Advertisement
Advertisement

JJ 06/60: Jimmy Giuffre – The Easy Way

A review by Gerald Lascelles, first published in Jazz Journal June 1960

This album leaves me as dissatisfied and unconvinced as I was after hearing Jimmy Giuffre on his recent tour of England. I am not convinced, for one thing, that he really is master of his instrument – the clarinet – and many of my misgivings in this respect are ampli­fied by the astonishing routine, described by Benny Green on the sleeve, which Jimmy adopted in switching from tenor to clarinet, with its overriding neces­sity to extend his playing range from 2½ to 4 octaves.

If it really is as com­plicated as Mr. G. would have us believe, then he is undoubtedly playing up a gum tree, which is both sticky (hence the lack of swing) and makes a very poor music stand (being leafy, like most trees, you cannot see half the notes)!

Advertisement

Whatever the fundamental reason, Giuffre succeeds in producing one of the dullest trio records I have ever had to listen to. One can overdo the play on economy, but one must never appear to be groping for the notes.

The end pro­duct, for want of a better word – it is certainly not jazz as I understand it – is tatty, unexciting, and at times hesitant. Even the admirable guitar of Jimmy Hall and that ever solid bass beat by Ray Brown cannot retrieve an unfor­tunate and embarrassing situation.
Gerald Lascelles

Discography
The Easy Way; Mack The Knife; Come Rain Or Come Shine: Careful (21½ min.) – Ray’s Time; A Dream; Off Centre; Mintage; Time Enough (21 min.)
Jimmy Giuffre (clt and ten); Jim Hall (g); Ray Brown (bt). 6th and 7th August. 1959.
(HMV CLP 1344. 12inLP. 34s. 1½d.)

Latest audio reviews

Advertisement

More from this author

Advertisement

Jazz Journal articles by month

Advertisement

Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers: Olympia Concert

Vinyl reissue of 1958 Paris concerts, played weeks after the Moanin' studio session, shows how the gloves came off Blakey played live
Advertisement

Still Clinging To The Wreckage 12/21

"I'd like to tell a funny story about Artie Shaw," said Al Cohn. "But there aren't any." Maybe not, but there was much wisdom to be...
Advertisement

Samara Joy: ‘I didn’t start singing to become a jazz superstar’

“It was terrible! The nerves! I was so nervous! So, so nervous!” exclaims New York singer Samara Joy of her first visit to the...
Advertisement

Sight Readings: Photographers And American Jazz, 1900-1960

Alan Ainsworth is a photographer with specialist interests in jazz performance and contemporary architecture. His book, published in February 2022, surveys a range of...
Advertisement

Miles Davis: Birth Of The Cool – the DVD

Stanley Nelson's bio-doc of Miles Davis (reviewed in theatrical form in February) not only takes its title from the name of one of the...
Advertisement

JJ 10/85: Jazz Styles: History And Analysis – Second Edition

Forty years ago Mark Gilbert welcomed Gridley's encyclopedic codification of jazz history - a task that in the fragmented and retrospective post-90 scene might be impossible