Long before his name was introduced to mainstream audiences through a series of Capitol LPs decorated with pictures of buxom, full-bottomed females,
Jonah Jones made a name for himself as a versatile swing trumpeter whose best work put him in league with
Herman Autrey,
Bill Coleman,
Roy Eldridge,
Charlie Shavers,
Emmett Berry, and
Buck Clayton.
Story, EPM's
Jazz Archives salute, takes on a nine-year stretch from 1936 to 1945, during which he collaborated with an impressive range of big bands, small groups, and blues singers. As a member of violinist
Stuff Smith's Onyx Club Boys,
Jones delivered some of his most expressive playing on "Old Joe's Hittin' the Jug," a frantically paced celebration of excess and sloth that is the logical counterpart to "You'se a Viper."
Jones is heard with bands under the leadership of pianists
Teddy Wilson and
Lil Armstrong; hyperkinetic multi-instrumentalist
Lionel Hampton; trumpeter/saxophonist
Benny Carter, and the extroverted vocalist
Cab Calloway, who reluctantly maintained silence during several instrumentals, including the feature spotlight number "Jonah Joins the Cab." If
Calloway's handling of "Hey Doc!" is entertaining, the best version in the world is still probably the famous, perfectly executed rendition by
the Ink Spots.
Jones was very adept at stepping back and providing thoughtful accompaniments for vocalists, and the examples provided in this package (a warm reading of
Richard M. Jones' "Jazzin' Babies Blues" by
Georgia White and a completely disarming "Suicide Blues" sung by
Peetie Wheatstraw) demonstrate the trumpeter's obligato technique beautifully. "Lust for Licks," based on the chord progressions of "Exactly Like You," was recorded in September 1944 for
Harry Lim's Keynote label with arranger
Buster Harding at the piano and four of
Jones' bandmates from the
Calloway band who also participated in a Commodore session about nine months later. On "Rose of the Rio Grande," "Hubba Hubba Hop," and "Stompin' at the Savoy," the
Jonah Jones Orchestra consisted of trombonist/vibraphonist
Tyree Glenn, clarinetist
Buster Bailey, saxophonists
Hilton Jefferson, and
Ike Quebec, bassist
Milt Hinton, guitarist
Danny Barker, and drummer
J.C. Heard.
Quebec in turn invited
Jones to participate in a Blue Note date that yielded "Hard Tack," after which the trumpeter sat in with
Walter Foots Thomas & His Jump Cats, the unit responsible for "Every Man for Himself" and "Look Out Jack!" While several of his contemporaries (
Roy Eldridge in particular) opted for direct involvement in the bebop revolution,
Jones was always a straightforward swing player. This excellent collection illustrates the broad foundation of his involvement in that part of the tradition.
–
arwulf arwulf, Rovi