Search This Blog

BLP 1516

Jutta Hipp - At The Hickory House, Volume 2

 



Released - September 1957

Recording and Session Information

"Hickory House", NYC, April 5, 1956
Jutta Hipp, piano; Peter Ind, bass; Ed Thigpen, drums.

Gone With The Wind
After Hours
The Squirrel
We'll Be Together Again
Horacio
I Married An Angel
Moonlight In Vermont
Star Eyes
If I Had You
My Heart Stood Still

Track Listing

Side One
TitleAuthorRecording Date
Gone With the WindHerb Magidson, Allie Wrubel05/04/1956
After HoursAvery Parrish05/04/1956
The SquirrelTadd Dameron05/04/1956
We'll Be Together AgainCarl Fischer, Frankie Laine05/04/1956
HoracioJutta Hipp05/04/1956
Side Two
I Married an AngelLorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers05/04/1956
Moonlight in VermontJohn Blackburn, Karl Suessdorf05/04/1956
Star EyesGene de Paul, Don Raye05/04/1956
If I Had YouIrving King, Ted Shapiro05/04/1956
My Heart Stood StillLorenz Hart, Richard Rodgers05/04/1956

Credits

Cover Photo:FRANCIS WOLFF
Cover Design:REID K. MILES
Engineer:RUDY VAN GELDER
Producer:ALFRED LION
Liner Notes:LEONARD FEATHER

Liner Notes

AT 11 A.M. on Nov. 18, 1955, a nervous figure stepped off the gangplank of the S.S. New York at Pier 88 in Manhattan and gazed around with myopic eyes at the unfamiliar landscape of a strange new country. Jutta Hipp had arrived in America.

It had been almost two years since Jutta and I had last met, in the crowded cellar club in Duisberg; almost two years since we had begun the long correspondence that began with unformulated yearnings, that later materialized into specific plans, into consultations with a New York lawyer at this end, with her family and friends at the other, and into the ultimate news that her visa had come through and her career as a German pianist in Germany could end as soon as she wanted.

It had not been easy for a girl of Jutta's sensitivity to do in Germany all that she wonted to do musically. The good night club jobs were few and far between. During the two years of waiting there had been trips to Scandinavia and Jugoslavia, and her letters had told of the healthy musical climate of Sweden and the tawdry Communist restrictions of Belgrade.

Small wonder that when she arrived in Manhattan, a decade after her escape from the Russian Zone in Germany and the commencement of her career as a professional pianist, Jutta was bemused. On her first nights in town, a visit to Basin Street, Birdland, Bohemia, to hear Erroll Garner, Miles Davis, Count Basie and a dozen other idols, left her speechless and awe-struck as a teen-aged bobby-soxer. For weeks afterward, she went into a shell, spending long evenings glued before the television set, watching mystery after escapist mystery — and, between mysteries, crossing over to the phonograph to play a record by her new discovery, Horace Silver.

Jutta hardly touched the piano during those weeks at least, never when she felt anyone might be within earshot. Her nervousness took a month, two months to break down. For the first time, one night at the Bohemia, she met Horace Silver, and was happy that the man was as charming as his music. Friends and fans everywhere besought her to sit in, but she felt neither ready nor willing.

Then come two important developments: the arrival of her Musicians’ Union card and the promise of a job at the Hickory House on West 52nd Street, for more than 20 years the pied-à-terre of countless American jazz stars she had read about. The challenge galvanized Jutta into action, enthusiastic action. It was a matter of days before she was at the keyboard for hours at o stretch.

Jutta realized that she was not the only new pianist on the jazz scene. A number of other new stars, some of them from overseas, some feminine, had stormed the American jazz citadels. But the stimulation of competition, by this time, was scarcely even necessary, for Jutta soon found that the pleasure of working with an American rhythm section had been worth those idle months of apprehensive anticipation.

Joe Morgen, the indomitable press agent for the Hickory House, was more than just a publicity man, he was a friend, someone in our corner who wanted to do everything in his power to make her name a bright one in American lights. it was with Morgen’s help that she settled down to the threesome you hear on these records, with Peter Ind on bass and Edmund Thigpen on drums.

Ind, born in Middlesex, England in 1928, studied piano and harmony at Trinity College, played piano with local bands around London, and took up bass in 1947. Starting in 1949 he used every opportunity to work on the Transatlantic liners, enabling him to grasp treasured tours in New York at the studio of Lennie Tristano. In April of 1951 he came to New York again, this time as an immigrant. He had worked frequently with Tristano and with Lee Konitz’ combo before joining Jutta.

Ed Thigpen is, like so many drummers (Sonny Payne and Bill Bradley, for instance) the son of a great swing era musician. His father, Ben Thigpen, played drums in Andy Kirk’s band for 17 years. Born in Chicago Dec. 28, 1930, Ed was just 20 when he joined Cootie Williams’ band. After serving in the Army from 1952-4 he worked with Dinah Washington, Johnny Hodges, Tristano and Konitz, Gil Mellé, and for several months in 1955 with Bud Powell.

As for Jutta — well, if you don’t know all about Jutta from the notes on her first Blue Note LP (BLP5061 you should rectify the situation by buying it - not because of the notes, but because of the interesting contrast in style that becomes apparent from a study of those German sides. In those days there seemed to be a Tristano influence, but more recently the impact of Silver has produced in Jutta a more outgoing, hnrdswinging approach that is, she is firmly convinced, the true expression of her musical personality. Not that she has stopped growing or will cease to evolve: but the direction her evolution will take is now solidly established.

The informality of her present work, the free-swingng feeling of the trio and the wonderful in-person cooperation of Thigpen and Ind made an ‘on-the-spot” recording a logical step for Jutta’s U.S. disc debut. Thanks to the ready assistance volunteered by John and Howard Popkin of the Hickory House, and a masterful engineering job by the indispensable Rudy van Gelder, two entire LPs were recorded in one highly productive evening at the club, an evening when Jutta and Edmund and Peter felt right, and the audience was with them, and every set went smoothly and kept moving at just the right tempo.

It would be superfluous to single out any one tune for comment: your reaction will depend on your taste for moods and materials, though I must add a couple of personal notes to the effect that I was especially engaged by Dear Old Stockholm and the Parker Blues Billie's Bounce in BLP 1515, and by her delightful impression of Avery Parrish (After Hours) and tribute to Horace Silver (Horacio) in BLP 1516. After Hours will be welcomed by the countless GIs who heard her play it at service clubs in Germany, where it was her most popular request number

Shortly after the release of these sides, possibly even before you happen to read these lines. Jutta will have made her American concert debut as a participant at the Newport Jazz Festival. At this writing she is already in her third month at the Hickory House and has endeared herself, as a pianist and as a person, to those who work around its big oval bar as well as those who have visited there — and they hove included scores of admiring American jazzmen from Duke Ellington on down. No, I don't think there can be much doubt about it now. America is taking to Miss Hipp, and I'm hip Miss Hipp likes America.

-LEONARD FEATHER

No comments:

Post a Comment