WES MONTGOMERY


'John Leslie "Wes" Montgomery' (6 March 1923 - 15 June 1968) was an American jazz guitarist and the grandfather of actor Anthony Montgomery.

Contents
Biography
Technique
Recording career
After his death
Selected discography
See also
External links
Discographies

Biography


Montgomery was born in Indianapolis, Indiana, United States. He came from a musical family, in which his brothers, Monk (string bass and electric bass) and Buddy (vibraphone, and piano), were jazz performers. Although he was not skilled at reading music, he could learn complex melodies and riffs by ear. Montgomery started learning guitar at the age of 19, listening to and learning recordings of his idol, the guitarist Charlie Christian. He was known for his ability to play Christian solos note for note and was hired by Lionel Hampton for this ability.
Montgomery is often considered the greatest of modern Jazz guitarists. Following the early work of swing/pre-bop guitarist Charlie Christian and gypsy-jazz guitarist Django Reinhardt, Wes arguably put guitar on the map as a bebop or post-bop instrument. Although Johnny Smith was the guitarist in the original New York Bebop scene, and Tal Farlow also made amazing contributions in the 1950's to bebop guitar, each of these men curtailed their own output in the 1960s, creating a vacuum that Montgomery naturally filled with virtuousic playing. While many Jazz players are regarded as virtuosos, Montgomery was unique in his wide influence on other virtouosos who followed him, and in the respect he earned from his contemporaries. To many, Montgomery's playing defines jazz guitar and the sound that many try to emulate. It is hard to argue there was a more influential Jazz guitarist than Wes Montgomery.
Montgomery toured with Lionel Hampton early in his career, however the combined stress of touring and being away family brought him back home to Indianaopolis. To support his family of eight, Montgomery worked in a factory from 7:00 am to 3:00 pm, then performed in local clubs from 9:00 pm to 2:00 am. Cannonball Adderley heard Montgomery in an Indianapolis club and was floored. He helped sign Montgomery to a recording contract and recorded with him on his Pollwinners album. Montgomery recorded with his brothers and various other group members, including the Wynton Kelly Trio which previously backed up Miles Davis.
John Coltrane asked Montgomery to join his band after a Jam session, but Montgomery continued to lead his own band. ''Boss Guitar'' seems to refer to his status as a guitar-playing bandleader. He also made contributions to recordings by Jimmy Smith.
Jazz purists relish Montgomery's recordings up through 1965, and sometimes complain that he abandoned hard-bop for pop jazz towards the end of his career. Even in his later years, his playing is still stellar, and it is arguable that he gained a wider audience for his brilliant earlier work with his soft Jazz from 1965-1968. During this late period he would occasionally turn out original material alongside jazzy orchestral arrangements of pop songs. In sum, this late period earned him considerible wealth and created a platform for a new audience to hear his earlier recordings.

Technique


Montgomery often approached solos with a three-tiered approach. He would often begin a repeating progression with single note lines, likely derived from scales or modes. After a fitting number of sequences, he would play octaves for a few more sequences, and then crescendo his solos with arpeggiated chords before finishing.
The use of octaves (playing the same note on two strings one octave apart) for which he is widely known, became known as "the Naptown Sound". Montgomery was also an excellent "single-line" or "single-note" player, and was very influential in the use of block chords in his solos. His playing on the jazz standard "Lover Man" is an example of his single-note, octave and block chord soloing. ("Lover Man" appears on the Fantasy album ''The Montgomery Brothers''.)
Instead of using a guitar pick, Montgomery plucked the strings with the fleshy part of his thumb, using downstrokes for single notes and a combination of upstrokes and downstrokes for chords and octaves. This technique enabled him to get a mellow, expressive tone from his guitar. George Benson, in the liner notes of the ''Ultimate Wes Montgomery'' album, wrote that "Wes had a corn on his thumb, which gave his sound that point. He would get one sound for the soft parts, and then that point by using the corn. That's why no one will ever match Wes. And his thumb was double-jointed. He could bend it all the way back to touch his wrist, which he would do to shock people."
He generally played a Gibson L-5CES guitar. In his later years he played one of two guitars that Gibson custom made for him. In his early years, Montgomery had a tube amp, often a Fender. In his later years he played a solid state Standel amp with a 15 inch speaker.

Recording career


Montgomery toured with vibraphonist Lionel Hampton's orchestra from July 1948 to January 1950, and can be heard on recordings from this period. Montgomery then returned to Indianapolis and did not record again until December 1957 (save for one session in 1955), when he took part in a session that included his brothers Monk and Buddy, as well as trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, who made his recording debut with Montgomery. Most of the recordings made by Montgomery and his brothers from 1957-1959 were released on the Pacific Jazz label.
From 1959 Montgomery was signed to the Riverside Records label, and remained there until late 1963, just before the company went bankrupt. The recordings made during this period are widely considered by fans and jazz historians to be Montgomery's best and most influential. Two sessions in January 1960 yielded ''The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery'', which was recorded as a quartet with pianist Tommy Flanagan, bassist Percy Heath and drummer Albert "Tootie" Heath. The album featured one of Montgomery's most well-known compositions, "Four on Six."
Almost all of Montgomery's output on Riverside featured the guitarist in a small group setting, usually a quartet or quintet, playing a mixture of hard-swinging uptempo jazz numbers and quiet ballads. In 1964 Montgomery moved to Verve Records for two years. His stay at Verve yielded a number of albums where he was featured with an orchestra, and during this period Montgomery's music started to shift in to the territory of pop music. One notable exception is 1965's ''Smokin' at the Half Note'', which showcased two memorable appearances at the famous New York City club with the Wynton Kelly Trio. Wes continued to play outstanding live jazz guitar, as evidenced by surviving audio and video recordings from his 1965 tour of Europe.
As a considered founder of the Smooth Jazz school the album "Bumpin'" (1965) represents a model from which many modern recording are derived. In it, a full orchestral type of scoring goes beyond the artist's own ability to riff creating a wholistic concept of music and of Jazz. Longer clips from all of the tracks tracks on "Bumpin'" and other Wes Montgomery albums are found on Verve Records website.
By the time Montgomery released his first album for A&M Records, he had seemingly totally abandoned the straightforward jazz of his earlier career for the more lucrative pop market. The three albums released during his A&M period (1967-68) feature orchestral renditions of famous pop songs ("Scarborough Fair," "I Say a Little Prayer for You," "Eleanor Rigby," etc.) with Montgomery reciting the melody with his guitar. These records were the most commercially successful of his career.

After his death


Montgomery's home town of Indianapolis has named a park in his honor.
Many jazz and rock guitarists today list Montgomery among their influences including: Carlos Santana, Jimi Hendrix, Pat Martino, Lee Ritenour, Pat Metheny, George Benson, Pete Smyser, Chris Standring, Eric Johnson, Steve Howe, Yoshiaki Miyanoue and Joe Satriani. American guitarist Emily Remler entitled one of her albums 'East to Wes' in tribute to him.
By some accounts, Montgomery has been the ''most'' influential jazz guitarist of all time, whose style has transcended into other forms of music, including Rock 'n' Roll, Soul, and Rhythm and Blues. Many songwriters and composers have written musical tributes to him, including Stevie Wonder and Eric Johnson.

Selected discography




★ ''Fingerpickin''' (1958)

★ ''Far Wes'' (1958)

★ ''The Wes Montgomery Trio'' (1959)

★ ''The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery'' (1960)

★ ''Cannonball Adderley and the Poll-Winners'' (1960)

★ ''Movin' Along'' (1960)

★ ''The Montgomery Brothers'' (1960)

★ ''The Montgomery Brothers in Canada'' (1961)

★ ''So Much Guitar!'' (1961)

★ ''Groove Yard'' (1961)

★ ''Bags Meets Wes!'' (with Milt Jackson) (1961)

★ ''Full House'' (1962)

★ '' (strings arranged by Jimmy Jones) (1963)

★ ''Boss Guitar (1963)

★ ''Guitar On The Go'' (1963)

★ ''The Alternative Wes Montgomery'' (alternate takes for previously issued albums) (1963)

★ ''Portrait of Wes'' (1963)

★ ''Movin' Wes '' (1964)

★ ''Bumpin''' (arranged and conducted by Don Sebesky) (1965)

★ ''Smokin' at the Half Note'' (1965)

★ ''Goin' Out of My Head'' (arranged and conducted by Oliver Nelson) (1965)

★ ''Tequila'' (arranged and conducted by Claus Ogerman) (1966)

★ ''California Dreaming'' (arranged and conducted by Don Sebesky) (1966)

★ '' '' (with Jimmy Smith) (1966)

★ ''Further Adventures of Jimmy and Wes'' (with Jimmy Smith) (1966)

★ ''A Day in the Life'' (arranged and conducted by Don Sebesky) (1967)

★ ''Down Here on the Ground'' (arranged and conducted by Don Sebesky) (1968)

★ ''Road Song'' (arranged and conducted by Don Sebesky) (1968)

★ ''Willow Weep for Me'' (unused takes from the ''Smokin' at the Half Note'' session; overdubbed woodwinds and brass arranged and conducted by Claus Ogerman) (1968)

See also



Organ trio

Jimmy Smith, a Hammond organist with whom Montgomery often collaborated in organ trios

External links



Wes Montgomery Unedited

Wes Montgomery transcriptions

Wes Montgomery discography

Biography at the All Music Guide

Wes Montgomery guitar tabs

Wes Montgomery Park (Indianapolis)

★ Biography and tribute by grandson Anthony Montgomery - [1]

Wes Montgomery tribute

The Work of Claus Ogerman - extensive pictorial discography includes album scans, liner notes and more regarding Claus Ogerman's involvement in two Wes Montgomery albums.

Find-A-Grave profile for Wes Montgomery

Discographies



★ http://www.jazzdisco.org/wes/dis/c/

★ http://www.edfila.com/wes/

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