James Pasco Gourley, Jr. (June 9, 1926 – December 7, 2008) was an American jazz guitarist who spent most of his life in Paris.
Gourley was born in St. Louis in 1926. He met saxophonist Lee Konitz in Chicago when both were members of the same high school band. He credits Konitz with encouraging him to become a serious musician. Gourley's father started the Monarch Conservatory of Music in Hammond, Indiana, though he didn't teach, and he bought Gourley his first guitar.
Sacha Distel, Gourley & Henri Reymond |
Gourley took his first guitar classes at the school. He became interested in jazz while listening to the radio, enjoying in particular Nat King Cole. For his first professional experience as a performer, he dropped out of high school to play with a jazz band in Oklahoma City.
From 1944–1946, Gourley served in the U.S. Navy. After he returned to Chicago, he met guitarist Jimmy Raney and wanted to play like him. He worked in bars and clubs with Jackie Cain & Roy Kral, Anita O'Day, Sonny Stitt, and Gene Ammons. Through the G.I. Bill, he received tuition for three years to any college in the world.
Here's "North American Samba" from above album.
In April 1951, Gourley headed to Paris and enrolled in a music school. The event that likely convinced Gourley to remain in Paris was that in the jazz community in America, drugs were everywhere. "It was happening all around me. Guys dying or getting busted" said Gourley, a non-user. He was especially affected by the suicide of his good friend Ronnie Singer. In 1956, shortly back in the US, he worked with Anita O'Day.
Nathan Davis, Jimmy Gourley & Kenny Clarke |
By 1957, he relocated to Paris for the remainder of his life, working with Henri Renaud, Lou Bennett, Kenny Clarke, Richard Galliano, Stéphane Grappelli, Bobby Jaspar, Eddy Louiss, Martial Solal, and Barney Wilen. He played with American musicians who were passing through, including Bob Brookmeyer, Clifford Brown, Stan Getz, Gigi Gryce, Roy Haynes, Lee Konitz, Bud Powell, Zoot Sims, Lucky Thompson, and Lester Young.
Gouley was a prolific recording artist as leader or sideman throughout the 60’s in Paris, Holland, Switzerland, London and Italy, up to the early 2000’s. In the early 1970s he ran his own club in the Canary Islands and in the 80’s Gourley returned to the U.S. to show his new bride New York City, and visit old friends in Los Angeles.
He appeared for a week at Bradley's, a piano club in the Village, and then went out to the West Coast where he appeared with Mundell Lowe at Donte's in North Hollywood. He visited the US to record in 1994 which was the year he eventually took French citizenship. In 1996 he toured the UK with guitarist Trefor Owen.
His last guitar recordings were in Paris 2004. He died on December 7, 2008 in Villeneuve-Saint-Georges, Val-de-Marne, France at the age of 82.
(Edited mainly from Wikipedia)
ReplyDeleteFor “THE COOL GUITAR OF JIMMY GOURLEY • QUARTET & TRIO SESSIONS 1953-1961
Fresh Sound Records (2021)” go here:
https://www.upload.ee/files/14216085/Jimmy_Gourley_QuartetTrioSessions.rar.html
01. You're a Lucky Guy (Chaplin-Cahn) 3:40
02. You Stepped Out of a Dream (Brown-Kahn) 3:31
03. It's De-Lovely (Cole Porter) 2:49
04. Not Really the Blues (Johnny Mandel) 2:05
05. My Heart Belongs to Daddy (Cole Porter) 4:00
06. Changing My Tune (G. & I. Gershwin) 3:54
07. I Love You (Cole Porter) 2:59
08. Who Cares? (G. & I. Gershwin) 2:47
09. Almost Like Being In Love (Loewe-Lerner) 3:17
10. Bag's Groove (Milt Jackson) 3:45
11. Buddy Banks Blues (Buddy Banks) 3:25
12. Love You (Cole Porter) 5:56
13. Line for Lyons (Gerry Mulligan) 3:44
14. A Night in Tunisia (Gillespie-Paparelli) 4:25
15. Yesterdays (Jerome Kern) 3:28
16. You Go to My Head (Coots-Gillespie) 4:27
17. How Long Has This Been Going On? (G. & I. Gershwin) 3:03
18. Clarisse Blues (Jimmy Gourley) 2:36
19. For Heaven's Sake (Bretton-Meyer-Edwards) 5:05
20. Three Little Words (Ruby-Kalmar) 5:30
"Just when you think you’ve heard every swinging guitarist… Fresh Sound Records has uncovered yet another lost jazz artist that deserves modern appreciation. This time around it’s guitarist Jimmy Gourley, who was born in the Midwest but made his name in France. This disc features him in various European settings from mostly the early 50s and a bit of 1961, with lots of classy soloing in the vein of Herb Ellis and Johnny Smith.
Tracks #1-8, from the 10-inch LP "Henri Renaud et son Trio" (Vogue LD.178)
Tracks #9-16, from the 10-inch LP "Buddy Banks –Jazz de Chambre"
(Club Française du Disque 33)
Tracks #17-18, from TV Broadcast
Tracks #19-20, taken from the collective album "Jazz Jamboree 61, Vol. 1"
(Polskie Nagrania Muza XL 0127)
Personnel on #1-8:
HENRI RENAUD and His Trio featuring JIMMY GOURLEY
H. Renaud, piano; Jimmy Gourley, guitar; Pierre Michelot, bass; Jean-Louis Viale, drums.
Recorded at Studio Jouvenet, Paris, October 5, 1953
Personnel on #9-16:
BUDDY BANKS Trio & Quartet featuring JIMMY GOURLEY
Jimmy Gourley, guitar; Bob Dorough, piano; Buddy Banks, bass; Roy Haynes, drums (added on #10,12,14,16).
Recorded at the Geneix Studio, Paris, October 28, 1954
Personnel on #17-18:
JIMMY GOURLEY Quartet
Jimmy Gourley, guitar; Henri Renaud, piano; Jean-Marie Ingrand, bass; Daniel Humair, drums; (MC Sim Copans).
Recorded at TV Broadcast “Modern Jazz at the Blue Note,” Paris, January 1961
Personnel on #19-20:
JIMMY GOURLEY Quartet
Jimmy Gourley, guitar; Krysztof Komeda, piano; Adam Skorupka, bass; Adam Jedrzejowski, drums.
Recorded live at the Philharmonic Concert Hall, Warsaw, Poland, October 30, 1961
Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks for this.
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