New Studio Tubby Hayes Qrt, Fontana...

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  • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 4314

    New Studio Tubby Hayes Qrt, Fontana...

    "Christmas comes early for fans of the late, great Brit-jazz tenorist Tubby Hayes as Universal have announced the arrival of an unreleased 1969 studio album, entitled Grits, Beans and Greens: The Lost Fontana Sessions, which is to be released on 26 July, 50 years after its recording.

    The tapes were in perfect condition and had never been played since the recording, with reports suggesting the music ranks as highly as Hayes’ classic albums 100% Proof and Mexican Green. Alongside this the label also possesses all of the original tapes for Hayes’ 11 Fontana albums, plus lots of out-takes and never before issued material, all of which will be remastered and reissued in one mighty Tubby Hayes on Fontana box set.

    And, in a further move to ensure maximum collectability, all of the albums have been remastered by Gearbox Records, with the LPs being cut to the lacquers directly from the tapes, the resulting pure analogue sound potentially better than the original LPs. Hayes expert Simon Spillett has contributed liner notes to the set which will also features dozens of rare or unseen photos of Tubby in his heyday. “It's hard to believe that this music has lain unheard for fifty years, it's so fresh” says Spillett. “There's no doubt in my mind that had they been issued at the time, these recordings would have been seen as Tubby's last great album". ... Jazzwise. 5/2019

    It's amazing how this stuff keeps turning up. Looks good.

    BN.
  • Serial_Apologist
    Full Member
    • Dec 2010
    • 37814

    #2
    Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
    "Christmas comes early for fans of the late, great Brit-jazz tenorist Tubby Hayes as Universal have announced the arrival of an unreleased 1969 studio album, entitled Grits, Beans and Greens: The Lost Fontana Sessions, which is to be released on 26 July, 50 years after its recording.

    The tapes were in perfect condition and had never been played since the recording, with reports suggesting the music ranks as highly as Hayes’ classic albums 100% Proof and Mexican Green. Alongside this the label also possesses all of the original tapes for Hayes’ 11 Fontana albums, plus lots of out-takes and never before issued material, all of which will be remastered and reissued in one mighty Tubby Hayes on Fontana box set.

    And, in a further move to ensure maximum collectability, all of the albums have been remastered by Gearbox Records, with the LPs being cut to the lacquers directly from the tapes, the resulting pure analogue sound potentially better than the original LPs. Hayes expert Simon Spillett has contributed liner notes to the set which will also features dozens of rare or unseen photos of Tubby in his heyday. “It's hard to believe that this music has lain unheard for fifty years, it's so fresh” says Spillett. “There's no doubt in my mind that had they been issued at the time, these recordings would have been seen as Tubby's last great album". ... Jazzwise. 5/2019

    It's amazing how this stuff keeps turning up. Looks good.

    BN.
    Thias is proving a very rich period for releases or re-releases from that exceptionally fruitful era. I have often felt that it was the majors' neglect - not helped in many instances, it has to be said, by musicians' inertia - that created the impression, later much exploited by the Britjazz revivalists in the late 80s, of a barren period awaiting an intake of new blood. Top labels in their quest for money-raking fashion had gone from issuing grossly over-lauded progrock and fusion to punk rock. I've just received a plug for a previously unreleased album of fusioney stuff from 1978 in a band led by Pete Lemer, and including Allan Holdsworth on one track. It's a tad overformulated to my mind, but going down the list I came across this trio recording by a John Stevens led trio with Holdsowth and Danny Thompson from that same era.



    Shame about the samples on all these releases only being a minute long - they're tantalising in this instance, to say the least, and the reviewers knew or know how to write up the music. There are also some Tubby Hayes releases on that roster.

    Comment

    • BLUESNIK'S REVOX
      Full Member
      • Dec 2010
      • 4314

      #3
      Wasn't there a (very) brief period at the end of the 60s/early 70s when the majors did put a toe in the water? CBS, Fontana, Deram? The likes of Ray Russell, Howard Riley, John Surman (The Trio) etc?

      Comment

      • Serial_Apologist
        Full Member
        • Dec 2010
        • 37814

        #4
        Originally posted by BLUESNIK'S REVOX View Post
        Wasn't there a (very) brief period at the end of the 60s/early 70s when the majors did put a toe in the water? CBS, Fontana, Deram? The likes of Ray Russell, Howard Riley, John Surman (The Trio) etc?
        Indeed yes - partly the outcome of more developed musical tastes among a more informed section of youth market that included me, when I could afford 38/-, and a quid when the albums were reassigned or re-priced into the budget section, which sometimes happened pretty quick. I think the "business world" was pretty quick to then cotton on to the fact that appealing to mass taste first involved moulding that taste.

        Comment

        • Ian Thumwood
          Full Member
          • Dec 2010
          • 4223

          #5
          My friend Dave is a big Tubby Hayes fan and he acquired quite a bit of previously unissued material in the early 2000s when there was a spate of these kinds of releases. I have heard a few of them but quite a few sounded pretty ordinary and unremarkable. They were not a patch on the official studio recordings and I think done for BBC broadcasts. It is frustrating to think that there are exceptional performances kept in the vault for so long. I do wonder if they have just come to light or if they are as good as reported. Surely they would have been issued in the 1980s when there was more of a demand for Hard Bop and CDs?

          Comment

          • muzzer
            Full Member
            • Nov 2013
            • 1193

            #6
            This can only be a good thing. Bravo.

            Comment

            • Jazzrook
              Full Member
              • Mar 2011
              • 3109

              #7
              Tubby Hayes Quartet playing 'Gingerbread Boy' with Louis Stewart, Kenny Baldock & Spike Wells live at the Hopbine, 1968:

              Provided to YouTube by Redeye WorldwideGingerbread Boy (Live) · The Tubby Hayes QuartetThe Syndicate: Live at The Hopbine 1968, Vol. 1℗ MJQ Music IncReleased...


              JR

              Comment

              • Serial_Apologist
                Full Member
                • Dec 2010
                • 37814

                #8
                Originally posted by Jazzrook View Post
                Tubby Hayes Quartet playing 'Gingerbread Boy' with Louis Stewart, Kenny Baldock & Spike Wells live at the Hopbine, 1968:

                Provided to YouTube by Redeye WorldwideGingerbread Boy (Live) · The Tubby Hayes QuartetThe Syndicate: Live at The Hopbine 1968, Vol. 1℗ MJQ Music IncReleased...


                JR
                Of that lot, Spike is the last survivor. Still playing brilliantly - one of my favourite British drummers, and still a clergyman. I asked him...

                Comment

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