Charlie Haden - Always Say Goodbye

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Album Details

Title: Always Say Goodbye
Artist: Charlie Haden
Release Date: 1993
Re-Released On: 3/22/1994
Label: Polygram
Duration: 69:47
UPCs: 731452150127, 731452150141
Genre: Jazz
Style: Post-Bop
Moods: Cerebral, Elaborate, Elegant, Intimate, Literate, Passionate, Playful, Refined/Mannered, Reserved, Romantic, Sentimental, Sophisticated, Spiritual, Theatrical, Amiable/Good-Natured, Dramatic, Earnest, Exuberant, Freewheeling, Precious, Stately, Warm
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 1
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Introduction
  2. Always Say Goodbye
  3. Nice Eyes
  4. Relaxin' at Camarillo
  5. Sunset Afternoon
  6. My Love and I [Love Song from Adache]
  7. Alone Together
  8. Our Spanish Love Song
  9. Background Music
  10. Ou Es-Tu, Mon Amour? (Where Are You, My Love?)
  11. Avenue of Stars
  12. Low Key Lightly [Variation on the Theme of Hero to Zero]
  13. Celia
  14. Everything Happens to Me
  15. Ending

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
1994CDPolygram521501

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Always Say Goodbye is part of the continuing Quartet West project by Haden, in which the venerable bassist attempts to evoke the spirit of Hollywood circa 1930-1940. To that end, the record opens and closes with snippets from the soundtrack to The Big Sleep, one of Haden's favorite movies. After the introduction, the album seamlessly transitions to the title track, the leader's own composition and one of the high points on the record. Alan Broadbent's solo piano introduction perfectly sets the mood that is sustained throughout the entire album: one of acute nostalgia. Other devices used to inculcate this mood is the peculiar device of the dual performance, in which a recording of a song is played first by Haden's quartet and is then followed by a sampled performance of the same song by a great jazz artist of the past. The results, though at first a little bit unsettling, are quite spectacular. Particularly instructive is "Ou Es-Tu, Mon Amour? (Where Are You, My Love?)," where violin legend Stephane Grappelli joins the quartet for one reading, which soon makes way to a Django Reinhardt-Grappelli version of the same song recorded in 1949. Nostalgia has never been this tangible -- this solid and real. The quartet that Haden has assembled is top-notch. The leader is as tasty as ever, his warm lines implying the beat and the pulse of each song as often as they strictly denote and delimit it. Ernie Watts' tenor sound is one of the most vocal around, and pianist Broadbent and drummer Larance Marable make up a first-rate rhythm section. Broadbent also is an extremely melodic improviser, and his solos reveal a thoughtful, complete musician. Broadbent also is responsible for the extremely elegant use of strings on "My Love and I (Love Song From Apache)" and "Everything Happens to Me." Highly recommended. ~ Daniel Gioffre, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Alain CluzeauEngineer
Alan BroadbentConductor, Arranger, Piano
Aurelio de CarolisDrums
Benoit QuersinBass
Britt WoodmanTrombone
Carlo PecoriBass
Cat AndersonTrumpet
Charlie HadenBass, Producer, Director, Liner Notes
Charlie Haden Quartet WestPerformer
Chet BakerVocals
Clark TerryTrumpet
Coleman HawkinsSax (Tenor)
Cookie MarencoEngineer
Django ReinhardtGuitar
Duke EllingtonArranger, Piano
Eddie LockeDrums
Ernie WattsSax (Tenor)
Gerald WilsonTrumpet
Gianni SafredPiano
Hans WendlProducer
Harold BakerTrumpet
Harry CarneySax (Baritone)
Humphrey BogartSpeech/Speaker/Speaking Part
Jean-Louis VialeDrums
Jimmy HamiltonClarinet
Jimmy Johnson, Jr.Drums
Jimmy WoodeBass
Jo StaffordVocals
John SandersTrombone
Johnny HodgesSax (Alto)
Larance MarableDrums
Lauren BacallSpeech/Speaker/Speaking Part
Leslie Ann JonesEngineer
Major HolleyBass
Paul GonsalvesSax (Tenor)
Quentin JacksonTrombone
Ray NanceViolin
Raymond FolPiano
Russell ProcopeSax (Alto)
Stéphane Grappelli?, Violin
Tommy FlanaganPiano