Grits, Beans And Greens The Lost Fontana Studio Sessions 1969
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Grits, Beans And Greens The Lost Fontana Studio Sessions 1969

Original price was: £22.00.Current price is: £6.60.

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Description

Newly Discovered Studio Album From Legendary British Jazz Star Tubby Hayes Set For Release On Fontana / Decca Records.

Tubby Hayes is undoubtedly one of the most important, influential and ground-breaking UK jazz musicians of all time. During the 50s and early 60s, Hayes had stood apart from many of his UK-based contemporaries, displaying a self-confidence and virtuoso musical delivery that placed him neck-and-neck with many of the leading American jazzmen of the day. He worked with the likes of Quincy Jones, Ella Fitzgerald, Charles Mingus and Duke Ellington and his many fans included Miles Davis, Cannonball Adderley and Sonny Rollins. He had his own primetime TV show and was the face of UK jazz.

Thought to be either lost or destroyed until their recent rediscovery, the sessions are being hailed as among the very best work in the Hayes discography. Sometimes when tapes than have been lost or rumoured to exist finally surface there is a touch of anti-climax or the need to spin them in a way that makes them more important than they are explains Hayes biographer and award-winning British jazz saxophonist Simon Spillett. These sessions, on the other hand, are absolute classics in every regard. Its an album that can sit equally alongside the best Coltrane, Rollins or Dexter Gordon LPs. It really is a lost masterpiece, make no mistake.

At the time the Grits, Beans and Greens sessions were recorded, Hayes was also working on a more commercial project, The Orchestra, which found him aiming for the pop and easy-listening markets by covering The Beatles, Burt Bacharach and Nancy Sinatra. Ironically, sales of The Orchestra were poor by the standards of his previous albums and as Hayes health began to falter in the early 1970s, no further recordings took place, leaving the Grits, Beans and Greens reels forgotten and unreleased. After his tragic death following open-heart surgery, aged just 38, in 1973, the tapes were simply filed away, eventually becoming mislaid as the labels archives went through a series of corporate buy-outs.

The tapes were discovered when the late jazz writer and Polygram Catalogue Manager Richard Cook came across Hayes diary and noticed entries detailing a number of recording sessions. He subsequently trawled through the Polygram archives and made what was to be one of the most significant discoveries in jazz history when he came across the never-before-heard 1969 tapes. Cook left the company before the tapes were released and it wasnt until last year that knowledge of their existence resurfaced.

Upon discovery of the tapes, Decca hired high-end vinyl specialists Gearbox Studios to master the sessions for the first time. They created a 180-gram vinyl edition employing an original 1960s-era Studer C37 tape machine and a Scully Lathe (the same model employed by jazz record engineering god Rudy Van Gelder).

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