Wednesday, 4 June 2008
Gerard Badini
Artist: Gerard Badini
Genre(s):
Jazz
Discography:
And The Swing Machine
Year: 2004
Tracks: 6
While many releases on long-gone European labels ar concentrated to track, it is possible this French walter Reed player has appeared on something like 150 malarkey recording roger Sessions since the late '40s. Which isn't big, or sooner is Badini. Nothing establises him as the magisterial continental type more than a reference such as this: Gerard Badini, self-taught clarinettist and tenor saxist, made his professional debut at the Monte Carlo Sporting Club in 1952. He had begun his musical preparation as a classical singer, and picked up the clarinet in 1950. While roulette wheels spun and clicked and the elite of Europe lost fortunes, Badini honed his musical workmanship in diverse traditional jazz bands. A go of the European continent aboard Sidney Bechet was a prospect to be heard by a more expansive jazz interview at venues such as the Salle Pleyal in his native Paris and Festival Hall across the pond in London. It pot be sham that it was too an opportunity to be overshadowed.
By the conclusion of the '50s Badini had switched to tenor sax, cultivating relationships with players such as pianist Claude Bolling, drummer Gerard Pochonet, and alto saxophonist Michel Attenoux. Badini 's lotto is straight-ahead swing; he is a Benny Goodman man, although he solos competently and with a coherent sense of venture inside well-tested stylistic boundaries on tenor saxophone as well as clarinet. Through the '60s and '70s he worked both as leader of his possess little combos such as Swing Machine and behind visiting American stars including singer Helen Humes and a rotating serial of ex-sidemen from Duke Ellington's band. On that national, a side switch off with trombonist Sam Woodyard is some of the baddest Badini. Badini tested living in New York for respective years in the late '70s, just returned to France by 1982, obsessing about acquiring a decent crescent roll in the morning. The Super Swing Machine was his contribution to the civilisation of 1984. In the '90s he arrived at the slightly less arrogrant set diagnose of Gerard Badini Big Band. This group, in co-leadership with Michel Leeb, recorded the fine 1996 tribute entitled Djangos d'Or featuring guest artists Johnny Griffin on tenor sax and singer Dee Dee Bridgewater.