description
It Don't Mean A Thing (If It Ain't Got That Swing)
Blues For Nat
Minuet In Jazz
They Can't Take That Away From Me
St. Louis Blues
Dorshka (For Doris Duke)
Have You Met Miss Jones?
Things Ain't What They Used To Be
Zoot Blues
Black And Blue (What Did I Do To Be So Black And Blue)
Jazzbo's Jaunt
Pennies From Heaven
Blues In The Closet
Straight Life
It's All Right With Me
Sometimes I'm Happy
Taking A Chance On Love
Blues Improvisation In F
Ballad-Blues Improvisation In C
Ballad Improvisation In F
Salt Peanuts
A Place In The Sun (Main Title)
Willow Weep For Me
Time After Time
After You've Gone
Willow Weep For Me (Alternate Take)
Time After Time (Alternate Take)
Forgetful (Master Take)
Will I Ever Learn?
Leavin' Town (Master Take)
Country Boy
When You Are Near
The Trouble With Me Is You
You Wear Love So Well!
Picnic In The Wintertime
J.C. Blues
Without You (Tres Palabras)
Doodlin'
Ev'rything I Love
You Stepped Out Of A Dream
If You Could See Me Now
It's You Or No One
Angel Eyes
Caravan
Prelude To A Kiss (Unissued)
How High The Moon (Unissued)
J.C. Blues (Unissued Alternate Take)
J.C. Blues (Unissued Alternate Take)
Doodlin'
Doodlin'
Groove Funk Soul (In & Out)
Yesterdays
Day-Dream
Could Happen To You
Play Me The Blues
That's All
Yesterdays (Unissued Alternate Take)
Play Me The Blues (Unissued Alternate Take)
Lover (Unissued)
Day In - Day Out (Unissued)
Daisy Mae (Whatever)
The Sidewalks Of New York (East Side, West Side)
Here's That Rainy Day
My Ship
I'm Getting Sentimental Over You
One Life To Live
That Old Feeling
Cheek To Cheek
Fascinating Rhythm
Funky Blues
You Don't Know What Love Is
Things Ain't What They Used To Be
Sweet Lorraine
Get Out Of Town
Remind Me
Satin Doll
A Flower Is A Lovesome Thing
Just Squeeze Me (But Don't Tease Me)
Lush Life
Passion Flower
Remind Me
Joe Castro’s love for jazz, and his charming personality, made it possible for the pianist to become intimately involved with musicians of all stripes and abilities. Castro’s relationship with the famous heiress Doris Duke afforded him the financial means to further his relationships with these musicians in jam sessions held at home studios at Duke’s residences, Falcon Lair in California and Duke Farms in New Jersey, and to later record albums of his own work with incredible sidemen and projects led by these acquaintances and friends.
The initial Joe Castro boxed set, Lush Life – A Musical Journey (Sunnyside, 2015), provided an insight into the world of the pianist’s early meetings with the greats of jazz at home recorded sessions. These recordings included Buddy Collette, Chico Hamilton, Teddy Wilson, Stan Getz, Zoot Sims and Lucky Thompson. The box also included a couple of sessions recorded for potential release on Castro and Duke’s Clover label, including a Castro Big Band and the Teddy Edwards Tentet.
The second boxed set of recordings from Joe Castro’s collection, Passion Flower – For Doris Duke, highlights his collaborations with a vast array of incredible musicians. There are fine home recordings of jam sessions, studio recordings of Castro’s Atlantic Records releases, recordings of projects of friends and productions that were done under the aegis of Clover Records, the label that Duke and Castro founded and briefly ran.
The first disc is entitled Trios 1955-1956 – The Artist’s Choice. The program features seventeen tracks recorded at Duke and Castro’s Falcon Lair residence in Beverly Hills, California. All of the tracks feature Castro on piano with the aid of fantastic jazz legends and rhythm men. The ensembles feature combinations of bassists Leroy Vinnegar, Red Mitchell and Paul Chambers and drummers Jimmy Pratt, Lawrence Marable and Philly Joe Jones.
The second disc is Joe Castro’s Friends – At Duke Farms 1956. The disc provides never before heard solo selections from piano great Paul Bley, a full seventeen years before his classic solo recording, Open To Love. There are also pieces performed by Bley with his touring trio of bassist Hal Gaylor and drummer Lennie McBrowne. The other half of the program features recordings for a never realized project of Flo and George Handy, with five tracks of the duo and three with vocalist Flo fronting a twelve piece orchestra directed by composer/arranger George Handy.
The third disc is Joe Castro’s Mood Jazz with Voices & Strings – The Atlantic Album +, which contains the pianist’s first commercial release, Mood Jazz, which was released in 1957, along with previously unissued alternate takes. The album features the arranging of Ray Ellis and Neal Hefti along with musical accompaniment by well-known musicians like drummer Philly Joe Jones, trumpeter Nat Adderley and saxophonist Cannonball Adderley.
The fourth disc is Castro’s Groove Funk Soul – The Atlantic Album +, which is his second Atlantic recording, which was released in 1960, along with a number of previously unissued alternate takes. The ensemble is a fantastic one, featuring saxophonist Teddy Edwards, bassist Leroy Vinnegar and drummer Billy Higgins.
The fifth disc is an unreleased Joe Castro Trio session from 1965 entitled The Sidewalks of New York. The recording is special as it highlights the performances of Castro with his longtime friend, drummer Paul Motian. Teddy Kotick is also featured as the Trio’s bassist.
The sixth disc is Remind Me, a project that Castro conceived for Clover Records in 1965, and worked on through 1966, when the label folded. The recordings feature Castro’s trio of bassist Kotick and drummer Motian alone for half of the tracks, which were recorded in New York in April 1965. Castro took the recordings back to Los Angeles where he added horns with the aid of the Bob Cooper Ensemble, featuring trumpeter Al Porcino, woodwind players Gabe Baltzar, Cooper, Bill Holman, Bill Green and Bill Hood on a number of them. Teddy Edwards can be heard on Gaines and Ellington’s “Just Squeeze Me (But Don’t Tease Me)” and the rare piano stylings of Doris Duke, herself, are likely heard on Billy Strayhorn’s “Passion Flower” and Kern and Fields’s “Remind Me.”
Note: The outer box incorrectly lists the catalog number as SSC 1391, which is the catalog number for the earlier Joe Castro Sunnyside boxed set.
The numbering of the individual digipaks in the set are: SSC 1393-1, SSC 1393-2, SSC 1393-3, SSC 1393-4, SSC 1393-5 and SSC 1393-6.
Alto Saxophone
–
Julian "Cannonball" Adderley, (tracks: 3-01, 3-03, 3-12 to 3-15)
Arranged By
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Neal Hefti (tracks: 3-01 to 3-04, 3-06 to 3-09, 3-12 to 3-15),
Ray Ellis (tracks: 3-05, 3-10, 3-11)
Arranged By, Directed By
–
George Handy (tracks: 2-16 to 2-18)
Baritone Saxophone, Bass Clarinet
–
Bill Hood
Bass
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Ed Shonk (tracks: 3-01 to 3-15),
Hal Gaylor, (tracks: 2-06 to 2-10),
Leroy Vinnegar (tracks: 1-03, 1-04, 1-05, 1-08, 1-10, 1-13, 1-14, 1-16, 4-01 to 4-10),
Paul Chambers (3) (tracks: 1-02, 1-06),
Red Mitchell (tracks: 1-01, 1-07, 1-09, 1-11, 1-12, 1-15, 1-17),
Teddy Kotick (tracks: 5-01 to 5-11, 6-01 to 6-10)
Drums
–
"Philly" Joe Jones (tracks: 1-02, 1-06, 3-05, 3-10, 3-11),
Billy Higgins (tracks: 4-01 to 4-10),
Gus Johnson (tracks: 3-01 to 3-04, 3-06 to 3-09, 3-12 to 3-15),
Jimmy Pratt (tracks: 1-01, 1-04, 1-07 to 1-12, 1-15 to 1-17),
Lawrence Marable (tracks: 1-03, 1-05, 1-13, 1-14),
Lenny McBrowne (tracks: 2-06 to 2-10),
Paul Motian (tracks: 5-01 to 5-11, 6-01 to 6-10)
Ensemble
–
The Bob Cooper Ensemble, (tracks: 6-02 to 6-04, 6-06),
The Neal Hefti Singers (tracks: 3-01, 3-03, 3-04, 3-07, 3-12 to 3-15)
Executive Producer
–
Francois Zalacain
Flute, Alto Saxophone
–
Gabe Baltazar (tracks: 6-02 to 6-04, 6-06)
Graphic Design
–
Christopher Drukker
Liner Notes
–
Bret Sjerven
Mastered By
–
Katsuhiko Naito
Oboe, Tenor Saxophone, Orchestrated By
–
Bob Cooper (tracks: 6-02 to 6-04, 6-06)
Orchestra
–
The Neal Hefti Orchestra, (tracks: 3-02, 3-06, 3-08, 3-09),
The Ray Ellis Orchestra and Voices, (tracks: 3-05, 3-10, 3-11)
Piano
–
Doris Duke (tracks: 6-09 to 6-10),
George Handy (tracks: 2-11 to 2-15),
Joe Castro (tracks: 1-1 to 1-17, 3-1 to 6-10),
Paul Bley (tracks: 2-01 to 2-10)
Producer
–
Daniel Richard,
Joe Castro
Producer, Transferred By
–
James Castro
Saxophone, Clarinet
–
Bill Green (tracks: 6-02 to 6-04, 6-06)
Tenor Saxophone
–
Teddy Edwards (tracks: 4-01 to 4-10, 6-7)
Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet
–
Bill Holman (tracks: 6-02 to 6-04, 6-06)
Trumpet
–
Al Porcino (tracks: 6-02 to 6-04, 6-06),
Nat Adderley (tracks: 3-01, 3-03, 3-12 to 3-15)
Vocals
–
Flo Handy
Licensed Through
–
James Castro
Phonographic Copyright (p)
–
Sunnyside Communications
Copyright (c)
–
Sunnyside Communications