JazzMusicArchives.com Homepage
Forum Home Forum Home >Jazz Music Lounges >Jazz Music News, Press Releases
  New Posts New Posts RSS Feed - Louis Stewart’s, I Thought About You to be reissue
  FAQ FAQ  Forum Search   Register Register  Login Login

Louis Stewart’s, I Thought About You to be reissue

 Post Reply Post Reply
Author
Message
snobb View Drop Down
Forum Admin Group
Forum Admin Group
Avatar
Site Admin

Joined: 22 Dec 2010
Location: Vilnius
Status: Offline
Points: 30544
Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote snobb Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Topic: Louis Stewart’s, I Thought About You to be reissue
    Posted: 9 hours 50 minutes ago at 2:10pm
Dublin-based Livia Records reissues Irish guitar master Louis Stewart’s all-star 1977 recording, I Thought About You on 29th May. Long deleted and much sought after in its original vinyl form, I Thought About You features Stewart with the American rhythm section of bassist Sam Jones and drummer Billy Higgins and leading European pianist John Taylor.

The album was recorded when Stewart was working with the house band at Ronnie Scott’s in London and Jones and Higgins appeared at the club with pianist Cedar Walton, who had moved on from working with Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, Milt Jackson, Art Farmer and Clifford Jordan to leading his own groups to considerable acclaim.

Excited by Jones and Higgins’ mutual understanding and flowing rhythmical teamwork, Stewart invited them to record in a quartet with Taylor, who was his bandmate in Ronnie Scott’s quintet at the time. The four musicians went into one of London’s top facilities, Olympic Studios in Barnes, and recorded I Thought About You in one day.

Jones and Higgins brought massive experience to the session. Jones had already worked with jazz luminaries including saxophonists Cannonball Adderley, trumpeters Dizzy Gilliespie, Freddie Hubbard and Kenny Dorham and pianists Thelonious Monk, Bill Evans and Oscar Peterson. And having emerged on free jazz pioneer Ornette Coleman’s first recordings, Higgins had gone on to feature as a house drummer at the legendary Blue Note Records, appearing on such albums as Herbie Hancock’s Takin’ Off, Grant Green’s Feelin’ the Spirit and Dexter Godon’s Go! In an extensive recording career, Higgins also recorded with Pat Metheny, Freddie Hubbard, Charlie Haden, Charles Lloyd, Pat Martino and John Scofield.

The album was originally released on the Lee Lambert label, whose catalogue also included albums by guitarist Terry Smith, saxophonist Tony Coe, pianist Tony Lee and drummer Martin Drew.

“I Thought About You is considered by many of Louis Stewart’s admirers as his best studio recording,” says Livia Records’ Dermot Rogers, who has overseen a programme of Stewart reissues and previously unreleased albums, including The Dublin Concert guitar summit with Jim Hall, since reactivating the label in 2021. “It’s certainly a classy session and has an undoubted wow factor in terms of musicianship.”

Originally released in 1980, and including tunes by Thelonious Monk and Chick Corea alongside Sam Jones’ Unit 7, the album has a history beyond the musicians’ star quality. It was recorded on two-inch tape, with the instruments given separate tracks. Stewart then took a ¼” copy of the tapes to Dublin, where he decided to record some alternate solos which were used with the first release of the album in 1980.

“The reasons for Louis re-recording those solos are unclear and the hybrid version didn’t work well,” says Rogers. “Restoring the album, nearly 50 years after it was recorded, required digitization of the original two-inch tapes, which had been in a lock-up for twenty years. The ¼” overdub tapes were also digitized but proved unsatisfactory. However, the whole process revealed alternate versions of Francy Boland and Jimmy Woode’s November Girl and Miles Davis’s All Blues which we were able to add to the remixed and remastered original recording to create the best version of the album for re-release.”

Rogers has plans to add further Louis Stewart albums to the Livia catalogue, which also features Acoustic Guitar Duets by Stewart and Martin Taylor, and has already released albums by leading contemporary Irish jazz musicians, saxophonist Michael Buckley and acoustic bass guitarist Ronan Guilfoyle this year.

“Louis Stewart died in 2016 and although he’s still very much revered as Ireland’s greatest jazz musician by those who heard him play, it’s important that his legacy is celebrated and his recordings remain available for new listeners to hear this great talent,” says Rogers. “I’m obviously a fan but to hear I Thought About You in its bright, shiny new form really reinforces what a wonderful guitarist Louis was and how at home he sounds in such topflight company.”


from https://jazzineurope.mfmmedia.nl


Edited by snobb - 9 hours 49 minutes ago at 2:11pm
Back to Top
 Post Reply Post Reply
  Share Topic   

Forum Jump Forum Permissions View Drop Down

Forum Software by Web Wiz Forums® version 10.16
Copyright ©2001-2013 Web Wiz Ltd.

This page was generated in 0.109 seconds.