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  • Home >> Wes Montgomery >> Bumpin'


    Wes Montgomery

    Bumpin'

    Wes Montgomery, Piano
    Roger Kellaway, Piano
    Bob Cranshaw, Bass
    Grady Tate, Drums
    Helcio Milito, Drums

    Arranged and Conducted by
    Don Sebesky
    Produced by Creed Taylor

    Recorded at Van Gelder Studios
    Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
    Rudy Van Gelder, Engineer
    Recorded May 16, 18, 19 and 20, 1965

    Catalog Number: 314 539 062-2
    Format: CD
    Release Date: 1997
    Label: Verve




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    Click on tracks to hear sound samples.

    1. Bumpin' (6:49)
    2. Tear it Down (3:13)
    3. A Quiet Thing (3:29)
    4. Con Alma (3:22)
    5. The Shadow of Your Smile (2:17)
    6. Mi Cosa (3:19)
    7. Here's That Rainy Day (4:57)
    8. Musty (4:13)
    9. Just Walkin' (2:57)
    10. My One and Only Love (4:07)
    11. Just Walkin' (3:37)

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  • Wes recorded with strings on a number of occasions, but Bumpin’ is by far the most successful. It’s mellow but still swings when it should, and Wes has never played with more feeling. Don Sebesky’s arrangements are smart and allow the guitar to play off the orchestra instead of simply over it. This is the first Wes album I ever heard and I’ve been hooked ever since. It’s elegant yet robust music. WOW, what a masterpiece!

    – Greg Vincent

    A Brilliant Performance by the Immortal Wes Montgomery
    Wes Montgomery again shows his brilliance on this recording. All of the pieces on this CD are vibrant and emotional. Wes was a master of showing his emotions through his guitar. This CD is no exception to that. From “Bumpin’” to “Musty,” it is a fantastic listen. I enjoy his interpretation of “Shadow of Your Smile.” The world definitely lost a brilliant performer with the premature death of Wes Montgomery. He had so much more to offer, yet what he did still lives on brilliantly.

    – historyone

    Notes from Don Sebesky
    Wes. Thinking of him brings back so many memories. His music was a reflection of his sunny disposition: always a big smile, a laugh, a hearty handshake. He was a beautiful man.

    Bumpin’ was the first in a long series of albums I did with Wes for Creed Taylor – it was also the first time I worked with Creed.

    Creed kept this very loose – he asked Wes and me, “What do you guys want to do? What are you comfortable with?” Creed wanted to wed Wes’s unique, percussive guitar sounds to an elegant string ensemble in a mix of standards and originals. But he trusted me to find a way to do it. We didn’t have a lot of discussions. Creed said “Just do it.”

    I wrote the arrangements and brought them to Rudy Van Gelder’s studio in Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on the appointed day. The room was filled with talented musicians: We got Bob Cranshaw and Grady Tate, who brought their buoyant energy to the project.

    Having never worked with Wes or Creed, I wasn’t sure what to produce; I just trusted my first instinct to create the kind of backdrop that would make the musicians comfortable. In my arrangments, I try to echo the soloists’ sound; I take my cue from them. (If I do my job well, the soloists can’t tell if my music is echoing what they’re doing or if they are echoing me.)

    We ran down the first chart and began to balance the sounds. After a few takes, I noticed Wes didn’t seem to be too happy. In fact, he was frowning (I never saw him like this again). We tried to get a satisfactory take anyway, but the music wasn’t jelling. Wes was clearly uncomfortable.

    After about an hour we adjourned to the control room to listen to the playback. We sounded like we were struggling. In particular, the clarity and natural energy with which Wes normally played was missing; his playing was tentative, tight. His solos seemed to be curtailed by my charts. (I felt then as I do now, that a soloist should never be restricted by an arrangement.) After another hour, we decided to call off the session and send everyone home – with nothing in the can.

    When we discussed things with Wes, he finally told us what was troubling him. “Man,” he began, “all those Juilliard cats are out there, wailin’, and I can’t even read music!” Can you imagine it – this great, self-taught jazz genius was intimidated by the classically trained guys and froze?!

    We decided to try a different approach; really, it was Creed’s idea. We took Wes and the rhythm section back to the studio with just the framework of the arrangements, allowing them to be relaxed and spontaneous. His big smile returned, lighting up the room.

    I then took the session tapes home and built new charts around his solos instead of fitting his solos into my charts. It worked.

    We then used this approach for all of Wes’s albums; we used it for most of the albums Creed and I did for other artists as well. It became the basis for the “CTI sound.” The musicians come up with licks that I then adopt as motifs or use as segues between sections. Writing this way makes me feel like I am part of the rhythm section, part of the nucleus of the ensemble. I still record this way whenever I am lucky enough to work with especially creative musicians.

    Looking back on Bumpin’, I must say it marked the beginning of a golden era for all involved. I don’t think we realized it at the time, but we were working in a “family business” atmosphere. We would get together to discuss the parameters of a project; everyone’s contribution was valuable.

    Because Bumpin’ was done in the era before synthesizers, it was necessary for all of us to depend on each other for certain sounds – the drummer played drums, the bassist played bass. No one person could do everything electronically. Besides, a musician can only play by himself for so long; he needs input from others to create. In making this record we interacted all the time; I hear the communal spirit when I listen to what we did. It comes through like fresh air.

    Wes’s sound is timeless. He’s in a special category that includes Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Stan Getz, Bill Evans – guys whose sound is instantly recognizable and often imitated. Recently there have been several new records by guitarists trying to replicate the feeling of Bumpin’ and other Wes albums – which were made as much as thirty years ago. That should tell you something about the impact that Wes still has on music.

    If this is your first exposure to Wes Montgomery’s music, I envy you. You will experience musicianship of a very high caliber that you can nonetheless be very comfortable with. His music always feels just right. You’re in for a treat.

    – Don Sebesky

    Wes Montgomery


    Grady Tate with Creed

    Photos by Chuck Stewart

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