**** DAVID X. YOUNG'S JAZZ LOFT
(Jazz Magnet)
Painter David X. Young had a loft in Manhattan’s old flower district that was a magnet
for jazzmen passing through New York City between 1954 and 1965. Guys like Zoot Sims,
Jimmy Raney, Gerry Mulligan, Don Ellis, Mose Allison, Bob Brookmeyer, Jim Hall, and
Dave McKenna would come by after gigs and spend all night — as the cats used to put
it — blowing. And Young ran tape often enough to yield at least these two CDs of
relaxed-yet-scalding jams.
The set opens with a burner: Sims plowing his tenor sax through almost 13 minutes of
“It Don’t Mean a Thing If It Ain’t Got That Swing.” Then there’s Brookmeyer making
his trombone hop through “Spuds” and a raucous “Stompin’ at the Savoy” that pits
Sims’s tenor against Pepper Adams’s baritone sax, with Allison in the rhythm section
on piano. Some of the prettiest lines belong to Raney and Hall, whose guitars duet
in “There’ll Never Be Another You.” Swinging and charged, all the playing is punctuated
by shouts and oaths — testimony to the way energy and ideas are being released like
lightning bolts. Plus there’s the jolt of Young’s jazz-inspired paintings, which are
reproduced in a colorful 42-page booklet that also includes reminiscences by some of
the musicians. An excellent window on one of downtown jazz’s most vital and historic scenes.
— Ted Drozdowski
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