Plas Johnson – This Must Be The Plas! / Mood for the Blues

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Description

Release Date:  2019

Label:  Essential Jazz Classics

 

Track List

1 Too Close For Comfort 2:59
2 I Hadn’t Anyone Till You 3:32
3 Heart And Soul 2:39
4 Poor Butterfly 3:36
5 Memories Of You 3:13
6 Just One Of Those Things 2:16
7 There Is No Greater Love 2:57
8 If I Had You 3:11
9 My SIlent Love 3:09
10 Day In, Day Out 3:18
11 My Old Flame 2:53
12 S’il Vous Plait 3:24
13 Don’t Let The Sun Catch You Cryin’ 3:19
14 One Mint Julep 2:53
15 How Long Has This Been Going On? 2:46
16 Blues In My Heart 2:20
17 I’ve Got A Right To Cry 3:56
18 Please Send Me Someone To Love 2:28
19 Tanya 2:57
20 Fool That I Am 2:37
21 Chloe (Song Of The Swamp) 2:41
22 Since I Fell For You 3:08
23 Mood For The Blues 2:23
24 I Wanna Be Loved 2:17
25 The Music from the House Next Door2:26
26 Thar He Blows 2:21

 

Personnel

Tracks 1-12

  • Plas Johnson – alto, tenor, baritone sax
  • Larry Bunker, Gene Estes, Vic Feldman – vibes
  • Paul Smith – piano
  • Ernie Freeman – hammond organ
  • Howard Roberts, Bill Pittman – guitars
  • Red Callender – bass
  • Earl Palmer – drums

Tracks 13-24

  • Plas Johnson – alto, tenor, baritone sax
  • Ray Johnson – piano
  • Ernie Freeman – hammond organ
  • Rene Hall, Bill Pittman – guitars
  • Red Callender – bass
  • Earl Palmer – drums

 

Notes

During the late Fifties and early Sixties in the US the saxophone of Plas Johnson was a ubiquitous sound on radio. Known as “the horn behind the hits”, he was famous as the tenor sax on the celebrated 1963 “Pink Panther” main theme recording. Born near New Orleans, he moved to the west coast at a very young age and there launched a career that made him one of the most sought-after studio musicians on the Los Angeles scene, with a great reputation built largely on his remarkable ability to play any style of music with taste and restraint.

The two Capitol albums here epitomize this. On “This Must Be the Plas!” (1959), he is accompanied by three small groups with slight personnel changes, and although Plas is the main voice—on tenor, baritone and alto sax—everybody else in the group has his own solo space. “Mood for the Blues” (1960) features Plas on tenor with strings and rhythm, the tasteful arrangements of Gerald Wilson and René Hall forming a fine background for his solo work. Also included here is his first single for Capitol, including his smash hit The Big Twist and Come Rain or Come Shine.

His warm tone and naturally easy style is as greatly admired by other musicians as it is by jazz and pop music fans. It resulted in the kind of soulful, pretty and well-controlled sound that gave universal enjoyment.

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