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Ike Quebec

Complete Blue Note 45 Sessions

 

Heavy Soul

 

It Might as Well Be Spring

 

Blue and Sentimental

 

Easy Living

 

Bossa Nova Soul Samba

 

A Proper Introduction to Ike Quebec: Blue Harlem

Ballads: Ike Quebec

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

IKE QUEBEC
Blue Note Reissues, 1959--1962

by Marshall Bowden

The story of Ike Quebec is in many ways the prototypical story of the working jazz musician who never quite catches a lucky break, but who nonetheless perseveres and is able to earn a livelihood from his art for his entire life. A product of the swing and big band era, Quebec made a name in the Cab Calloway band, but before that he played with an outfit known as the Barons of Rhythm and then with such luminaries as Hot Lips Page, Roy Eldridge, and Benny Carter. In the 1940s Blue Note released a series of 78 rpm recordings featuring Quebec as the leader. At the end of the fifties he returned to Blue Note, cutting a series of 45 rpm recordings that served both as a trial balloon as to Quebec’s popularity with the record-buying public and as a Blue Note strike into the 45 rpm jukebox market. Quebec was a success on both counts.

Quebec was an excellent tenor man of the Coleman Hawkins school, with nods to Ben Webster and Stan Getz as well. In the 1940s Quebec cut some 10 and 12-inch 78 rpm records for Blue Note, records that were quite popular in their day. By the mid-fifties, Quebec had virtually disappeared from the scene, at least partially because his 78 rpm sides were not available on the new LP format, and so very few young jazz fans had ever heard of him. In 1960, Alfred Lion produced a series of Quebec 45 rpm recordings, and the response to these was sufficiently encouraging that Blue Note embarked on a plan to record albums with Quebec as a leader, and to launch a comeback of this forgotten artist. From the time of the Heavy Soul session in 1961 to the sessions for his final album, Soul Samba in October 1962, Quebec was kept busy with a variety of projects at Blue Note, appearing as a sideman with Sonny Clark, two other sessions as a leader (It Might As Well Be Spring and Blue and Sentimental) and a couple of other sessions which remain unissued. Unfortunately, this comeback was cut short when Quebec passed away on January 16, 1963 at the age of 44, of lung cancer.

Following the success of Ike's 45 sides, Alfred Lion brought Ike into the studio to record a series of sessions that featured the tenor saxophonist as both a leader and a sideman. Both Heavy Soul and It Might as Well Be Spring, recorded in 1961, are fantastic albums. Sadly, a mere 13 months after these albums were recorded, Ike Quebec died of cancer. Two more recordings, Easy Living, and Soul Samba, were released in 1962.

The Blue Note 45s have been collected in the Blue Note Connoisseur Series release Ike Quebec: The Complete Blue Note 45 Sessions. These performances demonstrate just how much of an R&B slant Quebec could put on his material. True, tracks like “A Light Reprieve” (a title Quebec later used for another composition on It Might As Well Be Spring) aren’t much different than his work on the 1961 sessions. But tracks like “Zonky,” “Dear John,” and “Later For the Rock” positively bristle with the energy of R&B and what was becoming rock and roll. For one thing, Quebec’s choice of accompanying instruments ensured a sound that was both modern and gritty. Working with a succession of organists, guitarists, bassists, and drummers, Quebec fronted an amazing series of musicians on these recordings. Organists include Edwin Swanston, Sir Charles Thompson and Earl Van Dyke; guitarists are Skeeter Best, Willie Jones; bassists are Milt Hinton, Sam Jones, and Sonny Wellesley; drummers are J.C. Beard, Wilbert Hogan, and Les Jenkins.

These groups can, of course, turn on the juke joint charm, and they do it often. But they also prove to be sensitive backers on the balladic selections. Take the weary, redeye rendition of “Blue Monday,” with organist Edwin Swantson providing gentle washes of sound over which guitarist Skeeter Best provides commentary on Quebec’s Ben Webster-ish warm, breathy tenor statements. While this is a particularly bluesy number, the same approach is heard on the last three tracks of disc one: “What a Difference a Day Makes,” “For All We Know,” and “Ill Wind.” On these last three, the group is comprised of Sir Charles Thompson, Milt Hinton, and J.C. Heard, with no guitarist. Through it all, Quebec’s tenor has the same reference points—swing to bop, with the influences of Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Ben Webster, heavily overlaid with a blues sensibility and a congenial, conversational tone. These recordings, along with the 1961 sessions formed the basis of what Alfred Lyon anticipated to be a significant comeback for the tenor man whose career had been sidetracked both by stylistic changes in jazz and drug abuse. In any event, Quebec’s solid tenor sound was perfectly amendable to the backing of an organ, and he stuck with the formula throughout the rest of his recordings as a leader.

Heavy Soul is a powerful session featuring Quebec in the company of organist Freddie Roach, bassist Milt Hinton, and drummer Al Harewood. Opening with the minor key “Acquitted,” Quebec comes bursting out of the gate, demonstrating with ease that he has lost none of his abilities. It’s all there—the full, round Webster/Bias tone with an extra piquant edge, the bluesy, soulful human vocal quality of his tone, and the way he chooses his notes and phrases with almost telepathic ability. In the tradition of tenor ballads, Quebec presents a soulful reading of “Just One More Chance” that is truly as interesting an interpretation as any I’ve ever heard by a vocalist.

Freddie Roach has an organ style that sometimes seems to belong to a previous era to that in which he is recording. Some would no doubt argue that his work on the instrument is somewhat hokey, but nothing could be further from the truth. His subtlety of style is both refreshing and very supportive of Quebec’s earnest readings of his chosen material. Roach was one of Quebec’s discoveries in his sideline as A&R man for Blue Note during those years, and the organist went on to record several albums for the label as a leader.

The playing here ranks with the best recorded examples of Quebec’s work, and may ultimately be judged his best recording. In conjunction with his other late period Blue Note recordings, the best music of his career was produced at the end of his life. Particular standout tracks here include the Depression-era “brother Can You Spare a Dime,” a gorgeous reading of “The Man I Love,” and an amazing interpretation of the enigmatic ballad “Nature Boy,” performed by a duo of Quebec and Hinton. These performances demonstrate clearly that Ike Quebec was a major tenor player and that his influence would have been widely felt had it not been for his untimely death. With the gorgeous sound common to all RVG Editions, Heavy Soul is a must have for anyone who loves the great tenor saxophonists.

It Might As Well Be Spring features the same group and much the same type of repertoire. Quebec plays the hell out of the Rodgers and Hammerstein title track, imbuing it with a soul that it certainly had never possessed prior to his playing it. The other “A Light Reprieve” and “Easy—Don’t Hurt” represent Ike’s compositional output here, with both being blues-based vehicles for the tenor player to stretch out and show what he could do. “Lover Man” and “Willow Weep for Me” provide two more ballad opportunities for the saxophonist, while “Old Man River” is taken in a rare highly upbeat version that shows Quebec thinking in a more boppish direction.

Pretty much all of Quebec’s 1959-1962 Blue Note work is memorable, and between the Rudy Van Gelder and Connoisseur Series his available discography has grown to befit the excellence of these recordings. Blue and Sentimental is considered one of his finest, though its formula of rousing jump blues and sensitive ballads is similar to that found on the other Blue Note sides. His backing group on this disc is comprised of guitarist Grant Green, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones. With no pianist to fill in many of the spaces, Quebec is left open to display his balance of yin and yang, while Green not only proves the perfect accompanist but also solos tastefully throughout. Soul Samba finds him working a Brazilian mood, with guitarist Kenny Burrell, percussionists Willie Bobo and Gavin Masseaux, and bassist Wendell Marshall. The album isn’t strictly bossa, as the group takes a shot at Dvorak’s “Going Home” theme as well as “Liebestraum.” Easy Living featured performances by Sonny Clark, Milt Hinton, Art Blakey, Bennie Green, and Stanley Turrentine, and continued the familiar Quebec formula, with performances of “See See Rider,” “I’ve Got a Crush on You,” and the title track.

In the early to mid 1950s, Quebec was considered a jazz artist who had already done his best recorded work, but that turned out not to be the case, thanks to Quebec himself and Alfred Lion. Now listeners can hear one of the major tenor voices of the late 50s and early 60s who, while not forging any particularly new paths nonetheless managed to create a distinct body of work with a voice that remains, despite its many influences, fiercely independent and original.

 

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