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Joe
Roccisano - Nonet
Dtrcd-138
Joe Roccisano
- Alto Sax, Tim Ries - Tenor Sax, Jack Stuckey - Baritone Sax, Bob Millikan
- Trumpet, Greg Gisbert - Trumpet, Conrad Herwig - Trombone, Bill Charlap
- Piano,
Doug Weiss -
Bass, Terry Clarke - Drums
1. Moment's Notice
- John Coltrane
2. Mr. Day -
John Coltrane
3. Days of Wine
and Roses - Henry Mancini
4. Springsville
- Johnny Carisi
5. Charade -
Henry Mancini
6. Some Other
Time - Leonard Bernstein
7. So In Love
- Cole Porter
8. No More Blues
- Antonio Carlos Jobim
9. America -
arr: Joe Roccisano
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I met
Joe Roccisano in the sixties at a summer performing arts camp called Ramblerny,
located in Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Joe was from my hometown, Springfield,
Massachusetts, and had won some sort of Phil Woods' scholarship to attend
what was then called the Maynard Ferguson School of Jazz. Maynard came
by for a minute but was much too busy to devote any time to the jazz program.
I lived in the area and had volunteered to help by teaching in exchange
for free tuition for my kids. Ramblerny graduated some very fine
musicians: Rick Chamberlain, Mike Brecker, Richie Cole, Roger Rosenberg,
Bobby Mover and Tom Zappe among them.
Joe was
very advanced in musical talent and skill and although he was a great alto
player it was his arranging and composing skills that got my attention.
I remember his first chart on Leonard Bernstein' s Lonely Town. It was
harmonically rich and captured the somber mood of the piece perfectly!
He became a frequent contributor to the Ramblerny bands repertoire and
a writer was born!
Directly
across the Delaware River from New Hope was the Lambertville Music Circus,
an arena whose normal fare was musical comedy but on Monday nights brought
in jazz groups. I had arranged for the Ramblerny jazz majors to attend
these concerts and also meet the artist(s) in the afternoon prior to the
concert. Dave Brubeck, Stan Getz and Julian Cannonball Adderly were some
of the artists who graciously met with the students and answered some of
their questions. On Monday, as I was gathering the students for the field
trip to meet Horace Silver, some of the kids said they had a rehearsal
and couldn't go. The Musical Comedy department, which was doing Carousel,
had called a rehearsal and administration had backed them up. Nobody had
told me of this change of policy so I went to the office to protest to
the owners, all to no avail. I told them either stand by the agreement
or I was gone and I gave them a couple of hours to think about their grievous
error while Joe and I went to lunch. When we came back the school was in
turmoil. Students milled around the courtyard and the word out was that
the lady owner had fainted. I went to see her. She had swooned and was
laying on her couch doing Camile. As I entered, her husband shouted; "Phil
Woods! You'll never work this town again!" Since I was not being paid and
the town only had 200 people, the threat was rather hollow. But it was
obvious that my part-time teaching post was over. Joe was just as outraged
over this lack of good faith on management's part and came home to spend
the rest of the summer with me and the family. I would take Joe along on
record dates and we had a ball.
Joe and
I became the best of friends. At one point he was married to the daughter
of my other Springfield, Massachusetts buddy, Joe Lopes. Ah, the incestuousness
of life in E flat! Joe Roccisano was one of those cats who had to make
music. It had nothing to do with gigs--he just wanted to write and hear
his music performed--some kind of way, any kind of way! Joe could invent
a gig in a minute. He led a rehearsal band in Los Angeles when he lived
there and he kept this energy going when he moved to NYC. Joe was always
an East Coast guy at heart and New York was good for him as he was good
for the Apple! Joe wrote charts for the likes of Woody Herman, Buddy Rich,
Steely Dan and contributed to many of my special projects. (Little Big
Band, Quintet, and many other orchestral projects.)
Joe could
also spot a great restaurant and he turned us all on to our friend Enzo's
Porta Bello restaurant located on Thompson at Bleeker. Best Italian food
in New York (maybe anywhere) - and Joe loved it there! And I loved the
twinkle in his eye when we ate well and laughed, and we always ate well
at Enzo's! Joe and I did a lot of laughing!
This recording
represents Joe's last band, a nonet. His writing on this is crisp and clear
and his playing is full of light. His rendition of Henry Mancinis' "Wine
and Roses" makes me weep - I weep for Joe but I also cry because the world's
taste buds seem to be centered where the sun don't shine and the music
that Joe made was virtually ignored by the jazz world! With Joe it was
music first! That is why he always had the very best players--like Terry
Clarke, who, when he left Canada for New York became a charter Roccisano
fan and friend and drummer--straight from Boss Brass, not a bad band either!
All the
cats who played Joe's music were hooked! So even if the press and the gigs
were not happening, Joe always attracted superior musicians. The cats always
know and that is the important thing! Quality! Joe was quality and love,
a heluva package.
Joe died
of a massive heart attack on November 9 while on his way to work at his
regular Sunday Brunch gig at the Blue Note with this Nonet. He was 58!
It is very sad and very unfair and unfathomable. My world is a lot lonelier
without him and I shall miss him very, very much!
This recording
represents Joe's last work. The writing is honed to a laser's edge - standards
take on new facets - old harmonic friends sound new and fresh and there
is about the writing a great deal of optimism. I cling to this optimism.
Enjoy and weep if you like, but Joe is still with us--just listen to him!
Phil Woods
- May '98
©1998 DOUBLE-TIME
RECORDS. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Produced by
Joe Roccisano & Alan Foust for Double-Time Records
Recorded at
Sound On Sound, NYC, Oct. 9th, 1997
Recording Engineer/Mixer
Gene Curtis; Assistant Engineer Zack Wind
Mixed at Clinton
Recording Studios, NYC, Jan. 24-25th, 1998
Photography
by Walter Bridell
Enhanced CD
Produced by The CodeWorks, Inc.
Executive Producer
Franklin Jones
Double-Time
Records, Jamey D. Aebersold - 1998. DTRCD-138. |