group, stunning audiences with numbers like a hard-swinging version of Honky Tonk Train Blues, but in 1974 he left the WGJB to freelance, touring America and Europe, recording for labels like Sackville and appearing regularly at festivals. In 1979, in an inspired move, he teamed up with keyboard veteran Jay McShann as The Last of the Whorehouse Piano Players, the two men producing some of the most rumbustious and lively music on the planet. His biography, Loose Shoes By Shacter, appeared in 1994.

Despite suffering a stroke in the early '90s, Sutton kept a busy schedule through the mid-'90s, playing at jazz parties and festivals.

He died suddenly on December 29, 2001, in his car outside a restaurant in Evergreen, CO. Although he would have received much greater fame if he had been born 20 years earlier and come to maturity during the 1930s rather than the 1950s, at the time of his death it was obvious that Ralph Sutton had earned his place among the top classic jazz pianists of all time.

 (Compiled and edited from Wikipedia, George Borgman blog, AllMusic & The Guardian)

Ralph plays two of his favourite tunes: Love Lies & Viper's Drag. Jerry Cherry from St Louis is on the bass at the 1994 Mid-America Jazz Festival in St. Louis.

3 comments:

  1. For “Ralph Sutton - Oh Baby: Solo Piano” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/9151596/Ralph_Sutton_-_Oh_Baby.rar.html

    1. Down Home Rag
    2. Harlem Drag
    3. Jelly Roll Blues
    4. Cannon Ball Blues
    5. Black Bottom Stomp
    6. Cataract Rag
    7. Shoe Shine Boy
    8. Christopher Columbus
    9. Hindustan
    10. Villain
    11. Frog Legs Rag
    12. Chromatic Rag
    13. Grace and Beauty
    14. The Cascades
    15. Black and White Rag
    16. Three Little Words
    17. No Local Stops
    18. Oh Baby
    19. Concentrating
    20. Drop Me Off in Harlem
    21. Morning Air
    22. Blues for Chuck
    23. African Ripples

    AllMusic Review by Scott Yanow
    Ralph Sutton was one of the greatest stride pianists of all time and arguably the finest stride pianist to emerge after World War II. He loved the music of James P. Johnson, Fats Waller, and Willie "The Lion" Smith, and was able to emulate them while being a powerful force himself. Oh Baby has two of his earliest record dates. The first 15 selections were recorded in November 1949 and they are a bit different than expected. Instead of stride classics, Sutton is mostly heard playing ragtime pieces along with a few Jelly Roll Morton numbers and a touch of swing. At the time he was helping out Rudi Blesh and Harriet Janis with their upcoming book, They All Played Ragtime, by sight-reading some rags that had been largely unheard for decades. Although Sutton never liked to be called a ragtime pianist since he was more of an improviser, he does a very good job on such pieces as "Cataract Rag," "Frog Legs Rag," and "Grace and Beauty," while swinging up a storm. The remainder of Oh Baby is from a British LP (recorded in Switzerland) from 1952. Although the ten selections are pretty concise (none exceed three minutes), they are more in the stride style that was typical of the brilliant Sutton. He romps through such songs as "Three Little Words," "Drop Me Off in Harlem," and "African Ripples" in addition to playing three pieces by Willie "The Lion" Smith. This set is highly recommended both for its historic value and for being so enjoyable.

    For “Ralph Sutton With Ted Easton Jazz Band” (1975) go here:

    https://www3.zippyshare.com/v/lmE7et3W/file.html

    1. I'll Be a Friend with Pleasure
    2. Curse of An Aching Heart
    3. Blues in My Heart
    4. South Rampart Street Parade
    5. Sunshine of Love
    6. Blue Turning Grey Over You
    7. Ain't Misbehavin'
    8. Sheik of Araby
    9. Emaline
    10. Keepin' Out of Mischief Now
    11. I'm Gonna Sit Right Down and Write Myself a Letter
    12. Honky Tonk Train Blues

    Personnel: Ralph Sutton (piano); Frits Kaatee (clarinet, tenor saxophone); Bob Wulffers (trumpet); Henk VanMuyen (trombone); Ted Easton (drums).

    Thanks to egroj @ egrojworld blog for original post.

    Review by Scott Yanow
    The great stride pianist Ralph Sutton was in Europe when he recorded this live concert with Dutch drummer Ted Easton's quintet. The repertoire is mostly filled with Dixieland and New Orleans warhorses (the exceptions are Benny Carter's "Blues in My Heart," "Sunshine of Love," and "Emaline"), but the musicians make the music sound fresh and generally exciting. Sutton, who was always very consistent, excels as usual and there are fine solos along the way by trumpeter Bob Wulffers, trombonist Henk Van Muyen, and clarinetist Frits Kaatee. Highlights include "I'll Be a Friend With Pleasure," "South Rampart Street Parade," "Emaline," and "Honky Tonk Train Blues," the latter one of four unaccompanied Sutton piano solos. An excellent Dixieland date from the mid-'70s; the 1975 date is an educated guess.

    ReplyDelete
  2. As a bonus and seeing that the Festive Season is near, here’s Ralph Sutton as part of the Worls Greatest Jazzband with some Christman Cheer.

    For”The World's Greatest Jazzband - Hark The Herald Angels Swing (1972)” go here:

    https://www.upload.ee/files/9151382/TWGJ_-Christmas.rar.html

    01. Hark The Herald Angels Swing
    02. Little Drummer Boy
    03. Rudolph The Red Nosed Reindeer
    04. Silent Night
    05. Joy To The World
    06. Jingle Bells
    07. White Christmas
    08. I'll Be Home For Christmas
    09. The Christmas Song
    10. Winter Wonderland
    11. Deck The Halls

    Personnel:
    Yank Lawson - Trumpet
    Bob Haggart - Bass
    Billy Butterfield - Trumpet
    Bud Freeman - Tenor Sax
    Vic Dickenson - Trombone
    Rulh Sutton - Piano
    Bob Wilber - Clarinet & Soprano Sax
    Eddie Hubble - Trombone
    Gus Johnson – Drums

    This is one of the happier Christmas jazz LPs ever released. Although barely 32 minutes, this outing by the World's Greatest Jazz Band is filled with delightful performances of Yuletide favorites including "Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer," "Joy to the World," "Jingle Bells," and "Winter Wonderland," showing that many Christmas songs lend themselves well to Dixieland. The hot music is performed by trumpeters Yank Lawson and Billy Butterfield, trombonists Vic Dickenson and Eddie Hubble, Bob Wilber on clarinet and soprano, tenor saxophonist Bud Freeman, pianist Ralph Sutton, bassist Bob Haggart, and drummer Gus Johnson. Recommended. ---Scott Yanow, Rovi

    Thanks to bluesever @ theblues-thatjazz.com for original post.

    ReplyDelete