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    Mary Lou Williams - "The First Lady of Jazz"  
     
    Mary Lou Williams is the only major Jazz Artist who lived through all the 
    eras in the history and development of Jazz.  A pianist, arranger and 
    composer extraordinaire, Williams is credited with arranging and writing 
    for all the well-known big band leaders during the Swing Era including the 
    Andy Kirk and His Twelve Clouds of Joy, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, 
    Tommy
      
       
    
      
    Dorsey, Benny Goodman, Cab Calloway and many others. 
    
      
    
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          Lou Williams
      
      
      DIVA
      JOAN CARTWRIGHT 
      www.divajc.com 
      
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     Mary Lou Williams
    was born Mary Elfrieda Scruggs, on May 8, 1910,  in Atlanta, Georgia,
    and grew up in the East Liberty neighborhood of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. As
    a very young child she taught herself to play the piano and her first public
    performance was at the age of six. She became a professional musician in her
    teens and became a jazz pianist, composer, and arranger.  
    Her professional debut with big bands came at age 12 
    substituting for a pianist in a vaudeville show and for the next few years 
    she toured and played with such artists as Jelly Roll Morton, Willie "the 
    lion" Smith, Fats Waller and Duke Ellington. 
     
    A child prodigy with perfect pitch and a highly developed musical memory, 
    she began playing by age four.  By age ten she was known as "The Little 
    Piano Girl," playing at private parties around Pittsburgh where the family 
    moved when she was 6 years old. "Around Pittsburgh, I played for many wealthy 
    families, the Mellons, in particular.  I was just a kid. They were 
    wonderful!  They’d send a chauffeur out for me and I’d play for their 
    private parties.  Once they gave me $100.  My mother almost 
    fainted. She wanted to know if the lady drank. She even called the people to 
    see if they had made a mistake."   
     
    In the early forties Williams began a long happy engagement at Café Society 
    Downtown in New York City. She was playing on and off, more on than off for 
    approximately five years beginning in 1943. 
     
     The years between 1941 and 1948 were an intense period of 
    creativity in Jazz and New York was the place to be.  Williams arrived 
    on the scene just in time to capitalize on the history making events of that 
    era. It was during this period that Williams came in contact with musicians 
    such as Dizzy Gillespie, Kenny Clarke, Oscar Pettiford, Miles Davis, Tadd 
    Dameron, J.J. Johnson, Kenny Dorham, Charlie Parker, Art Blakey, Bud Powell, 
    and Thelonious Monk, who was in her company daily.  Many of these 
    musicians would hold court in Williams’ apartment after hours creating and 
    playing new sounds that would push forth the Bop Era.
     
     Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk would bring their 
    compositions to her to listen to and the musical sessions extended through 
    the night and into the next day and might involve Erroll Garner or Mel Torme 
    or Sarah Vaughan, etc. 
     
    In 1964 she founded the Pittsburgh Jazz Festival and served as director for 
    three years.  Williams even published her own music through her Cecilia 
    Publishing Company and recorded her own Mary Records label.  She was 
    also founder and served as president of the Bel Canto Foundation for needy 
    musicians as well as the general poor and young children and she started the 
    New Reform Foundation for gifted children between the ages of 6 and 12. 
    Williams
    died on May 28, 1981. 
     Mary Lou Williams was the "Mother 
    of Bebop." 
    
 She was the mentor to Dizzy, Bird, Monk, Bud Powell and Tad Dameron, who gave them the secrets of the flatted 5th and started the bebop 
    revolution. Monk stole a tune from her. "Rhythmning 
    " was a Mary Lou Williams' riff in one of her arrangements for Andy Kirk and 
    Thelonious Monk made a song out of it without even changing it at all. -
    Nelson Harrison 
    
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    The Mary Lou Williams Collective  
    Zodiac Suite: Revisited 
    Mary Records (M104)  
    Geri Allen (piano & musical director);  
    Buster Williams; Billy Hart; Andrew Cyrille. (February 7, 2006)
    
    
     
    The
    Mary Lou Williams Collective, under the musical direction of
    pianist/arranger/ composer  Geri Allen, reexamines and revitalizes Mary Lou
    Williams’ Zodiac Suite  - the first lady of instrumental jazz’s
    landmark 1945 recording of her collection of twelve solo, duo and trio piano
    pieces named for the astrological signs of the fellow jazz greats to whom
    they are dedicated - on Zodiac 
    Suite: Revisited. Allen, joined by virtuoso bassist Buster Williams
    (Mary Lou Williams’ frequent colleague) and drummer Billy Hart (the very
    creative third member of the younger pianist’s working trio from 2003), in
    the words of producer Father Peter O’Brien, SJ, "explores and
    explodes the music " preserving the composition, but putting herself
    entirely into it." In addition to the selections from the suite, the
    trio also recreates Williams’ exciting collaboration with bassist Milton
    Suggs, "Intermission." On the date’s other two selections,
    Herbie Nichols’ "The Bebop Waltz" (a favorite of Mary Lou’s)
    and "Thank You Madam" (Allen’s dedication to Williams), the
    great Andrew Cyrille, who had performed often with Williams and appeared on
    Allen’s debut recording, makes a guest appearance on drums. 
     
    Zodiac Suite: Revisited  begins, as the original does, with
    "Aries" Williams’ dedication to Ben Webster and Billie Holiday,
    uniquely talented artists who the composer called "pioneers, people who
    create sounds and things you’ve never heard before." Initially
    recorded as a piano-bass duet, Billy Hart opens Allen’s arrangement alone
    on drums, rhythmically transforming the composition, which featured a
    Monkish melodic line with a boogie woogie mid-section in its earlier
    incarnation (described by trumpeter Dave Douglas as a post-modern
    construction). The Collective’s interpretation is radically different,
    alluding to the impressionism of Herbie Hancock (Allen’s primary
    influence) and the shifting moods and tempos of his work with Ron Carter and
    Tony Williams in the Miles Davis Quintet, before emphatically stating Mary
    Lou Williams’ memorable melody utilizing parallel octaves.  
     
    "Taurus," the second section of Zodiac Suite, was
    composed by Williams prior to the other sections of the suite. Representing
    her own birth sign, it is also dedicated to Duke Ellington and Ellis
    Larkins, Allen’s reflective solo piano introduction replicating the
    elegance of those two pianists. The body of the piece is reminiscent of
    Ellington’s "jungle band," with the pianist’s ominous left
    hand line and dissonant right hand clusters setting the mood over Hart’s
    mallets. Buster Williams’ melodic bass is spotlighted here. 
     
    Allen’s arrangement of Williams’ "Gemini" follows the spirit
    of the original recording faithfully, utilizing an up tempo boogie woogie
    left hand line on top of which she builds a playful childlike theme
    assembled from a progressively constructed musical scale. After a brief
    ethereal interlude the trio restates the boogie woogie theme before moving
    into a more modernistic motif that hearkens to latter day Ellington.  
     
    "Cancer" is melancholy melody in a minor mode, a composition of
    uncommon beauty, that moves between Allen’s slowly waltzing piano rhythm
    to a more open landscape created by Hart’s quietly dynamic cymbals and
    Williams softly bowed bass. 
     
    Hart opens "Leo" boldly with a martial drum beat before Allen
    states the Williams theme’s fanfare with a menacing exaggerated
    dissonance. Dedicated to Vic Dickenson, the piece’s middle section is a
    moving memorial to the great trombonist’s beautiful way with a ballad, to
    which Allen introduces a modern harmonic touch reminiscent of Coltrane’s
    "Naima" and Mc Coy Tyner, before the trio revisits the opening’s
    flourishes. 
     
    "Virgo" is a swinging medium tempo blues that reflects Williams’
    early allegiance to the bebop revolution. Allen’s Monkish articulation
    follows the original’s mood, as does Buster Williams powerful walking
    bass. Mary Lou dedicated this composition to Leonard Feather, one of the new
    music’s first journalistic champions. 
     
    Allen performs "Libra" as a solo piano piece, just as Mary Lou
    originally did. The earliest composed section of the suite (along with
    "Aries"), Williams dedicated it to Dizzy, Art Tatum, Bud Powell
    and Monk, who she described as "very beautiful friends." As Dan
    Morgenstern observes in his notes to Zodiac Suite, it has a "very
    pretty opening and attractive, impressionistic harmonic movement" –
    qualities which make it a perfect vehicle for modern interpretation by
    Allen. 
     
    Buster Williams introduces "Scorpio" with a rhythmic bass figure
    and is then joined by Hart, with wide cymbals splashes followed by softly
    malleted drums, before Allen’s entrance, which is vaguely reminiscent of
    Juan Tizol’s Ellingtonian classic "Caravan" in its eastern mood.  
     
    The final four sections of the suite are all solo piano pieces originally
    improvised live by Williams on her weekly WNEW radio program.
    "Sagittarius" was first dedicated to pianist Eddie Heywood and
    later to bassist Bob Cranshaw by Mary Lou. It’s a thoughtful theme
    Morgenstern compared to Bix Beiderbecke’s "In A Mist." Allen’s
    interpretation retains the original’s pastoral quality in a slightly more
    modern way that also hearkens to Bill Evans and Keith Jarrett.
    "Capricorn" is a melancholy melody in a minor mode (written for
    Williams’ Café Society compatriot, trumpeter Frankie Newton) that Allen
    delivers with percussive aplomb. "Aquarius" is an attractive piece
    with modulating moods that Williams dedicated to President Franklin Delano
    Roosevelt. The concluding "Pisces" is an elusive Williams waltz
    that highlights Allen’s beautiful touch and tone. 
     
    The trio of Allen, Buster Williams and Andrew Cyrille perform pianist Herbie
    Nichols attractive composition "The BeBop Waltz," a piece Mary Lou
    recorded three times under the title "Mary’s Waltz." Although
    the previous recordings improperly credited the composition to Williams,
    producer O’Brien sets the record straight here, noting the true composer
    and Williams love and respect for the unheralded genius, Nichols. Buster
    Williams is featured with a moving, articulate solo on this gorgeous
    rendition. 
     
    Billy Hart is back with Williams and Allen on "Intermission," the
    1973 collaboration between Mary Lou and bassist Milton Suggs, previously
    recorded on the elder pianist’s excellent Zoning album. The whole
    trio stretches out on this swinging interpretation of the exciting
    composition, with Allen’s melodic pianism anchored by Buster Williams’
    powerful bass ostinato and propelled Hart’s energetic drumming. 
     
    The date concludes with "Thank You Madam," a tender ballad
    composed by Geri Allen in honor of Mary Lou Williams especially for this
    recording with Buster Williams and Andrew Cyrille. Producer O’Brien
    insightfully describes the piece as one which "is built up from a
    musical motif which gently rises and softly resolves, then rises again and
    resolves and continues in this hopeful manner, until it peacefully and
    quietly dissolves. It is a loving tribute from Geri Allen, who would
    especially know the musical heart of Mary Lou Williams." 
     
    Geri Allen, as musical director of the Mary Lou Williams Collective, is
    particularly well suited to revive the musical legacy of the great Mary Lou
    Williams. Zodiac Suite: Revisited, pristinely recorded by DJ
    Val Jeanty (of Allen’s husband Wallace Roney’s band) on Allen’s own
    piano in her Montclair, NJ home, is an intimate revisitation to this
    important music. Future releases by the Collective are to include a disc of
    nine Williams originals with guest appearances by vocalists Andy Bey and
    Honi Gordon and another date featuring some of Mary Lou’s previously
    unrecorded sacred music. With Geri Allen at the piano, the music of Mary Lou
    Williams is alive and well for yet another new generation of jazz lovers,
    ensuring the great lady’s musical immortality.  
     
    Media Contact:  
    Jim Eigo Jazz Promo Services  
    269 S Route 94 Warwick, NY 10990 
    T: 845-986-1677 / F: 845-986-1699  
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    www.jazzpromoservices.com
    
    
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