Monday, 23 June 2025

George Russell born 23 June 1923

George Allen Russell (June 23, 1923 – July 27, 2009) was an American jazz pianist and a hugely influential, innovative figure in the evolution of modern jazz, the music's only major theorist, one of its most profound composers, and a trail blazer whose ideas have transformed and inspired some of the greatest musicians of our time. 

George Allen Russell was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, the adopted son of a registered nurse and a chef on the B&O Railroad. Russell's first instrument was the drums, which he played in the Boy Scout Drum and Bugle Corps and at local clubs when he was in high school. At 19, he was hospitalized with tuberculosis, but he used the enforced inactivity to learn the craft of arranging from a fellow patient. Once back on his feet, he played with Benny Carter, but after being replaced on drums by Max Roach, Russell began to zero in on composing and arranging. 

He moved to New York to join the crowd of young firebrands who gathered in Gil Evans' "salon," and he was actually invited to play drums in Charlie Parker's band. But once again, he fell ill, finding himself in a Bronx hospital for 16 months (1945-1946), where he began to formulate the ideas for the Lydian Concept. Upon his recovery, Russell leaped into the embryonic fusion of bebop and Afro-Cuban rhythms by writing "Cubana Be" and "Cubana Bop," which the Dizzy Gillespie big band recorded in 1947. He contributed arrangements to Claude Thornhill and Artie Shaw in the late '40s and wrote the first (and not the last) speculative scenario of a meeting between Charlie Parker and Igor Stravinsky, "A Bird in Igor's Yard," recorded by Buddy DeFranco. 


                          Here’s “Ezz-Thetic” from above album

                                   

While working on his Lydian theories, Russell dropped out of active music-making for a while, working at a sales counter in Macy's when his book was published. But when he resumed composing in 1956, he had established himself as an influential force in jazz. Russell's connection with Gunther Schuller resulted in the commission of "All About Rosie" for the 1957 Brandeis University jazz festival, and he also taught at the Lenox School of Jazz that Schuller co-founded. 

He formed a rehearsal sextet in the mid-'50s that became known as the George Russell Smalltet, with Art Farmer, Bill Evans, Hal McKusick, Barry Galbraith, and various drummers and bassists. Their 1956 recording Jazz Workshop (RCA Victor) became a landmark of its time, and Russell continued to record intriguing LPs for Decca in the late '50s and Riverside in the early '60s. Another key album from this period, Ezz-Thetics, featured two important progressive players, Eric Dolphy and Don Ellis. 

Finding the American jazz scene too confining for his music, Russell left for Europe in 1963, living in Sweden for five years. From his new base, he toured Scandinavia with a new sextet of European players and received numerous commissions -- including a ballet based on Othello, a mass, and the orchestral suite Electronic Sonata for Souls Loved by Nature: 1980. Upon his return to the U.S. in 1969, he joined the faculty of the New England Conservatory of Music, where Schuller had started a jazz department, and this gave him a secure base from which to tour occasionally with his own groups. 

Russell stopped composing from 1972 to 1978 in order to finish a second volume on the Lydian Chromatic Concept. He led a 19-piece big band at the Village Vanguard for six weeks in 1978, played the Newport Jazz Festival when it was based in New York City, and made tours of Italy, the U.S. West Coast, and England in the '80s. 

Russell's most imposing latter-day commissions included "An American Trilogy" and the monumental three-hour work "Time Line" for symphony orchestra, jazz ensembles, rock groups, choir, and dancers. In addition to The African Game and So What on Blue Note, Russell made recordings for Soul Note in the '70s and '80s and Label Bleu in the '90s, while continuing to teach at the New England Conservatory and leading his Living Time Orchestra big band into the 21st century. 

He received a MacArthur Foundation "genius" grant in 1989. In his career, Russell also received the 1990 National Endowment for the Arts American Jazz Master Award, two Guggenheim Fellowships, and the British Jazz Award. He has been elected a Foreign Member of the Royal Swedish Academy of Music, won the Oscar du Disque de Jazz Award, the Guardian Award, the American Music Award, six NEA Music Fellowships, and numerous others. He taught worldwide and was a guest conductor for German, Italian, Danish, Finnish, Norwegian, and Swedish radio groups.  

In 2005 George Russell & the Living Time Orchestra's The 80th Birthday Concert, released on the Concept label, celebrated the legendary octogenarian's contributions to the art of jazz with performances of some of his most groundbreaking extended compositions and arrangements.  George Russell died in Boston on July 27, 2009 of complications from Alzheimer's disease; he was 86 years old. 

(Edited from AllMusic & About Jazz)

 

3 comments:

boppinbob said...

A big thank you goes to Denis for suggesting today’s birthday jazz pianist and for the loan of the box-set below

For “George Russell Sextet & Septet – Complete 1960-1962
Decca & Riverside Album Collection (2014 Fresh Sound)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/ZTDsnVHx

01. Sippin' at Bells (Miles Davis) 7:15
02. 121 Bank Street (Dave Baker) 5:54
03. Swingdom Come (George Russell) 7:25
04. Dance Class (Carla Bley) 6:14
05. Moments Notice (John Coltrane) 8:01
06. Beast Blues (Carla Bley) 8:52
07. Stratusphunk (George Russell) 6:05
08. New Donna (George Russell) 8:24
09. Bent Eagle (Carla Bley) 6:12
10. Lambskins (David Lahm) 7:11
11. Things New (George Russell) 6:54

CD 2

01. Kentucky Oysters (Dave Baker) 8:20
02. Theme 3:14
03. Rhymes (Carla Bley) 4:27
04. Lunacy (Dave Baker) 7:15
05. War Gewessen (Dave Baker) 6:19
06. Sandu (Clifford Brown) 11:01
07. Tune Up (Miles Davis) 8:05
08. Nardis (Miles Davis) 4:38
09. Lydiot (George Russell) 8:05
10. Thoughts (George Russell) 5:32
11. Round Midnight (Monk-Williams) 6:33
12. Kigers Tune(Al Kiger) 5:41

CD 3

01. Ezz-thetic (George Russell) 8:55
02. Honesty (Dave Baker) 8:59
03. Pan-Daddy (George Russell) 4:58
04. The Stratus Seekers (George Russell) 6:52
05. Kigers Tune(Al Kiger) 5:46
06. Blues in Orbit (George Russell) 7:24
07. A Lonely Place (George Russell) 7:19
08. Stereophrenic (Dave Baker) 5:14
09. The Outer View (George Russell) 10:05
10. Zig-Zag (Carla Bley) 4:02
11. D.C. Divertimento (George Russell) 9:14

CD 4

01. Au Privave (Charlie Parker) 6:20
02. You Are My Sunshine (Davis-Mitchell) 11:51
03. Introduction by George Russell 1:42
04. Things New (George Russell) 7:58
05. Dance Class (Carla Bley) 3:38
06. Potting Shed (David Lahm) 4:34
07. Stratusphunk (George Russell) 6:34
08. Introduction by George Russell 0:25
09. The Outer View (George Russell) 9:02
10. Stratusphunk (George Russell) 7:04
11. Volupté (George Russell) 12:03
12. You Are My Sunshine (Davis-Mitchell) 8:53

CD 1 - #1-6, from the album At the Five Spot (Decca DL 79220)
CD 1 - #7-11 & CD 2 #1 from the album Stratusphunk (Riverside RS 9341)
CD 2 - #2-7, from the album In K.C. (Decca DL 74183)
CD 2 - #8-11, and CD 3 tracks #1 & 2 from Ezz-thetics (Riverside RS 9375)
CD 2 - #12, not on the original Riverside RS 9375 LP configuration
CD 3 - #3-8, from the album The Stratus Seekers (Riverside RS 9412)
CD 3 - #9-11 & CD-4 tracks #1 & 2, from The Outer View (Riverside RS 9440)
CD 4 - #3-12, from private recordings

Here’s my contribution , all available on the usual streamers @192

For “George Russell – Complete 1956-1960 Smalltet & Orchestra Recordings (2014 Fresh Sound)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/RUSEkE9U

The Jazz Workshop
1-1 Ezz-thetic 5:13
1-2 Jacks Blues 3:44
1-3 Ye Hypocrite, Ye Beelzebub 3:49
1-4 Livingstone I Presume 3:24
1-5 Round Johnny Rondo 3:29
1-6 Night Sound 3:53
1-7 Concerto for Billy the Kid 4:42
1-8 Witch Hunt 3:48
1-9 Fellow Delegates 5:38
1-10 Ballad of Hix Blewitt 3:15
1-11 Knights of the Steamtable 2:34
1-12 The Sad Sergeant 3:25
1-13 Concerto for Billy the Kid [Alt. Take] 4:45
1-14 Ballad of Hix Blewitt [Alt. Take] 3:43
Modern Jazz Concert - All About Rosie
1-15 First movement 2:07
1-16 Second movement 3:19
1-17 Third movement 5:13
Jazz In The Space Age - Chromatic Universe
1-18 Part, 1 3:33
1-19 Part, 2 3:46
1-20 Part, 3 4:52
New York, N.Y.
2-1 Manhattan 10:34
2-2 Big City Blues 11:37
2-3 Manhatta-Rico 10:10
2-4 East Side Medley: Autumn in New York (Vernon Duke) / -How About You (Lane-Freed) 8:00
2-5 A Helluva Town 4:59
Jazz In The Space Age
2-6 The Lydiot 10:04
2-7 Waltz from Outer Space 6:59
2-8 Dimensions 13:10

boppinbob said...

For”George Russell – Four Classic Albums (2018 Avid Jazz)” go here:

https://pixeldrain.com/u/4hG41rNv

George Russell & His Orchestra (featuring Bill Evans At The Piano) - Jazz In The Space Age (1960)
1-1 Chromatic Universe - Part 1 3:40
1-2 Dimensions 12:04
1-3 Chromatic Universe - Part 2 3:49
1-4 The Lydiot 10:07
1-5 Waltz From Outer Space 7:01
1-6 Chromatic Universe - Part 3 4:57
George Russell Sextet - George Russell Sextet In K.C. (1961)
1-7 War Gerwessen 6:20
1-8 Rhymes
1-9 Lunacy 7:15
1-10 Sandu 11:02
1-11 Tune Up 8:06
1-12 Theme 3:11
George Russell Sextet - Stratusphunk (1960)
2-1 Strausphunk 6:09
2-2 New Donna 8:27
2-3 Bent Eagle 6:16
2-4 Kentucky Oysters 8:24
2-5 Lambskins 7:14
2-6 Things New
George Russell Septet - The Stratus Seekers (1960)
2-7 Pan-Daddy 5:01
2-8 The Stratus Seekers 6:54
2-9 Kige's Tune 5:52
2-10 Blues In Orbit 7:27
2-11 A Lonely Place 7:22
2-12 Stereophrenic 5:17

Please Note…You’ll find some repeats in these track-lists, but I have left them all in situ for the continuity of the albums, other than editing them out!

Richard said...

Very nice indeed. Thank You