After You’ve Gone: Trio And Quartet Sessions, Vol. 1 cover

After You’ve Gone: Trio And Quartet Sessions, Vol. 1

Recorded
1935-1937
Released

Clarinetist Benny Goodman was one of the most popular bandleaders of the swing era, touring the country relentlessly and making hit records. But in the mid-1930s, he embarked on a side quest of sorts, forming a trio with pianist Teddy Wilson and drummer Gene Krupa that played short, precisely calibrated tunes with the intimacy of chamber music. Occasionally, they were joined by vocalist Helen Ward, whose vocal on “All My Life” has the maidenly quality of a woman who’s never even heard of the blues. When they cut loose, as on “Nobody’s Sweetheart,” the music is almost hyperactive, but it still holds together. After a year or so, they added vibraphonist Lionel Hampton to the ensemble, and created a startlingly beautiful sound: on a piece like “Vibraphone Blues,” Hampton’s lyrical ripples are shadowed by soft trills from Goodman, as Wilson and Krupa slip and slide together, swinging with impeccable gentility.

Phil Freeman

Recommended by

Suggestions
Real Deal cover

Real Deal

David Murray, Milford Graves
Big Band cover

Big Band

Julius Hemphill
Dimensional Stardust cover

Dimensional Stardust

Exploding Star Orchestra, Rob Mazurek
Goshu Ondo Suite cover

Goshu Ondo Suite

Choral Chameleon, Eri Yamamoto
Exit! cover

Exit!

Fire! Orchestra
Hear You Say cover

Hear You Say

Ray Anderson, Marty Ehrlich
Actions cover

Actions

Fire! Orchestra
Clarity cover

Clarity

Alexa Tarantino
Con-Soul and Sax cover

Con-Soul and Sax

Wild Bill Davis
De Todas Las Flores cover

De Todas Las Flores

Natalia Lafourcade