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    Clifford Brown: A Trumpeters Perspective

    Al Hood

    Performance Impressions

    Dynamic Control

    *Control in his playing was the kind of control you felt in his personality (Land)

    *"Our own policy is to aim for the musical extremes of both excitement and subtle

    softness whenever each is necessary, but with a lot of feeling in everything"

    (Brown/Hentoff)

    *He had a great sense of dynamics - he would build to a frenzied pitch! (Dockery)

    *He could change from a meek lamb, musically, into a fierce tiger. He could play the

    top, bottom, loud, soft - he was playing the WHOLE instrument! (Golson)

    Effect on Listeners

    *His style was such that it radiated emotional impulses (Golson)

    *He's make you react physically. He made you twitch, move your feet. He had a

    mystical charm. (Golson)

    *Knack for starting solos with phrases that snapped listeners to attention (BN)

    *People would stand "transfixed" (Dockery)

    Performance Commitment

    *Played as if his life depended on it - he never "walked" through anything! (Golson)

    *He wasn't afraid to take chances - he was always reaching (Land)

    *There is nothing he would stop at to make each performance sound as if it were his last

    (Quincy)

    *Played every tune, set, like there was no tomorrow (Teddy Edwards)

    *Clifford was so consistent night after night - just got better and better! (Donaldson)

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    Technique

    *Ability to give technically demanding passages a human heart (BN)

    *Moved around the instrument more like a saxophonist (Louis Smith)*His prodigious technique is always totally integrated with the content of his playing (Ira

    Gitler)

    Emotional Traits

    *He had a sense of humor, which you can hear in his playing (Art Farmer)

    * There was a joy in his playing - a warmth. (Marsalis)

    Personal Traits

    High School Days

    *Howard High senior class treasurer (Morning Star)

    *Andrews - He had great drive (West)

    *A mind in music has to be disciplined (Boysie)

    *Boysie taught him to have a "stick-to-it-iveness" - that he had to get to know his craft

    (LBW)

    *He learned everything fast - called him "the brain" - (Rella)

    *So attuned to MATH during those days (Bach Inventions parts) (LBW)

    Perfectionism

    *He never really realized - I am good. Very hard on himself(LBW)

    *He always tried to improve his playing. He was never satisfied - he was a perfectionist

    (LaRue)

    *Became a perfectionist at whatever he tried (Chris Powell)

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    Family

    *He came from a talented family - they were competitors! (LBW)

    *He took his time - everyone would get excited but him - (Leon)

    *CB - You can't copy on somebody! (Leon)

    About Music & Musicians

    *He never had to say how good he was or how bad someone else was (Farmer)

    *I never heard him criticize another musician (Morris)

    *I asked why he bothered to show up to play these circus-type tunes, and he said, "I like

    all kinds of music," and from that point on, I delved into anything I could get my hands

    on. That one thing he said really turned me around (Belgrave)

    Sound

    His Own Sound

    *He always had his own sound (Jenkins)

    *Sound was like a flower (Cherry)

    *A happiness in his sound. It affirms and makes you feel good! (Marsalis)

    *Certain kind of romantic innocence in his playing (Bradford)

    *Miles told me about Brownie - he plays very "warm" (Art Farmer)

    *His sound was gorgeous - even when it "cracked" (Red Rodney)

    *Sound would be about 95% same live as what you hear on records (LBW)

    A Singing Sound

    *Conceived patterns through singing (Berliner)

    *Music should have the same vibrato as the human voice (Boysie)

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    *But to be thinking as a vocalist or singing with the trumpet - that's the way he

    approached it (Don Cherry)

    An Even Sound in All Registers

    *"He played the full range of the instrument, utilizing the lowest and highest notes

    effectivelythe low notes didn't have the same body and fullness and purity of tone as

    the high notes" (Brown on Harry James, db blindfold test - 2/22/56)

    *Sounds the same in every register (Marsalis)

    A Big & Brilliant Tone

    *Sound was a little bit different than Fats - it had that 'edge' to it. It was that fat sound

    that attracted me to him (Sketch One/John Lewis) - (Max Roach)

    *Always thought it was dark (but with advent of CD), but actually it was pretty bright

    (Goode)

    *If you hear big, you're going to have a big tone. My sound is a direct result of being

    around Clifford (Bop Wilson)

    *I get the closest to CB's sound by experimenting with the "lip vibrato" - it's a sound

    controlling device. You can hear it in his vibrato, esp. when he plays ballads. You earonly registers the prominence of the outside, the open part of it. And just opening it

    slightly gives you the illusion of a big fat sound. When he starts playing faster, he closes

    down and goes to the smaller aperture. (Shew)

    His Influences & Early Training

    Main Influence/Listening

    *We had records - Bessie Smith, Erskine Hawkins, etcwe put on the recordings and weknew it from start to finish - what ALL the instruments were playing (Geneva)

    *Started trumpet in High School (Jenkins)

    *Feather's Encyclopedia of Jazz - "the late Fats Navarro" (CB)

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    *(Navarro) - "That boy sure likes me, doesn't he?" (Golson/LBW)

    *Fats, Diz, KD and Clark Terry (Larry Smith)

    *Clark Terry and Fats - those were his 2 guys (Clarke)

    *It was like Fats Navarro, only with a better sound (Blue Mitchell)

    Boysie

    *"We wouldn't allow him to copy. We was telling him to get his own thing!" (Boysie)

    *Lowery taught him chord changes - he wasn't too much into playing other's solos

    (Jenkins)

    Howard High School

    *Howard Band played all of the masters - marches, etc(Cooper)

    *Andrews - advanced brass study at the U of MI (West)

    *Andrews was very strict on discipline, practicing and being neat (Cooper)

    *"Carnival of Venice" (Staigers) in HS - It was flawless! Also "Blue Feathers" (Jenkins)

    *Del Staigers "Carnival of Venice" - by potential concert trumpet soloist CB. Also

    directed the Howard dance band - the Esquires (Morning Star)

    *Capacity audience - well received (same)

    *It was just in a short time that he blossomed - like Chopin or something! (Cashman)

    Teachers

    *While recovering, I'd show him stuff I was learning in NYC - different extensions and

    changes (Jenkins)

    *Nobody taught CB how to play but CB (Cooper)

    *There was nobody who MADE Clifford - Clifford made himself(Morris)

    *Clifford is a guy who made me because he was the one who told the world about me.

    But it was him, not me(Boysie)

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    Singing & Other Influences

    *CB could sing pretty good too - his whole family did (LaRue/BG)

    *Liked to listen to singers and classical composers, etc(LBW)

    *He loved to sing - Broadway, blues, standards, Figaro, anything! (LaRue)

    *Played a ballad like a singer would sing it (LaRue)

    *Sarah Vaughan, Diz, Monk, Miles, Coltrane, Golson, Milt Jackson (LBW)

    Mendez & the Classical Influence

    *Mendez meeting in DC - gave him a book and a horn (Chris Powell)

    *(lick) on Steve Allen Show - "I stole that from Rafael Mendez!" (LBW)

    *"Flight of the Bumblebee" duo with him (LaRue)

    *He loved Heifetz (LaRue/BG)

    The Beboppers

    *Asked Red Rodney for lesson as teenager (LaRue/BG)

    *Bird - smiled and said "CB - I just can't believe this guy!" (Manning)

    Books

    Arban/Prescott System

    *Andrews - I started him on the Prescott system which is based on Arbans (West)

    *Used the Arban-Prescott System (Cooper)

    *Used Arban's almost exclusively (Cashman)

    *Arban's was his 'bible' (Jenkins)

    *Arban's is the key - the technique's in there and that's where he got a lot of his ideas

    (Bop Wilson)

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    *Told me about the Arban book - esp. the part with the arpeggios (Don Cherry)

    *Recall him playing out of that famous trumpet book - the Arban's (Land)

    *"Just goin' in the Arban book - he turned it upside down and just played the shit out of

    it! I realized later that he had memorized it!" (Larry Smith)

    Other Technical Books

    *Played an awful lot of technical books, like Clarke types of things (Shew)

    *Rafael Mendez book of solos (LBW)

    *Duets - trumpet and piano, reading was important (Amsden Duets) (LBW)

    Practice Techniques/Habits

    Practice Amount

    *Everyday after school was spent practicing (Jenkins)

    *Walking by Clifford's house and hearing him playing in the basement (Jackie Cooper)

    *Found him in the closet practicing one Sunday morning (Leon)

    *Practiced a "solo" so it would be the same next time (Leon)

    *Clifford was dedicated. He would never know when to go home! When he went home,

    he practiced. People call it a gift, but I figure it's a matter of patience that you have for a

    particular thing (Boysie)

    *When he played, everything was scientifically laid out. He was into writing ideas down,he would always tell me to write things down. He'd play everything through the keys.

    (Belgrave)

    *Had an instinct for music and was serious about it. He practiced all the time. He used

    to get on my nerves he practiced so much! (Ralph Morris)

    *Practiced in the back of my '39 Plymouth (Dave Clarke)

    *He was playing his trumpet all of the time in the hotel with the mute (Algiers-Mialy)

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    *Constant and diligent practicer (Morrow)

    *He practiced all the time and he listened - the great ones are also great listeners (Max

    Roach/Beehive)

    *Practiced all the time! Hours and hours.(LBW)

    *He LIKED to practice (Taylor)

    Exercises

    *Even if we were in a place where he couldn't blow his horn, even with the mute, he

    would do lip exercises, tongue exercises or he would just simply blow his mpc (LaRue)

    *LaRue - Daily warm up included an inverted whistle - pucker his lips inside out andwhistle, then blow his mpc a bit - all for an hour (West)

    *Purse his lips and tongue (dih-dih-dih-dih) (LBW)

    *Morning, noon and night to "keep his chops up" (LBW)

    *Forever doing fingering with no trumpet (LBW)

    Recording Practice

    *He recorded himself practicing everyday for critical analysis. Learned from Boysie (?)Also recorded performances (LaRue)

    *Recorded his playing into a mic for 25-30 minutes (Morrow)

    Practice Tapes - What We Can Learn

    *Practiced mezzo-voce (in harmon) - favoring smooth passage of inner musical thought.

    Stream of uninterrupted ideas which he tries to play in a stricter rhythm that he marks by

    tapping his foot. In concert, he is in top form, but pays more attention to QUALITY,

    sticking to what he can do best. The Emarcy recordings are much more refined. He

    sings passages - senses that his mind is alert to all possible variations. Does a little

    buzzing to get the "feeling" for it again. Like JS Bach, sketching without worrying about

    polish. A trance-like concentration. (Mathez)

    *(Practicing tape) - every time he runs stuff and hits a little snag, he stops and slows the

    whole thing down and starts taking it apart. He even puts the horn down and sings it a

    few times - a right brain kind of thing. He knew HOW to practice. Scat sings to clean uparticulation. Ability to confront problems - never swept anything under the rug. He

    knew how to practice and he taped himself a lot to assume a subjective and objectiveview point (Shew)

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    Relate to Singing

    *One of his favorite practice methodologies was to try to capture, on his horn, a singer's

    phrasing (LaRue)

    *That singable quality has a great deal to do with whether you are actually playing musicor just playing trumpet. The horn is the amplifier of YOU (Shew)

    Jazz Study and other instruments

    Boysie's Teachings

    *Boysie taught Brownie mostly CHORDS and jazz (Cashman)

    *Teach them how to hear - learn the directions of sounds. "Mathematically using theinstrument" Hear it - Hum it - Play it (Boysie/Schaap)

    *First class, second class, tonic class, diminished sounds and altering of such to help you

    hear what a key sounds like - jazz is modification. Single and double active notes go to

    "inactive" notes - eventually, the only thought is ELIMINATION (Boysie)

    *Mastered their instruments. They were actually mathematicians. (Boysie)

    *Mathematical genius - took his instrument to the extreme (Boysie/Schaap)

    Other Instruments*Played piano and bass (Dockery)

    *We had a player piano at home, later a second hand radio. He'd go to Walnut Street

    YMCA for better piano - also to practice and jam (Leon)

    *Jam session - no horns, sat in and soloed like a pianist with the rhythm section (Land)

    High School & After

    *Andrews - he knew polytonality - took our small theory class and developedarrangements - very Gillespie-oriented (West)

    *Attributes 1950 accident recovery to great progress in development (Dockery)

    His Thinking in Jazz

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    *He didn't ever transcribe - he "absorbed it" - the sound of the ocean, the feeling he had

    for a sunset (LBW)

    *Articulated the fact that he was thinking compositionally (Taylor)

    *Reflects some degree of melodic organization - melodic continuity and long rangestructural concerns - unfolds in a logical and dramatic way - great paraphrases of other

    composer's melodies - very related to Parker (Charles Blanq)

    *Lines were refreshing - highly intellectual, yet simple. He defined everything (Red

    Rodney)

    *People look at style (surface things) rather than CONTENT. Big sound, fat from top to

    bottom, chops, etcwhat does that say? He practiced a lot. The important things he did

    were in how he dealt with the harmony. His concentration was into what he was playing

    and he was totally centered. (Goode)

    *The first trumpet player after Bird to get real specific about the intervals he playedrelative to the tonic. Not by "lick" Real content was in how he wove the lines and dealt

    with the harmony. (Goode)

    *Had the most complete sense of chord changes - developed to its fullest. He played allthe variations and the scales (Dizzy)

    *Harmonically subtle, yet melodically uncorrupted. Resolves the complexities of

    difficult harmonies into melodic coherence and still retains the elusive vitality of the jazz

    spirit (Benny Green)

    *The clarity of his harmonic ideas just gave you something else to work with (Taylor)

    Phrases & Patterns

    *Phrases had a more regular construction than Parker's. Glimpses of possible extensions- continuing Gillespie in that way. A vertical connection to Coleman Hawkins. (Hodeir)

    *CB played note to note. He didn't make a lot of wide leaps. Thought on his feet like

    Bird but Bird's thing was more sweeping and CB's more plodding (in short groupings)

    (Goode)

    *He must have been playing a lot of piano. He practiced a lot of patterns too, I believe.He was into slightly altering the pattern to allow for the change in the chord and keeping

    as many common tones as possible (Goode)

    *I think that he would definitely work up certain things that he would play. (Goode)

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    Equipment & Trumpet Geek Stuff

    Mouthpieces

    *I made his first mouthpiece (Boysie)

    *Lowery cut CB's mpc off at the shank to produce higher notes easier and clearer

    (Boysie)

    *I talked to Art Farmer - basically he had a lot of different mouthpieces and was alwaysswitching around. On Hamp's band he used a Bach 7C, but also a 17C and a 17CW That

    was the one in the case - it's very small with a big fat cushion rim. With his rather fleshy

    lips, there is only one way he could have played on it and that's with a small aperture. He

    would have had to roll his lips in a bit. I think the articulation is what gives it away for

    me. (Shew)

    *When he finished, he reached into his pocket and pulled out another mouthpiece - I later

    learned that he carried 2 or 3 - and started complaining about the mpc. (Blue Mitchell)

    *Uncomfortable mouthpiece story (Land)

    *We had the same horn and mouthpiece - he used KING and MARTIN (Bop Wilson)

    Trumpets

    *Bought him a trumpet - I think it was a Blessing (Blakey)

    *He played a Blessing Super Artist trumpet. It has a .470 bore and a large "A" bell which

    gives you a broader sound because its wider in the throat of the bell. There's also a

    patented thing at the bottom of the tuning slide (quick change to A) that changes the

    response and sound like a Monette Sound Ring (Goode)

    *A Bach mpc and Blessing trumpet would give you a pretty good gap. That allows one

    to tongue quicker, but gives you an airier sound (Goode)

    *Small mpc on a larger bore horn (.470) - set up with mpc and lead pipe and bore of horn

    that gave him just enough back pressure so he could "pop" notes - simulated cleantonguing of notes at times - he's tonguing certain notes, but not all the notes (Standifer)

    *He always came back to his old beat-up, held together with rubber bands type of horn

    (LaRue/BG)

    *Going to Elkhart to try a Martin "Committee"

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    Embouchure

    No Pressure System

    *Mr. Andrews taught him about the "non-pressure" system (Jenkins)

    *Andrews - introduced him to the 'no pressure' system. 2/3 lower lip in mpc. Perfected

    making octave jumps early on and developed a beautiful range (West)

    *Didn't sound to me like he used the "no pressure" system, though he got much lighter atthe end of his life (Goode)

    Doc Reinhardt

    *He didn't have a high register yet - it was weak. He needed some lip building exercises,so I suggested he go see 'Doc' Reinhardt, which he did (Red Rodney)

    *He told me he was trying to get a knot on his lip (Leon)

    *Reinhardt was into finding out what your jaw type was, following a natural jaw

    movement to facilitate playing across the registers Clifford was definitely upstream.

    (Goode)

    Buzzing & Fluttering

    *I don't know how much actual buzzing he did, but on the practice tape he does a pedal

    thing, sort of like a 'pre-Neanderthal' flutter. Another smart thing. (Shew)

    *Embouchure and buzzing from LaRue

    Tonguing & Articulation

    *You got to know how to use your tongue (Boysie)

    *Detached style of Miles, but more percussive (Hodeir)

    *He had a real blunt, explosive attack which was somewhere between Miles and Fats

    (Bradford)

    *Used his tongue more frequently, creating clipped, machine-gun like lines in which

    every note was crisply delineated (BN)

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    *Diz includes CB in a small list of those who have shaped the modern jazz brass tradition

    *Young guys are now playing the trumpet based on a (pauses)the "feeling" of CB

    (Dizzy/Nolan)

    *Your influence is in how many people copy you (Diz)*Brownie was the most important trumpet player who has come forth since the

    1940sAnd still is. (Blakey, 1965)

    *Greatest trumpet influence we've had to date (Red Rodney)

    *Bird was gone and CB was the future of the music. Complete, utter one-in-a-million

    genius (Manning)

    *CB/MR at Basin Street was one of the first recordings I ever heard. In HS, I learned allhis solos off of CB with Strings Tremendous influence - Lee, Freddie, Woody (Marsalis)

    Lee Morgan/Miles

    *Lee Morgan at the Heritage House (hurricane story) - (LBW)

    *Lee Morgan was a constant visitor in our home (LaRue)

    *CB was Lee Morgan's idol/mentor - Boysie taught him too (Cooper)

    *Miles, as bad as he was, had big time respect for CB (Quincy)

    *It would have been more difficult for Miles had Fats and Clifford lived (Taylor)

    Quincy's Assessment

    *He should not only be judged by his present talent (which is still of superior quality),but by his potentialities. I'm very aware of his sensitivity and superior taste; he will never

    lower his standards and play without sincerely feeling, whatever the mood (Quincy)

    *To ME, the name of Clifford Brown will always remain synonymous with the very

    essence of musical and moral maturity. This name will stand as a symbol of the ideals

    every young jazz musician should strive to attain (Quincy)

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    Reviews of Playing

    Chris Powell Oct 22, 1952 2 I Come From Jamaica

    And a fair trumpet solo to round things out

    Tadd Dameron Nonet - Metronome magazine Dec 53 Jazz singles byUlanov

    .they do boast a trumpet-playing discovery who may achieve the stature of Dizzy or

    Fats Navarro. This distinguished youngster, Clifford Brown, goes by the name ofBrownie and plays by the way of Fats and Freddy Webster, no small accomplishment.Theres fervor in his Philly JJsolo, piquancy in his choice Choose Now effort, muted

    skill in what he does with Tadds Theme, and a combination of a rich tone and fingering

    ease in everything.

    Lou DonaldsonClifford Brown 12-30-53 4Brown has roots in Gillespie and especially Navarro, but has his own crisp, recognizable

    identity. Not since Miles Davis' promise began to dim has there been as exciting a hornman in this tradition.

    Metronome 1-9-54 Ulanov Reviews Lou Donaldson..there's too much Donaldson alto, not enough Brown, and not really first-rate trumpet atthat. He deserves better than another rehearsal of the early bop patterns for material, too.

    Clifford Brown 04/07/1954 - Sextet (Easy Livin, etc)

    Brownie has really arrived; now lets hope he can get some steady gigs.

    Metronome May 1954 - Sextet

    Brownie in almost every way justifies the star status he's given here. By tone andtechnique and individuality, he shows himself the most striking trumpeter to come out of

    the bop background since the late great Fats Navarro. He blows brilliantly, up, in theexhilarating Cherokee and the not-so-fast Wail, satisfactorily inMinor, fairly well in the

    ballads,Living andEyes, and returns to top form in the poignant middle-tempo Hymn.

    Is Clifford Brown Such a Discovery? asks Maurice Burman - June 5,1954 (England)

    It is seldom that one hears a whole show devoted to one artist. The reason is obvious -

    We have so little jazz time and there is so much to be heard that, apart from a handful of

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    greats, it simply isnt fitting. Tony Hall, however, devoted this show to trumpeter

    Clifford Brown as a Star of Tomorrow? I am glad he added the interrogation mark, for

    as good as Clifford is - and he has a masterly technique - he lacks originality, uses clichsand has borrowed a deal from Dizzy. If we were going to look for a star of tomorrow, we

    should look for someone comparable to Lester Young who, in 1938, was playing the sort

    of music that every one scrambled to play in 1948. There is no doubt in my mind thatsomewhere in America that contemporary player exists - but he isnt Clifford Brown.

    Alun Morgan June 54 with Art Farmer / Swedish All-Stars

    Lover Come Backopens with a brilliantly conceived chorus by Brownie. If you stilldoubt that Cliffs destined for big things, hear his arresting authority and strength here,

    for this is great trumpet playing by any known standards.

    Melody Maker 06/12/1954 Clifford Brown/Art Farmer with SwedishAll-Stars

    One could hardly call either Delaware-born Brownie or Californian Art Farmer the equal

    of Chet Baker. If it wasn't for sometimes imperfect intonation, however, they wouldcome near. to being the next best.

    Jazz Journal - July 1954 Raymond Horricks - Clifford Brown Quartetin Paris

    Brownie was certainly the leading solo personality. He has swing, wit, an abundance of

    ideas and the fighting guts of a gladiator. His style combines the harmonic surety of Fats

    Navarro with the attacking zest of Gillespie and the dry humor of Shavers. It is most

    noticeable that his style varies considerably with different tempos. At a fast pace he

    employs a smallish tone and often restricts his short, staccato type of phrasing to only a

    single octave. With slow, ballad material, however, his tone quickly broadens and his

    longer melodic lines flow easily through every register.

    Melody Maker 07/10/1954 Talking of Fats & Brownie - AlunMorgan

    It took an untimely death to elevate Fats Navarro to a position of musical esteem. Let ushope Clifford Brown enjoys the appreciation he deserves while still alive.

    Aug 25, 1954 Satchmo blindfold test - Cherokee (Blue Note) byLeonard Feather

    I dont know what theyre playingIt reminds me of a guy with a mouth full of hot rice;

    got to have hot lips to blow that stuff - like he put it to his lips then pulled away, a feverblister or something But if hed put it right there and hold it there and let about fourgoodnotes come out, with a beautiful tone, it would be much nicer. Now you take my

    boy, Bobby Hackett just a few of them pretty notes is worth a whole basket of these hot

    mouth notes. Rate this? Well, youve got to rate him hes got nerve! If he aint in the

    hospital yet, with chop trouble! Just that friction of the mouthpiece he cant keep thatdamn roller derby up all night, and nobody would want to hear that all night. Lets lay

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    about four on him, because a trumpet players got to get ratings, regardlessthats the

    toughest of all instruments.

    Art Blakey Split Kick; Once in a While; Quicksilver 4 Sept. 8, 1954The brilliant Clifford Brown amply justifies his new star victory in this year'sDown Beat

    Critics' Poll except for one thing, and that's why this isn't five-starred. Once in a While isClifford's concerto and it doesn't quite come off. Reasons: the approach to the tune is

    interestingly different but there apparently wasn't enough preparation, because the tempo

    alterations come out awkwardly (in the accompaniment, too), and there is therefore the

    feeling of cluttered rather than flowing structure. Clifford also does not sustain his longernotes well; and he has one main trouble on all the tunes - he often plays too many notes.

    Clifford will be a great trumpeter, not just a very good one, when he finds out the

    expressive value of economy.

    Oct 20, 1954 Clifford Brown & Max Roach GNP Volumes 1 & 2

    Clifford sounds a little tense on both Children and Tenderly (he is so far no giant on

    ballads). Cliffords blowing, however, is looser and more consistent most of the way onthis one, (vol. 2) which is why the higher rating. Sometimes, as on the first set, he tries

    for more than he can cohesively absorb into his solo line, but his general conception andamazing sense of time are often so thrilling that a few incompletions and the several

    clinkers on both LPs dont always assume major importance. There are times as onI Geta Kickand sections ofStarted, when Cliffords dazzling run of notes makes you wonder

    what, if anything hes trying to say beyond a flexing of his technical muscles. When he

    does break free of his delight in notes as notes, he is certainly one of the important voicesin contemporary jazz.

    3/23/55 Dinah Washington Jam Session 3Frequent lapses of the trumpets into notes for the sake of notes. Each, particularly Brownand Terry, have exciting moments, but can certainly construct better, less-exhibitionistic

    choruses than occur here. The "exuberance and enthusiasm" mentioned in the notes is no

    excuse for lack of sustained imagination.

    Charlie Mingus - The Fabulous Thad Jones - 1955 Liner notes

    "Here is a man (Thad Jones) who practiced while Fats goofed, and thought while

    Brownie copied."

    Bobby Shad Dec 1955

    Clifford Brown is one of Emarcys biggest money makers largely because of the Clifford

    Brown with Strings LP which was issued earlier this year. "It's still selling as if it just

    came out."

    (talks about Browns acclaim)

    And much of that acclaim, strangely enough, came from the with Strings album which

    was liberally panned by practically all jazz critics. Shad says of that, "You guys missed

    the boat - so did Brownie, he didn't want to do it. But that kind of album brings talent to

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    people who would never buy a jazz LP and makes a demand for the musicians other

    records." Meanwhile, the multi-noted Brownie blows on with no strings attached.

    Clifford Brown Max Roach 01/11/1956 Study in Brown 4Brownie can be very exciting and is often here, but there are still times when his choruses

    are partially essays in swiftness rather than cohesively well shaped, flowingly individualstatements. When Brownie comes to learn the value of economy, he'll be even more

    stimulating than he is now.

    Met Apr. 1955 Gryce Brown

    Clifford plays brilliantly in his many-noted fashion for most of the way except in theballad (Romantic) where he has trouble sustaining long tones as does Gryce in the same

    piece.

    Clifford Brown 07/01/1955 Clifford Brown with Strings 3 Clifford, who hasn't been heard extensively up to now in ballads, proves that he has an

    inventive lyric ability as well as his already known blazing, many-noted prowess at uptempo flights. If it means a wider audience for Clifford, I'm for it, but I can't give the

    string writing a very high rating musically. Clifford, though, is very tasty throughout.

    Clifford Brown 07/13/1955 Clifford Brown Quartet in Paris

    There are, however, several stimulating passages of characteristic high-speed invention,and rhythmically, Clifford swings the date almost all by himself. There are also, however,

    a few sections when he has difficulty sustaining notes and it is then that his intonation

    tends to waver.

    Goldblatt - Report of Newport Fest Saturday July 16, 1955

    The final number of Dave Brubecks set that same evening was Tea for Two. Daves

    regulars were augmented by Chet Baker, Gerry Mulligan, and Max and Clifford. Theycracked! Max attacked the standard savagely. While the group pounded away the

    closing moments of the evening, the most telling statements were made by Max and

    Clifford. The crowded audience left their seats to encircle the stage, and George Wein

    came out waving his arms like a windmill to halt the festivities. Clifford ignored the

    producer, digging his head deeper into his shoulders, scrunching his face up even more

    than it had been, and blasting out a gorgeous, fire-breathing final chorus. At that moment

    the rain, which had been threatening all day, started to spatter down against his horn.

    Met July 1955 Clifford Brown with Strings

    .proving nothing beyond the fact that popular music can be dreadfully dull especially

    in such huge doses. If it has to be done, then Bobby Hackett is the trumpeter, not

    Brownie, who has some trouble with intonation (track 5, for example) and more with his

    vibrato (tracks 1 and 2). Then, too, Neal Hefti, for all his talent, has a string pattern forthis kind of thing which has a dull intensity that is almost melodramatic. Unfortunately,there's noJust Friends in this collection, but Clifford does play well onMemories, and

    tracks 7 and 12 are easily the most effective in the album.

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    9-7-55 Brown & Roach, Inc. 3First tune displays Brown's occasionally disturbing tendency to sacrifice linearcohesiveness and development for dazzling technical hot-rodding. In this respect, Brown

    might well pay heed to Thad Jones' effective use of economy of means when it's

    necessary. On Ghost, however, Brown is excellent in a long solo that is one of the

    achievements of the year.

    Gary Kramer 09/10/55 Billboard

    Trio of Jazz Combos Rock NYs Basin Street

    In contrast to the Brubeck group, the effect produced on their listeners by the Brown-

    Roach Quintet is immediate and electric. Both Brown and Roach, now at the high points

    of their respective careers, effortlessly perform with such supreme virtuosity on their

    instruments that aficionados at the nitery are simply staggered. The fanciful flights of

    Brown on trumpet never serve a cheap effect, however. The fireworks are brilliantlypatterned and thoroughly thought out. In a drummer, the modesty and complete lack of

    exhibitionistic tricks of Max Roach are almost as impressive as the variety of sounds thathe coaxes from his drums in his tasty solos. These two artists are currently combining

    their rich talents in one of the most stimulating modern jazz combos extant.

    Davis Picks From Wide Variety

    Miles and Miles of Trumpet Players by Leonard Feather Sept 21, 1955 (Blindfoldtest)

    Falling in Love with Love (Prestige) Clifford & Art Farmer with Swedish All-Stars

    Aside from the trumpets, I didn't care for the other soloists at all . . . also I think that

    Arthur should improve his tone and that Clifford should swing more. Four stars, though.

    Burt Korall Brubeck at Basin Street - Nov. 1955 (Metronome)

    Trumpeter Clifford Brown seems bent on exhibitionism. This, which can only serve asan inhibiting mechanism on his progress, and make people forget how promising he is."

    07/07/1956 by Mike Nevard An Appreciation of the Late CliffordBrown

    I respect his sincerity, his fervent belief in the music he was playing. I also believe hewas a man who played from the heart. Its just that he wasnt big-hearted enough. My

    chain of greats omits Navarro too the man from whom Brownie drew much of hisinspiration. But Fats did play with more assurance than his disciple. I found Clifford

    Browns trumpet indefinitesearchingfumbling. A man who is exploring hitherto

    unprobed avenues can be excused a lot, but Brownie never seemed to find anything thatjustified his efforts. On the strength of his recorded work, I would say that he was a

    trumpeter that played with force, but who unfortunately had that throttled, restricted tone

    that so many of the modernists favor.

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    Tribute By Quincy Jones 08/22/56

    In this generation where some well-respected and important pioneers condemn the youngfor going ahead, Brownie had a very hard job. He constantly struggled to associate jazz,

    it's shepherds, and it's sheep, with a cleaner element, and held no room in his heart for

    bitterness about the publicity-made popularity and success of some of his pseudo-jazz

    giant brothers, who were sometimes very misleading morally and musically. As a manand a musician, he stood for a perfect example and the rewards of self-discipline.

    Clifford, at 25, was at the beginning of showing capabilities parallel only to those of

    Charlie Parker. There was nothing he would stop at to make each performance sound as if

    it were his last. But there will never be an ending performance for him, because his

    constant desire was to make every musical moment one of sincere warmth and beauty;

    this lives on forever. This would be a better world today if we had more people whobelieved in what Clifford Brown stood for as a man and a musician. Jazz will always be

    grateful for his few precious moments; I know I will.