From Analog Tape

Wes Montgomery in Paris – The Definitive ORTF Recording

Wes Montgomery

Please mind this is a mono recording.
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Original Recording Format: Analog Tape
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Recorded during the one single overseas tour he would ever make due to his fear of flying, In Paris, The Definitive ORTF Recording is considered perhaps the greatest live Wes Montgomery performance ever. Another rare gem in the 2xHD-Resonance Records catalog at NativeDSD.

It’s over 140 minutes of music, transferred from the Original Analog Mono Master Tape to DSD!

Tracklist

Please note that the below previews are loaded as 44.1 kHz / 16 bit.
1.
Meet Me in St. Louis - The Girl Next Door
00:06
2.
Here's That Rainy Day - Carnival in Flanders: Here's That Rainy Day
00:08
3.
Jingles
00:12
4.
To Wane
00:11
5.
Full House
00:10
6.
Round Midnight -take 1 - Round Midnight
00:09
7.
Blue 'n Boogie - West Coast Blues
00:13
8.
Twisted Blues
00:13
9.
Four on Six
00:06
10.
Impressions
00:10

Total time: 00:01:38

Additional information

Label

SKU

2XHDRE1106

Qualities

, ,

Channels

Artists

Composers

, , , , , ,

Genres

,

Analog Recording Equipment

Nagra-T modified with high end tube playback electronics

Digital Converters

Merging Technologies Horus

Mastering Engineer

René Laflamme – Transfer from Analog Monaural Master Tape to DSD 256

Instruments

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Original Recording Format

Recording location

Théâtre des Champs Élysées – 27 March, 1965

Recording Software

Pyramix

Recording Type & Bit Rate

Analog

Release DateApril 13, 2018

Press reviews

All About Jazz

Zev Feldman has called Resonance Records, “The house Bill Evans and Wes Montgomery built.” That may be hyperbolic, but the label has liberated from obscurity many previously unreleased or rarely heard performances by the two artists. The label now adds a diamond pin to this crown in the form of the present Wes Montgomery In Paris: The Definitive ORTF Recording.

Afraid of flying, Montgomery made only a single trip to Europe, only after he was assured that the rest of the tour he would travel by train. On this tour, Montgomery appeared in Paris on March 27, 1965 at the Theatre Des Champs-Elysee. The concert was recorded, and the tapes retained by the National Audiovisual Institute of France (INA), a public institution overseeing the historic office of French Radio and Television (ORTF). This is Resonance Records second collaboration with the organization, the first being Larry Young’s In Paris: The ORTF Recordings (also available in DSD 128 and DSD 64 from Native DSD Music). It is a hopeful sign that there is more of this great, previously unreleased music to come.

The album contains solid performances of Montgomery’s “Four on Six” and “Jingles,” as well as John Coltrane’s “So What” contrafact “Impressions.” This is the introspective part of the performance, Montgomery’s articulation precise and emotive. All pieces receive a lengthy airing with compact support from his traveling trio of pianist Harold Mabern, bassist Arthur Harper, and drummer Jimmy Lovelace.

If disc one is introspective, disc two is radioactively extroverted. Opening with Mabern’s nod to tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, “To Wane,” Montgomery consumes his part at a relentless tempo. Then the show becomes all Montgomery, adding tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin to reprise his performances of a sturdily -built “Full House” and “Blue ‘N Boogie” from the previously recorded concert Full House. “Round Midnight” was always a good vehicle for Montgomery, here sharing duties with Griffin and turning in a near iconic performance. The aforementioned “Blue ‘N Boogie” is coupled with Montgomery’s “Kansas City Blues” creating an effective 12-bar bop juggernaut that leads to an equal length reading of Montgomery’s “Twisted Blues.”

This particular concert has been bootlegged since the mid-1970s, typically with inferior sound quality. That almost justifies its existence as such because of Montgomery’s brief corporeal and recording life. Resurrected with a brand-new shine on it, Wes Montgomery In Paris: The Definitive ORTF Recording is not merely for Montgomery completists, but is as necessary as the live recordings Full House or Wynton Kelly Trio With Wes Montgomery – Smokin’ At The Half Note are to the Montgomery discography.

popmatters.com

Listening to Wes Montgomery is like experiencing the first warm rain in spring. The drops may refresh, but there’s something melancholy about it. The end of winter is still an end, even if the wonder of the seasonal change deserves welcome. Montgomery’s notes pour down from his guitar in showers. They are more of a stream than a torrent. The appropriately titled standard, Jimmy Van Heusen’s “Here’s That Rainy Day” from the newly issued Live in Paris album originally recorded at the Champs-Elysees back on March 27, 1965, provides an excellent example of Montgomery’s fluid style. He’s ably backed by a trio of top-notch players: Harold Mabern (piano), Arthur Harper (bass) and Jimmy Lovelace (drums), but they take far too many long solos. The guitar is where the action is.

Montgomery takes turns using different syncopations, riffs and picking styles to keep the song moving forward. He’s not just playing with technical finesse. He’s creating a mood. Despite the general upbeat tempo, Montgomery’s not putting a happy musical face. This is more serious, in a reflective way. This music would go well with a bottle of red wine and a cigarette, but if you were with a partner, this would be your break up song.

Who knows what Montgomery thought when he played guitar, but the general atmospherics of this gig suggests an attentive crowd. There is a silence, a reverence of a sort when the band gets in a groove that illustrates the audience’s involvement on a psychological level. Sure, they applaud at the right moments, but they and the band also provide a space where jazz is reason enough. It doesn’t require context. Art for art’s sake — the Paris of one’s imagination made real for a night.

Tenor saxophonist Johnny Griffin joins in on several cuts, including the ten-minute-plus “Full House” and Thelonious Monk’s classic, “‘Round Midnight”. On the latter, Montgomery explores the beauty of the melody and shows how sophisticated the music is in its very simplicity. He keeps the music on the down low, not getting too fast or wound up. When Griffin joins in, the very tone of his sax adds commentary to what Montgomery just played. The horn adds an agitation to the mix. He’s animated in contrast to Montgomery’s calm. That creates tension, and at first, one thinks Griffin’s going to turn the song into an occasion to party. But the guitarist comes back and takes control for the last four minutes. He captures Griffin’s excitement, but he mutes it as a way of keeping the flame burning or at least smoldering. The song ends with a minute of just Wes solo on the strings in a meditative groove.

The concert ends with three blues numbers, a medley of “Blue ‘N’ Boogie” / “West Coast Blues” and “Twisted Blues”. Ironically, these are the happiest songs. Montgomery plays them with a lighter touch, perhaps because he wanted to end the show on a less heavy level. He strums more than picks here and keeps the pace moving to a fast beat. He accents his cadences with fancy frilly as he glides up and down the strings on the final cut. As far as one can tell, it’s not raining outside. But Montgomery’s playing has fallen on their ears. The promise of April in the City of Lights awaits.

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