Contributed by Dave_Bruce, who writes:-
A light but nonetheless accomplished album by a talented musician who perhaps deserves as much recognition from the public at large as he has earned over the years from his peers. This charity-shop find features a Jazzman/Lair regular, guitarist Ike Isaccs.
I'm reliably informed that the model on the front cover, Shakira Baksh, married some bloke called Michael Caine in 1973 and that they are still together 43 years on.
Duncan Lamont - tenor
Ike Isaacs - guitar
George Kish - guitar
Roger Webb - piano
Kenny Baldock - bass
Ron Mathewson - bass
Art Morgan - bass, drums
Barry Morgan - percussion
01 Desafinado
02 A Man And A Woman
03 Sunny
04 Meditation
05 Manha De Carnaval
06 How Insensitive
07 The Girl From Ipanema
08 Quiet Nights Of Quiet Stars
09 One-Note Samba
10 The Shadow Of Your Smile
11 Call Me
12 Fly Me To The Moon
Label: MFP 1357 MFP 5093 Pathe 5088
Recorded: 1970
Lineage: LP>FLAC
File size: 537MB
Scans: Front and rear LP covers
Duncan Lamont's AllMusic biography
b. 4 July 1931, Greenock, Scotland. Lamont started out as a trumpet player leading his own band in Scotland which won recognition in Melody Maker in 1951. He spent some time in London playing with Kenny Graham’s Afro-Cubists but during the early 50s continued to be active in Scotland. It was during this period that he switched to tenor saxophone and became a jazz studio player on this instrument. He worked with numerous popular British dance bands and jazz groups including those led by Basil and Ivor Kirchin, Ken Mackintosh, Jack Parnell, Geraldo, Eric Delaney and Vic Lewis, with whom he toured America in 1958. In the 60s he played with Pat Smythe, Kenny Baker and others, freelanced extensively and was in a band formed for Benny Goodman to lead on a European tour. Over the years Lamont was often to be heard leading his own small bands but he also played in numerous big bands and studio orchestras including those led by Kenny Wheeler, Gil Evans, who was a great admirer of Lamont’s talent as a composer, Bobby Lamb and Raymond Premru, Nelson Riddle, Henry Mancini, Benny Carter and Bill Holman.
Among singers Lamont has accompanied either on tour or as a member of studio orchestras are Frank Sinatra, Rosemary Clooney and Paul McCartney. In addition to his activities as a performer, Lamont has also composed many songs including the award winning ‘I Told You So’ (recorded by Trudy Kerr among others), ‘Carousel’ (Nancy Marano), ‘Not You Again’ (Cleo Laine) and ‘Manhattan In The Rain’ (Joyce Breach and Norma Winstone). Lamont has also composed several longer works including ‘The Young Person’s Guide To The Jazz Orchestra’, ‘Soho Suite’ and ‘Sherlock Holmes Suite’, the latter a collaboration with Spike Milligan.
He has also written music for children’s television, that for Spot being Grammy nominated, and for several Walt Disney videos. For more than a decade, Lamont led a big band in order to raise money for cancer research. In 1999, he won the John Dankworth Jazz Award for long-standing talent. Lamont is a fluent performer with considerable technical skills and a searching intelligence to his playing. His activities as a composer have long been greatly respected by his professional peers and, at the start of the new century, are starting to receive the wider recognition they so richly deserve.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
https://1fichier.com/?eug1jj5j20
ReplyDelete24/96
Deletehttp://www12.zippyshare.com/v/XuJgplfq/file.html
http://www12.zippyshare.com/v/988b5TZJ/file.html
http://www12.zippyshare.com/v/RD9NoUgZ/file.html
thanks Rodney. an overlooked fine Scotjazzer. there was another similar album MFP 'Summer Sambas' which somebody must have.
ReplyDeleteOverlooked indeed, Zoot - very little by him as leader. The other album coming along later.
DeleteThanks Rodney and Dave_Bruce! Cheers!
ReplyDeleteMany thanks Rodney and Dave. I recall seeing his quintet with David Snell on harp and Barry Morgan on drums at a concert in Morley College, Lambeth in the late 1960s. This group made one LP called "Communication" on Columbia 33SX6149. I also saw him around the same time at a jazz club in Croydon above a Chinese restaurant with two other Scots tenormen, Bobby Wellins and Tommy Whittle - a memorable evening.
ReplyDelete[Communication] is on the menu, jazzandylan. Will post quite soon.
DeleteI look forward to hearing it Rodney - a rare album.
ReplyDeleteI have Summer Sambas.
ReplyDeleteBob
Bob - As said above, it is in the pipeline but if you could send it to me, we could post a little earlier.
DeleteI will have to get my digitised version off my old PC but will try and get it to you soon.
DeleteIf it's a lot of trouble, Bob, we can still ask bluebird for his rip.
DeleteIt shouldn't have been any trouble but it was on an old PC and seems to have got corrupted, so it's over to Bluebird ! Now I need it too !
DeleteOkay, Bob. Thanks for the thought anyway.
DeleteThank you for this post (and the anticipated future posts) of Duncan Lamont. Years ago I gave Duncan a cassette tape of his Sherlock Holmes Suite that was broadcast on BBC. Unfortunately I no longer have the tape. He was most appreciative and wrote me a nice "thank you" letter.An excellent tenor player and a brilliant lyricist.
ReplyDeletehttp://ronnieross1.tripod.com/id48.html
ReplyDeleteWe have Sherlock Holmes Suite, ritzbird. Broadcast on Radio 2 - New Year's Day 1989 - sans narrative bits but with intros by Peter Clayton. Not our recording - can't remember where it came from now. Will try to include later as an item in the Ronnie Ross series as he's on it. Listening now but no Ross solo yet.
That would be great Rodney, many thanks.
DeleteThis lp and the 'Summer Sambas' are still around in Charity shops. I saw both today in the same shop for 50p each!
ReplyDeleteWell worth a listen although nothing earth shattering.
This lp and the 'Summer Sambas' are still around in Charity shops. I saw both today in the same shop for 50p each!
ReplyDeleteWell worth a listen although nothing earth shattering.
Many thanks, Dave, and for the memories of the old MFP label.
ReplyDelete