Biography
Assembled in New York, the Birdlanders assembled an all-star roster that captured multiple bebop-focused dates throughout 1954. The guiding force, however, came not from a local but from the established French pianist and producer Henri Renaud, who entered the world on April 20, 1925, in Villedieu-sur-Indre, France. The ensemble took its name from Manhattan’s storied Birdland nightclub, itself christened after the pioneering bebop alto saxophonist Charlie “Bird” Parker. In its era Birdland ranked among the city’s premier jazz rooms, and a venue still operating under that name existed in Manhattan into the early 2000s, though the original site had long vanished. Renaud formally launched the Birdlanders venture on January 28, 1954, by overseeing a trio comprising Duke Jordan at the piano, Gene Ramey on bass, and Lee Abrams behind the drums. Every musician chosen for the follow-up dates of March 5, 7, and 11, 1954, likewise belonged to Birdland’s regular circle. Those March encounters featured J.J. Johnson or Kai Winding on trombone, Al Cohn on tenor saxophone, Milt Jackson doubling on vibes and piano, Tal Farlow on guitar, and bass duties split among Gene Ramey, Percy Heath, and Oscar Pettiford, with Max Roach, Charlie Smith, or Denzil Best on drums. Renaud himself sat at the piano for the March dates. Whether navigating brisk up-tempo pieces or reflective ballads, the group remained strictly bebop in orientation, avoiding swing, Dixieland, or earlier styles, and thus mirrored the jazz then heard nightly at Birdland. The 1954 recordings filled three LPs issued on the Period label. In 2000 Fantasy gathered the material for its Original Jazz Classics series, releasing it across two compact discs titled The Birdlanders, Vol. 1 and The Birdlanders, Vol. 2.
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