Trumpeter/arranger
Fagerquist defines the typical West Coast cool sound, and his band plays every nuance, phrase, and measure in hushed tones as a reserved, attractive, easily likable pure jazz persona. The band features such notables as alto saxophonist
Herb Geller, valve trombonist
Bob Enevoldsen, pianist/arranger
Marty Paich, and drummer
Mel Lewis. Lesser knowns such as second trumpeter
Ed Leddy, baritone saxophonist
Ronnie Lang, bassist
Buddy Clark, and French horn player
Vince DeRosa prove their mettle amongst the tall California redwood big names. The octet plays eight reworked standards, some like
"Easy to Love" much cooler than the others, and
"Smoke Gets in Your Eyes" a fine, full, and mellow ballad, both trumpet led. Though typical of '50s cool,
"Aren't You Glad You're You?" has a hopping
"Would You Like to Swing on a Star"-type melody, trumpet and trombone upfront, piano setting up the horns who throw this melody down, while the easy swinger
"All the Things You Are" is somewhat predictable but rich in harmonic content. It's clear this is
Fagerquist's session and he deals the melodic cards on
"The Song Is You," the others playing a second line, then the whole section counterpoints the third. They're all over the place, bouncing here and there during
"Time After Time," and
DeRosa leads into trumpet on
"Easy Living," followed by a tip-toe traipsing bridge chart for all. The most challenging arrangement crops up on
"Lullaby of Birdland." The first half of the melody is cleanly stated, the other half broken up and reassembled several times over, a good swinger as
Geller's alto gets the spotlight in a
Bird-like solo with more counterpoint and
Enevoldsen's trombone trading lines with
Geller. This is a sleeper, one that doesn't jump out and grab you graphically, and the names are innocent, most notably
Fagerquist's. Still it's a session that should not be ignored as one of the hallmarks of Pacific jazz expressionism in those feel-good times and a pivot point in jazz recordings of glorious 1957. Highly recommended. ~ Michael G. Nastos