Great Chicago Concert |
On June 1, 1956, Louis Armstrong and his All-Stars played a benefit for multiple sclerosis at the Medina Temple in Chicago. Fifty-five years later, Pure Pleasure has issued a beautiful box set of three 180 gm albums documenting that evening, along with the original liner notes and a remembrance by producer George Avakian.
Due to technical difficulties the recording sat in the tape vaults of Columbia Records, and was not issued on LP until 1980, twenty-four years after the concert. It was not again until 1997 that Columbia saw fit to issue a 2-CD set. At last fourteen years later, Pure Pleasure Records, from England, has given the Chicago concert its proper honor with a remaster by Ray Staff. Staff has done his usual exemplary job and listeners will find the fidelity to be improved, keeping in mind the miking, and concert technical issues that kept this material under wraps for so long.
The concert began with a New Orleans type parade onto the stage by the band with a medley of βFlee as a Bird to the Mountainβ and βOh, Didnβt He Ramble.β It was a recreation of a New Orleans traditional march to the graveyard mated to the celebration on the return.
Medleys were big that evening and Pops strings together three of them during the evening starting off with βMemphis Blues, Frankie and Johnnyβ and βTiger Rag.β Especially after the events of Hurricane Katrina, it is a welcome respite to hear Armstrong play βDo You Know What it Means to Miss New Orleansβ followed by his version of βBasin Street Blues.β
Armstrong and Trummy Young play in ensemble on βBlack and Blueβ before Pops scats. His voice was still in prime form in 1956. On βWest End Bluesβ miking problems (there were not nearly enough onstage) are present on the first chorus, before the horn soloists step up to the microphone and then the sound improves considerably, especially with Billy Kylesβ stride piano solo, as the piano is well-recorded. βStruttinβ With Some Barbecueβ is Dixieland bliss, but we get only a snippet of one of Armstrongβs nightly favorites, βWhen Itβs Sleepy Time Down South,β before an impromptu call for an intermission by Louis. Luckily, the song is later repeated as part of a medley with βManhattan.β
Duo vocals were a strong part of an Armstrong band repertoire, and we get treated to Trummy Young and Louis sharing βRockinβ Chair,β followed by Edmond Hall and Armstrong on βBucketβs Got a Hole In Itβ with Hallβs poignant clarinet solo, and then the three horns blowing taking the tune out. βPerdidoβ is a feature for pianist Kyle, while Edmond Hallβs hot clarinet and drummer Barrett Deemβs brush work are featured on βClarinet Marmalade.β
Side E features a very early performance of βMack the Knife.β Armstrong beat Bobby Darin to the punch by three years. On the final Side F, fans of Armstrongβs vocalist, Velma Middleton, are rewarded for spending a long evening at the Medina Theater by getting to hear Velma wail on βBig Mamaβs Back in Town,β βThatβs My Desireβ (where Pops and Velma flirt together), and βKo Ko Mo.β The crowd reaction is boisterous for Velma. Louis closes the evening with the obligatory, βWhen the Saints Go Marching Inβ and a straight up classic version of βThe Star Spangled Banner,β which would be quite the surprise in a jazz concert today, but not uncommon for an Armstrong performance then.
- Mono 180gm (3xLP)
- Genre: JAZZ
- Format Detail: 3LP Black
- Handling Note: **Please allow an additional 5 business days for this item's shipment.**
- Format: Vinyl
- Released: 7/25/18
- Internal ID: JIT