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Whatever instrument you are playing, you should study the history of the instrument from the very beginning. Many drummers think jazz drumming started with Elvin Jones and Jeff Watts. You have to find out where theses people learned from and go upstream from there. You can’t put student before the teacher. You have to start at the origin. Listen to Roy Haynes with Lester Young and Bud Powell. Listen to Art Taylor comp with his left hand like Bud Powell. - Joe Farnsworth
 
 Thursday, 08 January 2009
Pat Martino Goes to Hollywood Print E-mail
Written by Don Berryman   
Wednesday, 02 August 2006
On August 10th through the 13th Pat Martino will present a Tribute To Wes Montgomery at the Catalina Bar and Grill in Hollywood with a quartet that includes Scott Robinson on drums, Rick Germanson on piano, David Robaire on bass, and Danny Sadownick on percussion. Pat began playing professionally in 1961. He has performed with a wide variety of artists including Sonny Stitt, Gene Ammons, Richard Groove Holmes, John Handy, Bobby Hutcherson, Chick Corea, Jack McDuff, Don Patterson, Stanley Clark, Eric Kloss, Trudy Pitts, Woody Herman, Chuck Israels, Charles Earland. Since 1967, Pat has been touring as a leader and often pays tribute to Wes Montgomery who inspired him.
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Pat Martino © Jimmy Katz

After Django and Charlie Christian before him, Wes Montgomery is one of the most influential jazz guitarists for those who followed. Wes had an instinctive knowledge of jazz harmony and an incredible facility for playing the guitar. Although Montgomery was widely known for his inovative use of octaves, he was also an excellent single-line player, and was influential in the use of block chords in his solos. Wes also help refine the sound of the jazz organ trio in his work with organist Mel Rhyne. His early works on Riverside records are some of the finest jazz guitar recordings available. Pat went on to greater commercial sucess with more commercial music with A&M records in the late 60s.

Wes Montgomery's music, particularly the album Grooveyard, is said to have had an enormous influence on guitarist Pat Martino. Born Pat Azzara in Philadelphia in 1944, he was first exposed to jazz through his father, Carmen "Mickey" Azzara, who sang and briefly studied guitar with Eddie Lang. Pat began playing guitar when he was twelve years old and left school in tenth grade to devote himself to music. While taking lessons from Dennis Sandole in Philadelphia, Pat met another student of his, John Coltrane.

Martino's first road tour was with jazz organist Charles Earland, a high school friend. Martino moved to Harlem to devote himself to "soul jazz" as played by Earland and others. The organ trio concept had a profound influence on Martino's rhythmic and harmonic approach, and he remained in the idiom gigging with Jack McDuff and Don Patterson. Pat was signed as a leader to Prestige Records when he was twenty.

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Rick Germanson © Andrea Canter

In 1976 Martino became ill and eventually underwent surgery as the result of a brain aneurysm. The surgery left him with amnesia, without any memory of the guitar and his musical career. With the help of friends and his old recordings, Pat made a remarkable recovery and learned to play all over again. He resumed his career in 1987 in New York, a gig that was released on a CD with an appropriate name, The Return.

One of New York's rising stars on piano, Rick Germanson has been a highly in-demand pianist on the New York City jazz scene for nearly a decade now. Born May 29, 1972, Rick left his native Milwaukee, Wisconsin on the heels of winning the Grand Prize at The American Pianists' Association Jazz Piano Competition in 1996. His recent accomplishments have garnered much adoration from the media and led to him him being chosen as Best of New Talent in 2004 by All About Jazz NYC. Germanson's Trio has performed at Smoke, Smalls, The Kitano and Fat Cat in NYC, Blues Alley in DC, The Indianapolis Jazz Festival and The Artists' Quarter in St. Paul. Currently, the Rick Germanson Duo can be heard every Wednesday and Thursday evening at Ruth's Chris Steakhouse in Manhattan. As a solo pianist, Rick performed five nights a week during a year-long residency at the acclaimed Four Seasons Restaurant in 2001, the only musician to ever do so.


Catch Pat Martino and crew on August 10th-13th at the Catalina Bar and Grill, 6725 West Sunset Blvd., Hollywood, California 90028; Phone: (323) 466-2210.

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