The title
Three Guitars in Bossa Nova Time is misleading in that only two guitars in any instance play the material, while tenor saxophonist
Bob Enevoldsen is more important to the overall sound of the music than any other performer. In the main,
Herb Ellis and
Laurindo Almeida take charge on most of the songs, certainly all bossa novas and light sambas, accompanied by the pianist
Donn Trenner (who worked on television with
Steve Allen), bassist
Bob Bertaux, lesser-known percussionists
Bob Neel or
Chico Guerrero, the more famous
Milt Holland, and guitarist
Johnny Gray on three tracks in place of
Almeida. All of these selections are familiar, whether as Brazilian songs or Latinized mainstream jazz, while
Ellis is upfront in the mix and definitely the leader. While one guitar is initially off the beat on "You Stepped Out of a Dream,"
Ellis and
Almeida are merged together with
Enevoldsen in fuller proportions during the fine take of "But Beautiful" with some good solo step-outs, and play in harmonically inventive tones for the very nice "Bossa Nova Samba."
Enevoldsen, a multi-instrumentalist known more for playing the trombone, is as cool and smooth as
Stan Getz on the melody of the Carnival beat-driven "Leave It to Me," and the spare, careful "Bossa Nova #2."
Gray joins
Ellis for the more jazz-oriented pieces, including the simple, laid-back "Sweet Dreams," the more commanding "Low Society Blues," where things with the entire combo really come together, and the famous
Ray Brown evergreen "Gravy Waltz," made richly harmonic and memorable unto itself. "Detour Ahead" is turned into a bossa and is well done here, but the swinging version might be preferable to those who know this classic song well. On the other hand, the outstanding "I Told Ya' I Love Ya', Now Get Out" is a better adaptation with call and response squawking between
Enevoldsen and
Ellis perfectly depicting a couple's spat. This interesting 1963 prelude session from
Ellis and
Almeida together marked the beginnings of a tuneful and spicy partnership, and is a worthwhile addition and longstanding buried treasure in the discography of all participants.