Tuesday, 2 February 2021

Sonny Stitt born 2 February 1924

Sonny Stitt  (February 2, 1924 – July 22, 1982), was an American jazz saxophonist of the bebop idiom. He was also one of the most prolific saxophonists, recording over 100 records in his lifetime. He was nicknamed the “Lone Wolf” by jazz critic Dan Morgenstern, due to his relentless touring and his devotion to jazz. 

Edward Boatner Jr. was born in Boston on 2 February 1924.  It was a musical and religious household but a few years later his parents divorced and after his mother married Robert Stitt, Edward became known as Sonny Stitt. He studied the piano and clarinet and had saxophone lessons from Big Nick Nicholas who later sat in Tiny Bradshaw’s sax section with him. Wardell Gray was another of his tutors. His early instrumental influences at that time were Rudy Williams and Benny Goodman. The Stitts were living in Saginaw, Michigan and both Nicholas and Gray often stayed in the Stitt home when they worked locally because Saginaw’s only hotel did not accommodate African-Americans. 

In 1943, Stitt met Charlie Parker. As he often recalled, the two men had similar styles. Parker is alleged to have remarked, "Well, I'll be damned, you sound just like me", to which Stitt responded, "Well, I can't help the way I sound. It's the only way I know how to play." His earliest recordings were from 1945, with Stan Getz and Dizzy Gillespie. He had also experienced playing in some swing bands, though he mainly played in bop bands. Stitt featured in Tiny Bradshaw's big band in the early forties. 

Stitt played alto saxophone in Billy Eckstine's big band alongside future bop pioneers Dexter Gordon and Gene Ammons from 1945 until 1949, when he started to play tenor saxophone more frequently. Later on, he notably played with Gene Ammons and Bud Powell. During 1948 Stitt spent time in a Lexington prison on account of selling narcotics. 

Stitt, when playing tenor saxophone, seemed to break free from some of the criticism that he was apeing jazz genius Charlie Parker's style. When alto saxophonist Gene Quill was criticised for playing too similar to Parker once by a jazz writer he retorted, “You try imitating Charlie Parker!” Indeed, Stitt began to develop a far more distinctive sound on tenor. He played with other bop musicians Bud Powell and Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, a fellow tenor with a distinctly tough tone in comparison to Stitt, in the 1950s and recorded several albums for the burgeoning Prestige Records label as well as for Argo, Verve and Roost. Stitt's playing is said to be at its zenith on these now rare records. Stitt experimented with Afro-Cuban jazz in the late 1950s, and the results can be heard on his recordings for Roost and Verve, on which he teamed up with Thad Jones and Chick Corea for Latin versions of such standards as “Autumn Leaves.” 

Stitt joined Miles Davis briefly in 1960, and his sole performance with the 1960 quintet is on the record Live at Stockholm, which featured Wynton Kelly, Jimmy Cobb and Paul Chambers. However, Miles fired him due to the excessive drinking habit he had developed, and replaced him with fellow tenor saxophonist Hank Mobley. Stitt, later in the 1960s paid homage to one of his main influences, Charlie Parker, on the seminal cut “Stitt Plays Bird”, which features Jim Hall on guitar. 


                               

He recorded a number of memorable records with his friend and fellow saxophonist Gene Ammons. The records recorded by these two saxophonists are regarded by many as some of both Ammons and Stitt's best work, thus the Ammons/Stitt partnership went down in posterity of the best duelling partnerships in jazz, alongside Zoot Sims & Al Cohn, and Johnny Griffin with Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis. Stitt would venture into soul jazz, and he recorded with fellow tenor great Booker Ervin in 1964 on the enjoyable Soul People album. Stitt would also record with Duke Ellington alumnus Paul Gonsalves during the 1960's. 

In the 1970s, Stitt slowed his recording output, though not by much and in 1972, he produced another classic, Tune Up, which was and still is regarded by many jazz critics, such as Scott Yanow, as his definitive record. Indeed, his fiery and ebullient soloing was quite reminiscent of his earlier playing. Stitt was one of the first jazz musicians to experiment with an electric saxophone (the instrument was called a Varitone) in the late '60s. Because the device distorted Stitt's glorious, uncluttered, pure yet embodied sound, critics and Stitt followers were relieved when he eventually discarded the gratuitous gadget. 

Stitt, to his credit, never slowed down, joining the Giants of Jazz (which included Art Blakey, Dizzy Gillespie and Thelonious Monk) on some albums for the Mercury Records label, and recording sessions for Cobblestone and other labels. His last recordings were made in Japan. 

In 1981, Stitt had performed with George Duvivier and Jimmy Cobb, six weeks before his death when he suffered a heart attack and died on July 22, 1982 in Washington D.C. 

(Edited from All about Jazz, Jazz Profiles  & Wikipedia) 

4 comments:

  1. For “Sonny Stitt ‎– Four Classic Albums (Avid 2011)” go here:

    https://krakenfiles.com/view/e6fba52fec/file.html

    Saxophone Supremacy
    1-1 I Cover The Waterfront 3:14
    1-2 Lazy Bones 7:40
    1-3 Sunday 3:54
    1-4 Just Friends 3:47
    1-5 All Of Me 3:00
    1-6 Two Bad Days Blues 4:43
    1-7 It's You Or No One 4:30
    1-8 Blue Smile 4:06

    Personal Appearance
    1-9 Easy To Love 4:42
    1-10 Easy Living 4:47
    1-11 Autumn In New York 2:17
    1-12 You'd Be So Nice To Come Home To 4:49
    1-13 For Some Friends 4:41
    1-14 I Never Knew 4:24
    1-15 Between The Devil And The Deep Blue Sea 5:11
    1-16 East Of The Sun 5:28
    1-17 Original? 4:31
    1-18 Avalon 2:55
    2-1 Blues Greasy 3:21

    Sits In With The Oscar Peterson Trio
    2-2 I Can't Give You Anything But Love 4:03
    2-3 Au Privave 3:58
    2-4 The Gypsy 3:25
    2-5 I'll Remember April 4:41
    2-6 Scrapple From The Apple 4:19
    2-7 Moten Swing 7:08
    2-8 Blues For Pres, Sweets, Ben And All The Other Funky Ones 6:04
    2-9 Easy Does It 5:22

    The Battle Of Birdland
    2-10 Marchin' 8:50
    2-11 S.O.S. 7:59
    2-12 Jaws 10:05
    2-13 I Can't Get Started 7:30

    Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Sonny Stitt
    Bass – Edgar Willis, Leroy Vinnegar, Ray Brown
    Drums – Charlie Rice, Ed Thigpen, Kenny Dennis, Mel Lewis
    Organ – Doc Bagby
    Piano – Bobby Timmons, Lou Levy, Oscar Peterson
    Tenor Saxophone – Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis

    Four original LP's digitally re-mastered on 2CDs.

    "Saxophone Supremacy" recorded 21, 23 December 1959, Los Angeles.
    "Personal Appearance" recorded 12 May 1957, New York.
    "Sits In With The Oscar Peterson Trio" recorded 18 May 1959, Paris.
    "The Battle Of Birdland" recorded one Sunday night in 1954, Birdland, New York.

    Arguably never quite in the top league alongside the likes of Charlie Parker (his great influence), Lester Young, Benny Carter, Ben Webster and John Coltrane, nevertheless the great alto saxophonist Sonny Stitt is a welcome addition to Avids “classic album” series. Across four wonderfully diverse albums we find Sonny amongst four jazz quartets all discovering something new about each other along their musical journey. “Saxophone Supremacy” finds Sonny alongside Lou Levy on piano, Leroy Vinegar on bass and Mel Lewis on drums. For “Personal Appearance” he is joined by Bobby Timmins on piano, Edgar Willis on bass and Kenny Dennis on drums. “The Battle Of Birdland” recorded one Sunday night at New York’s famed Birdland club, Sonny teams up with fellow sax titan Eddie Davis for a supercharged blowing session alongside Doc Bagby and Charlie Rice. Finally Sonny joins the Oscar Peterson Trio for a 1959 date “Sits In With The Oscar Peterson Trio” paying tribute to amongst others, his great influence Charlie Parker, Sweets Edison, Ben Wbster, Louis Armstrong and Count Basie. All four albums have been digitally re-mastered for probably the finest ever sound quality! (Avid notes)

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  2. Great player. Thank you. Sits in with OP was one of the first jazz albums I ever owned. Now I have a multitude.

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  3. Hi!

    Thanx for these. Very good Jazz.

    Cheers!
    Ciao! For now.
    rntcj

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  4. I only had one of the albums here today, so welcome the other 3, thanks for posting.

    ReplyDelete