Description
SKU/Barcode: 788065905224
During his short life Thomas Wright Waller made it onto an enormous number of phonograph records as soloist, leader, sideman and accompanist. Each decade in the second half of the 20th century brought forth Fats Waller albums that ranged from budget "best-of" collections to intensive chronological surveys. It wasn't until 2006 that producer Ted Kendall and the JSP label began fulfilling the lifelong ambition of jazz archivist and remastering wizard John R.T. Davies by setting out to reissue literally every recording that Waller is known or believed to have made, in one extended anthology of unprecedented proportions. Packaged in reasonably priced four-CD sets, every episode in Waller's 21-year recording career has been revisited with precision. For sound quality and meticulous exactitude, no one has ever handled the recorded evidence more lovingly or thoroughly. Volume 6, swollen to five CDs for a total of 25 discs thus far in the series (more than a full day of uninterrupted listening for those who are so inclined) contains all of his studio recordings dating from the spring of 1940 through to the V-Disc session of September 16, 1943, almost exactly three months to the day before his sudden death at the age of 39. The complete range of Waller's musical personality is represented here, from intimate ballads to some of his all-time rowdiest blow-outs. As yet another fine manifestation of JSP's willingness to include material not found on standard RCA Victor Fats Waller editions, the extra material on this set is positively exhilarating. Waller is heard with a jazz band led by Commodore kingpin Eddie Condon in 1940; these instrumental jams are triumphant exercises in traditionally oriented, small band swing. Rare third takes of some of the Commodore titles are greatly appreciated, and the interaction between Waller and clarinetist Pee Wee Russell is magnificent. One of the few studio recordings in the Waller discography dating from 1942, a snappy performance of Irving Berlin's propagandistic WWII opus, "That's What the Well-Dressed Man in Harlem Will Wear," has Broadway-style backing by the Victor First-Nighter Orchestra. Three musical numbers from the soundtrack of the film Stormy Weather were recorded in January 1943; while singing "That Ain't Right," Ada Brown is consistently interrupted by cruel and salty backtalk from Waller, who ends the song with a bracingly misogynistic "suffer, excess baggage, suffer!" The V-Discs, which were intended for world-wide distribution among Armed forces personnel, feature Waller at the piano and the Hammond organ. They vary from emotionally steeped reveries like "Solitude" and "Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child" to brusquely delivered delights like "The Reefer Song"; "This Is So Nice, It Must Be Illegal"; a sendup of "Two Sleepy People" (he liked to say "sloppy" instead of "sleepy"); an entire song about birds who feed on horse fodder, and a dazzlingly executed rendition of Vincent Youmans' "Hallelujah." Numerous extremely rare, unissued V-Discs, which were discovered in his personal record collection, create the impression that this set contains the Dead Sea Scrolls of Waller Studies. A gorgeous medley of "To a Wild Rose" and "Don't Get Around Much Any More" is particularly enthralling. Disc "E" includes seven recordings on which Waller's presence has been disputed, despite long-standing black-and-white discographical evidence. That might well have been Waller backing Ethel Waters in 1924, and it is very likely that he played in the orchestra accompanying pop singer Gene Austin. One of the songs sung by Austin was written by Waller, the two men enjoyed a mutually respectful friendship, and they made records together on more than this one occasion. Whether the organist on "Chloe" and "When You're with Somebody Else" was Waller (as indicated by the session's supervisor Nat Shilkret) or Sigmund Krumgold (according to the group's pianist Mi