*** Welcome to piglix ***

Focus (Stan Getz album)

Focus
Focus (Stan Getz).jpg
Studio album by Stan Getz
Released Late January 1962
Recorded July 14, 1961 (#1-3)
July 28, 1961 (#4-7; strings)
Webster Hall, New York City
September-October 1961 (#2-7; Getz's parts)
Location unknown
Genre Cool jazz, third stream
Length 38:13 original LP
43:41 CD reissue
Label Verve
V6-8412
Producer Creed Taylor
Stan Getz chronology
Jazz Jamboree '60
(1960)
Focus
(1961)
Jazz Samba
(1962)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Down Beat 5/5 stars
Allmusic 4/5 stars
The Rolling Stone Jazz Record Guide 5/5 stars

Focus is a jazz album recorded in 1961, featuring Stan Getz on tenor saxophone with a string orchestra. The album is a suite which was originally commissioned by Getz from composer and arranger Eddie Sauter. Widely regarded as a high point for both men's careers, Focus was described by Getz as his favorite of all his recordings. The pair would next collaborate on their soundtrack to the 1965 film Mickey One.

As noted in the booklet for the 1997 CD reissue, Sauter's orchestration did not include melodies for Getz. Rather, Sauter left spaces in the arrangements in which Getz would improvise. Documentation for the recording dates is incomplete, but the CD booklet reports that those involved in the original sessions recall that Getz recorded live with the strings on about half the songs, while he overdubbed sax solos on the others.

The theme of the opening track, "I'm Late, I'm Late", is nearly identical to the opening minutes of the second movement of Béla Bartók's Music for Strings, Percussion and Celesta. Bartók had been an early supporter of Sauter, who intended the track as an homage. "I'm Late, I'm Late" also features drummer Roy Haynes, the album's only soloist beside Getz.

The Penguin Guide to Jazz selected this album as part of its suggested "Core Collection" stating "Nobody ever arranged for Getz as well as this, and Sauter's luminous and shimmering scores continue to bewitch". Similarly, critic Stephen Cook describes Focus as "admittedly Getz's most challenging date and arguably his finest moment".


...
Wikipedia

...