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Getz Meets Mulligan in Hi-Fi

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There's a cross-dressing quality about the first three tracks on Getz Meets Mulligan in Hi-Fi. You hear the baritone and tenor saxophones but things seem a little inside out. The baritone has Stan Getz's mildness and the tenor sounds more like Mulligan's bouncing attack. In fact, Verve producer Norman Granz recorded just such a switch, which at first might seem pointless but it kind of grows on you. Getz plays the baritone saxophone and Mulligan plays the tenor on the three tracks. Both are lacking slightly, since the baritone doesn't sound nearly as commanding and the tenor doesn't sound as airy or as sweet. But somehow it works as a novelty on Let's Fall in Love, Anything Goes and Too Close for Comfort, forcing you to hear the instruments differently. Or rather, you wind up listening for the Getz feel on the baritone and the Mulligan feel on the tenor.

By the fourth track—That Old Feeling—Getz and Mulligan are on their signature horns, with Getz roosted on the high end of the tenor's register and soaring off the top while Mulligan bops along with barking-seal accents on the baritone. That's when the pairing of these two giants gels. And how could it not. If they were playing wooden recorders they'd sound great. After Lester Young, they were among the smoothest, most inventive saxophone swingers in the 1950s. 

Recorded in October 1957, the album must have been recorded simultaneously in mono and stereo, a format that wasn't widespread yet. The mono hi-fi version was released in November '57 but the stereo version didn't come out until 1960, when more jazz record-buyers owned systems with two separate speakers that maximized the wider sound. The mono version of 1957 appeared at the peak of the high-fidelity craze and just before stereophonic sound caught on.

A little history: Shortly after 12-inch pop albums began appearing in 1955, replacing the 10-inch disc, better playback equipment was manufactured and marketed to the public as all-in-one, hi-fi consoles. Albums that underwent improved audio production and more dynamic instrument placement sounded better on these improved units. Album covers proudly exclaimed that the music inside was “in hi-fi" or they used a half-dozen other terms to say the same thing, including “orthophonic sound," “living sound" and “360 sound."Getz Meets Mulligan in Hi-Fi let you hear the two saxophones coming through your console's speaker more distinctly and seemingly in two different places.

As for the three tracks with Getz and Mulligan, Granz pointed his finger at Mulligan for the saxophone swap. In his notes, Granz wrote: “Mulligan suggested at one juncture that they trade horns, so you find that on side one of the album that Getz plays baritone and Mulligan plays tenor; and on the other side they reversed the procedure so that each played his primary instrument, Stan the tenor and Gerry the baritone. The session, by the way, produced a second album, which will be released shortly after this one, so there will be something for fans to look forward to as further minutes of this history meeting."

From these notes, it would seem that the earliest release came on two 10-inch albums, but it's hard to tell or why the 10-inch format would have been used so late. As for the rhythm section, Granz writes that they were assembled by Getz “with Mulligan's approval." They are: Lou Levy (p), Ray Brown (b) and Stan Levey (d).

Stan Getz died in 1991; Gerry Mulligan died in 1996.

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This story appears courtesy of JazzWax by Marc Myers.
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Track Listing

Let's Fall In Love; Anything Goes; Too Close For Comfort; That Old Feeling; This Can't Be Love; A Ballad; Scrapple From The Apple; I Didn't Know What Time It Was.

Personnel

Stan Getz
saxophone, tenor
Gerry Mulligan
saxophone, baritone
Ray Brown
bass, acoustic
Lou Levy
piano

Album information

Title: Getz Meets Mulligan In Hi-Fi | Year Released: 1957 | Record Label: Verve Records


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