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After the Jazztet disbanded, Golson spent more than a decade in the studios, writing for film, television, and commercials. These six albums chart his intermittent returns to jazz recording, from European sessions to Columbia funk dates.
Stockholm Sojourn is Golson the arranger and conductor stepping fully into the orchestral space, directing an international ensemble that mixed American expatriate players like Benny Bailey with top Scandinavian musicians like Eje Thelin and Bjarne Nerem. Recorded in Stockholm in July 1964 with some overdubs added later that fall, the album presents six Golson originals and three standards in big band arrangements that show just how fluent he had become writing for large ensembles.
The orchestra is rich with color: three trumpets, three trombones (including Grachan Moncur III, bringing an angular modernism to Golson's charts), French horns, a full reed section, and a pianoless rhythm section that gives the ensemble a distinctive open quality. Golson's writing trusts the musicians to carry the harmonic weight without a comping instrument filling in the middle, and the result is orchestral jazz with genuine transparency.
Cecil Payne's baritone anchors the low end while Bailey's trumpet cuts through the top of the ensemble with the precision of a player who had spent years in European big bands. Thelin's trombone solos bring a distinctly Scandinavian lyricism that complements rather than clashes with Golson's American hard bop sensibility. A genuine orchestral achievement that deserves wider recognition.
The title is accurate. By the mid-1960s Golson had become interested in presenting the full range of his musical personality, which included both the hard bop world of his early recordings and the more accessible commercial territory he had been exploring since the Jazztet dissolved. This album sits firmly in that middle zone, produced with enough care to be interesting but aimed broadly enough to be palatable to listeners who had never heard Blues-Ette.
The studio orchestra arrangements are tasteful rather than adventurous. Golson's tenor sits at the center of large-group sounds that frame him rather than challenge him, and there are moments where the combination of his playing and the orchestral context produces something genuinely beautiful. His ballad work with strings in this period is particularly worth hearing: the tone is so full and the control so complete that even a lush arrangement cannot obscure the essential quality of the playing.
This is not the Golson of Groovin' with Golson or Blues-Ette, and it does not try to be. Taken on its own terms, as a mid-career record by a serious musician exploring accessible territory, it has more to offer than its reputation suggests. But newcomers should start elsewhere.
This might be the most unusual entry in any major jazz musician's discography. Golson spent several years in the mid-1960s writing advertising jingles for major American brands, becoming one of the most financially successful jazz musicians of his generation by doing something most of his peers refused to consider. This album documents those jingles, repackaging them as jazz-inflected commercial compositions. It is a genuinely fascinating document of a specific moment in both jazz and American advertising history.
The music itself is better than you might expect. Golson brought the same compositional intelligence to a thirty-second jingle that he brought to a jazz standard, and the best of these pieces have a melodic memorability that was literally their purpose but which also means they function as jazz materials surprisingly well. His tenor playing over the commercial frameworks retains all of its characteristic warmth and directness.
Golson later returned to jazz recording with renewed energy and no apparent damage to his playing or his compositional voice. This record is the document of the detour. It is worth hearing for the curiosity value alone, and for what it reveals about how broadly Golson thought about music's possibilities. A genuinely one-of-a-kind artifact.
Golson took a brief detour toward the funk-influenced jazz that was dominating the Columbia Records roster in the mid-1970s, and this album is the result. It is not his natural territory, and the tensions between his fundamentally lyrical, blues-rooted tenor playing and the more rhythmically aggressive electric context are audible throughout. But those tensions are not uninteresting: there are moments where Golson's warmth transforms the electric groove in the same way it transforms everything else it touches.
The rhythm section is tight and funky in the expected sense, and Golson rides over it without losing what makes his playing identifiable. His tone remains immediately his regardless of the surrounding texture, which is a testament to how fully formed and distinctive it is. You would never mistake this for another tenor player even in an unfamiliar context.
This is a period piece in the best sense: fully of its moment, interesting for what it reveals about how Golson was engaging with the broader musical culture of the 1970s, but not the place to start for someone new to his work. Fans of the full discography will find it a worthwhile curiosity.
Killer Joe is Golson's most famous composition, one of the small handful of jazz tunes that transcended the world it was written for and became something that people who have never heard of Benny Golson know without knowing they know it. It has been used in films, commercials, and television so many times that its origins can seem obscure. This album presents Golson's signature tune in a large ensemble production that draws on the arranging and conducting skills he had developed during his years in commercial music.
The album is a far cry from the small-group hard bop of Golson's early career. This is an orchestral production with a full horn section (Bobby Bryant, Al Aarons, and Chuck Findley on trumpets; Britt Woodman, Frank Rosolino, and George Bohannon on trombones), a string section, and Latin percussion from Willie Bobo. Golson himself plays tenor and soprano saxophone, Fender Rhodes, and vibraphone across various tracks, revealing the breadth of his musical personality. Bobby Martin shares arranging duties.
The production values are unmistakably 1977 Columbia, polished and wide-screen, but Golson's playing cuts through the orchestral textures with characteristic warmth and directness. The album is more a showcase for Golson the arranger-composer than Golson the improviser, but both are present in generous measure. A fascinating document of what happened when a serious jazz musician applied everything he had learned in commercial music back to his own compositions.
By the late 1970s Golson was still experimenting with electric and groove-oriented contexts, though his return to straight-ahead acoustic jazz was imminent. This album sits at the far end of his commercial period, a record made by a musician who was genuinely curious about where these sounds could go but was also, by this point, beginning to hear the limits of the direction.
The title captures the spirit of the enterprise: Golson was always a musician who believed in rhythm and groove as fundamental rather than optional qualities of good jazz, and the funk-adjacent settings of the late 1970s gave him a context in which to explore that belief in an extreme form. The music is accessible and rhythmically alive, and his saxophone playing maintains the character and warmth that no production context could erase.
The return to acoustic small-group jazz that characterized the 1980s work is the natural sequel to this: after a decade of commercial and electric exploration, Golson went back to what he had always been best at, and the work from that point forward is among the finest of his career. This record is an interesting stop on the way there.