Fire, Fury and Fun
Fire, Fury, and Fun | ||||
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Fusion jazz | ||||
Length | 33:43 | |||
Label | Creative World Records, GNP Crescendo | |||
Producer | Robert Curnow | |||
Stan Kenton Orchestra chronology | ||||
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Fire, Fury, and Fun is a
Background
Up to the time of Fire Fury and Fun the band had primarily made recordings of music that were
In June 1973 Curnow had started as the new artists and repertoire manager overseeing the whole operation of the Creative World Records.[3] As per Curnow himself, "That was a remarkable and very difficult time for me. I was managing (Stan's) record company with NO experience in business, writing music like mad, living in a new place and culture (Los Angeles was another world), traveling a LOT (out with the band at least 1 week a month) and trying to keep it together at home."[4] The Fire Fury and Fun album was an outgrowth of and designed as a showcase for several of the current soloists in the Kenton Orchestra. The band itself had very little time to prepare the music for the sessions, but that was the norm for many recordings done by a road band such as the Kenton orchestra.[4]
Ratings
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz | [5] |
AllMusic Guide | [6] |
For this late-period Stan Kenton recording, the bandleader decided to present five of his top soloists from the era: baritonist Roy Reynolds, Tony Campise (mainly on flute), trombonist Dick Shearer, drummer Peter Erskine and Ramon Lopez on congas. Kenton himself is featured on piano during two numbers, but none of his sidemen make very strong impressions and the orchestra on the whole sounds like an anonymous college stage band. Fire, Fury and Fun is a lesser effort although Erskine (and trumpeter Tim Hagans) would become far more notable in future years.
Track listing
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|
1. | "Roy's Blues" | Dale Devoe | 7:54 |
2. | "Montage" | Ken Hanna | 5:46 |
3. | "Pete Is A Four-Letter Word" | Hank Levy | 4:17 |
4. | "Hogfat Blues" | Lloyd Spoon, Tony Campise | 4:40 |
5. | "Quiet Friday" | Hank Levy | 6:34 |
6. | "Ramon Lopez" | Chico O'Farrill | 6:20 |
Personnel
Musicians
- piano and leader: Stan Kenton
- saxophones and flutes: Tony Campise, Rich Condit, Greg Smith, Dan Salmasian, Roy Reynolds
- trumpets: John Harner, Dave Zeagler, Mike Barrowman, Tim Hagans, Kevin Jordan
- trombones: Dick Shearer, Lloyd Spoon, Dave Keim, Greg Sorcsek (bass trombone)
- tuba: Mike Suter
- acoustic and electric bass: Mike Ross
- drum set: Peter Erskine
- percussion: Ramon Lopez
Production
- Robert Curnow – production
- Murry Allen – recording engineering
- David McMacken – creative director, graphics
- Robert Curnow – mix engineer
References
- ^ ISBN 0-936653-82-5.
- ISBN 089745-993-8
- ISBN 089745-993-8
- ^ a b Email interview with Bob Curnow, February 16, 2013 with Dr. Jack Cooper, Assoc. Prof. of Music, the Univ. of Memphis
- ^ Larkin, Colin. The Virgin Encyclopedia of Jazz. Virgin, 1999. pp. 485
- ^ a b Yanow, Scott. "Review: Fire, Fury and Fun". AllMusic Guide.
Bibliography
- Easton, Carol (1973). Straight Ahead: The Story of Stan Kenton. New York, N.Y.: William Morrow & Company, INC.
- Sparke, Michael (2010). Stan Kenton: This Is An Orchestra. Denton, TX: University of North Texas Press.
- Sparke, Michael (1998). Stan Kenton: The Studio Sessions. Lake Geneva, WI: Balboa Books.
- Lee, William F. (1980). Stan Kenton: Artistry in Rhythm. Los Angeles, CA: Creative Press.
- Harris, Steven D. (2000). The Stan Kenton Kronicles. Pasadena, CA: Dynaflow Publications.
- Cook, Richard (2002). The Penguin Guide To Jazz On CD (6th Edition). London, England: Penguin Books.
External links
- Catalog record for Fire, Fury and Fun at the United States Library of Congress
- Fire, Fury and Fun at AllMusic
- Fire, Fury and Fun at MusicBrainz
- Fire, Fury and Fun at Discogs