One of the myths that has been promoted in jazz journalism goes like this:
Lester Young was so traumatized by his experiences in the military during World War II that when he returned to civilian life, his chops were permanently destroyed. But the idea that the quality of
Young's work declined so dramatically after WWII is simply nonsense.
The Pres, in fact, frequently triumphed in the '50s and has many inspired moments on
Live at Birdland, a 72-minute CD focusing on live radio broadcasts from New York City's famous Birdland -- one on January 15, 1953, the others on August 7 and August 15, 1956. Different groups are heard on different gigs; in 1953,
Young is joined by trumpeter
Jesse Drakes (who ESP Disk misidentifies as "Jesse Jakes" in the credits), pianist
Horace Silver, bassist
Franklin Skeete, and drummer
Lee Abrams, while on August 7, 1956, his accompaniment includes trumpeter
Don Ferrara, pianist
Bill Triglia, bassist
Gene Ramey, and drummer
Gus Johnson (an unknown trumpeter replaces
Ferrara on August 15, 1956).
Young has many fine moments on this collection, excelling on both his uptempo "Lester Leaps In" and introspective ballad performances such as "These Foolish Things" and "Polka Dots and Moonbeams." The thing that makes
Live at Birdland mildly inconsistent is not
Young's playing, but rather the solos of a few of the sidemen.
Silver and
Drakes are in fine form, while the unknown trumpeter on August 15, 1956, is less than memorable. Also, the sound quality on this CD -- although certainly listenable -- is hardly state of the art (even by '50s mono standards). But
Live at Birdland has more pluses than minuses and will easily appeal to
Young's die-hard fans even though it isn't recommended to casual listeners. ~ Alex Henderson