For five consecutive years, the CTI All-Stars spent two weeks at the beginning of the summer touring the West Coast, from San Diego to Seattle. "To see each one of them individually would have been a treat; to see them together was magic," Didier Deutsch once wrote.
The first official album by the CTI All-Stars, "California Concert," recorded live at The Hollywood Palladium on July 18, 1971, during the West Coast tour of that superband, originally came out as a 2-LP set with five long tracks: Hubert Laws' gorgeous version of James Taylor's "Fire and Rain" (previously recorded on Laws' studio album "Afro-Classic"), Freddie Hubbard's "Red Clay," Stanley Turrentine's "Sugar," and two songs composed specially for that tour at Creed Taylor's request: "Leaving West" (a bossa-tinged number written by Turrentine & Ron Carter with an amazing dialogue between Billy Cobham & Airto) and a mainstream blues number by Eumir Deodato (who didn't play on the '71 tour) simply titled "Blues West."
The line-up consisted of George Benson (guitar), Freddie Hubbard (trumpet), Hubert Laws (flute), Stanley Turrentine (tenor sax), Hank Crawford (alto sax), Johnny Hammond (Hammond organ & Fender Rhodes electric piano, although he was heard only playing Rhodes on the tracks that Creed selected for the original LP), Ron Carter (acoustic bass), Billy Cobham (drums) & Airto Moreira (congas & percussion). Ray Thompson engineered the remote control console provided by Wally Heider Recordings, and Creed later took the multi-track tapes to be mixed by Rudy Van Gelder (credited as "re-recording engineer") at his famous studio in New Jersey.
When the first CD issue of "California Concert" was released in the USA by CBS back in 1987, reissue producer Didier Deutsch deleted "Leaving West" in order to present a single CD, later including that track on the compilation "The Best of Stanley Turrentine," released in 1990.
However, at the time of the first Japanese CD reissue, produced by Yoichi Nakao for King Records in 1996, "California Concert" appeared as a 2-CD set in a lovely mini-LP gatefold sleeve, including all five tracks from the original album and reproducing Leonard Feather's liner notes, on which the late jazz historian defined the event as "spectacularly successful."
Feather's text, actually a review he had written for Melody Maker, listed the other tracks performed that night, but not included in the original album. So, thousands of CTI fans around the globe spent years dreaming with the chance to listen to those numbers.
While working in the reissue of another CTI album, I found out that the master tapes of "California Concert" had been preserved and were at hand at the CBS (now Sony) archives, and mentioned it to my friend Douglas Payne, who heads a fabulous website about CTI.
Two of those unreleased tracks eventually appeared on CD, thanks to Didier Deutsch. Freddie Hubbard's pretty flugelhorn performance of the jazz ballad "Here's That Rainy Day" was included in the compilation "The Best of Freddie Hubbard" (Epic, 1990). And Johnny Hammond's killer version of Carole King's "It's Too Late," featuring one of Billy Cobham's best solos ever, was added as a bonus track to the CD reissue of Hammond's "Breakout" (Sony, 2002).
Now, these 2 tracks plus 3 other tracks never before released anywhere in the world -- John Coltrane's "Impressions" (the opening song of the concert, and recorded by Turrentine on his "Sugar" LP), George Benson's take on Miles Davis' "So What?" (that he had cut in studio for his CTI solo debut, "Beyond The Blue Horizon") and Freddie Hubbard's explosive final number "Straight Life" (the title theme of his second CTI project) -- will be available for the first time ever in the most complete edition ever of "California Concert" scheduled for October 26 release by Sony Masterworks in the USA. Actually, only Hank Crawford's soulful performance of "Never Can Say Goodbye" is missing. Anyway, already one of the top releases for 2010!
(cover of the first CD reissue, from 1987, signed to Arnaldo DeSouteiro by Ron Carter, Freddie Hubbard, Airto, Freddie Hubbard and other members of the CTI All-Stars)
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