CD Review: Pat Martino - Remember: A Tribute to Wes Montgomery

Here are a couple of stories. One is amazing and funny. The other is just amazing.

Wes Montgomery, the great jazz guitarist, didn't know how to read music. That's right, this is the man whose fingers blistered their way around such tunes as "Twisted Blues" and "Four On Six" and who released such monumental records as Boss Guitar, Full House, and Smokin' At The Half Note. (I know... it's a Wynton Kelly record, but nobody really thinks of it that way.) All that great music coming out of no formal training. Bill Frisell put it perfectly when he said, "He didn't read music. It was like this homemade thing he did all himself."

Of course, my favorite Montgomery anecdote comes out of his famous distaste for practicing. Wes put it this way:"I never practice my guitar. From time to time I just open the case and throw in a piece of raw meat."

Pat Martino, the great jazz guitarist, does know how to read music. He also knows his way around that fretboard. In fact, Martino had to relearn the guitar after undergoing surgery for a brain aneurysm in 1980. Using his own records as source material, Martino eventually found his old form. Every time I put on one of his more recent records, I continue to be amazed, both by the music and the improbable backstory that is a part of it.

Twenty-six years have passed and Martino has decided to revisit the passions of his youth by recording Remember: A Tribute To Wes Montgomery. Focusing on Montgomery's Riverside recordings, Martino's fine band (Scott Allan Robinson/drums, Danny Sadownick/percussion, David Kikoski/piano and bassist John Patitucci) puts in some inspired performances on such classics as "Full House", "Twisted Blues" (during which Patitucci swing mightily and leader Martino shows why he's so deserving of the accolades tossed his way), "West Coast Blues" and, my personal favorite, "Four On Six".

Not only are the band members sympathetic to the material, they're very much in tune with each other. Face it, these tunes demand swing and groove. Any hint of "mechanics" and the mood would be ruined. Just check out the slippery descending unison lines that open "SKJ". Nice.

While there are undoubtedly many reasons for the creation of this record, Martino points out that looking back can be more than just a nostalgia turn: "We get caught up in life and can't get back to that place when you were a child and had dreams for yourself."

So true.

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Article Author: Mark Saleski

Mark Saleski is a writer and music obsessive based out of the Monadnock region of New Hampshire. He is an editor and writer for Jazz.com. He also writes reviews for Blogcritics.org and produces the weekly feature The Friday Morning Listen. …

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  • Remember: A Tribute to Wes Montgomery Remember: A Tribute to Wes Montgomery

    Will the last remaining jazz guitarist who hasn't recorded a tribute to Wes Montgomery please turn off the control board after he does? Yes, there have been a ton of salutes, but that shouldn't lessen ...

Article comments

  • 1 - sal m

    May 14, 2006 at 8:09 pm

    great stuff about martino relearning his craft...i will definitely listen with much more appreciation AND admiration from now on.

  • 2 - Connie Phillips

    May 15, 2006 at 6:47 pm

    This article has been placed at the Advance.net websites, a site affiliated with about 12 newspapers.

    One such site is here.

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