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Description:
Gil Melle was a 20th century renaissance man, a unique individual
with wide interests and many talents. In his life he wrote over
125 film scores, was a pioneer in experimenting with electronic
music, built computers and synthesizers, was a notable painter,
piloted planes, restored automobiles and airplanes, and was a
visual artist whose art was used on the cover of records by Miles
Davis, Sonny Rollins and Thelonious Monk. Musically he never stood
still or fit easily into any category. Early on Melle was a highly
skilled baritone-saxophonist with his own sound and approach,
performing at the Village Vanguard before he was even old enough
to have a drivers license. Patterns In Jazz from 1956 is Gil Melle's
definitive straight-ahead jazz recording. The music is colorful
and adventurous, laidback but eminently approachable. Teamed in
a quintet with trombonist Eddie Bert and guitarist Joe Cinderella,
the emphasis is on low tones, bright colors and surprising patterns,
whether on Melle’s originals or inventive rearrangements
of “Moonlight In Vermont” and “Long Ago And
Far Away”. Blue Note engineer Rudy Van Gelder seemed to
have a special affinity for Melle’s music since all of the
Melle sessions recorded in Van Gelder’s studio are sonically
exceptional, including this one. The music on this rare gem is
as unique, unusual and memorable as is Gil Melle himself.