THE OFFICIAL BOOTS RANDOLPH SITE |
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Liner Notes - by Tim SmithFrom the Zoho Music release of "A WHOLE NEW BALLGAME": My first meeting with Boots Randolph occurred when my father, the late comedian Ralph Smith, was recording a comedy album at Boots' legendary Printer's Alley nightclub in 1980 in Nashville. Meeting and hearing Boots live for the first time, I was blown away by him and his band! Later that year, Fred Foster from Monument Records hired me to play bass on Boots' last project for the label, "Dedication". By the time I had met Boots, he had already been one of the top tenor sax players in every conceivable popular music category you might think of, such as country, rock 'n roll, blues, pop, gospel, and swing jazz, for decades. Most people only associate Randolph with his self-written, 1963 multi-million selling hit, "Yakety Sax", but he also had other big hits such as "The Shadow Of Your Smile" in 1966. Boots Randolph was also the first to ever play sax on recordings with Elvis Presley, starting in 1960 on Elvis' comeback album "Elvis Is Back!", and the only one to ever play solo with him. In addition he played sax on the soundtracks for eight of Elvis' movies. Boots also played with Buddy Holly, Johnny Cash, Chet Atkins, and Floyd Cramer. His further session credits include such diverse classics as Roy Orbison's "Oh, Pretty Woman", Al Hirt's "Java", REO Speedwagon's "Little Queenie", Brenda Lee's "Rockin' 'Round The Christmas Tree", and Jerry Lee Lewis' "Turn On Your Lovelight". Without question, it was Boots' particular muscular blend of Dixieland Jazz, along with some swingin' Honky Tonk, which helped Nashville music makers turn from regional hillbilly records to the hybrid country/pop which transformed Nashville into the Country Music capitol of the world!
One day, driving to Boots' home to talk about a new recording, it hit me. Boots is 79 years old; he's cut nearly fifty albums, and he's playing as well as ever... who needs a concept? Let's just record a group of Boots' favorite standards from the great American Songbook...tunes he had never recorded previously. Well, there's a concept for you! We discussed a few songs, and got together at the studio to "see if anything would happen". Well, did it ever! The first session opened a floodgate, and we soon had fourteen songs that we really wanted to record. Boots is fond of calling great standards "evergreens", and that describes the titles represented here on "A Whole New Ballgame". It seems like the last few years have produced a glut of artists recording the great standards, so what could we bring to the table that would be new and unique? The answer is in the artist himself. Boots is one of the most distinctive sounding instrumentalists in the history of modern music. He has proven to be a special interpreter of great melodies. He possesses one of the most imitated and respected "tones" in the business.
Fans always ask Boots if he has a favorite sax player. They want to know who his influences were, and why he became the sax player he is today. Boots then mentions the huge names in the jazz world, players like Ben Webster, Coleman Hawkins, Lester Young, and Charlie Parker. However, he also never fails to mention Don Byas. As we started picking material for this recording, Boots brought in a copy of Don Byas playing a great tune called "Candy". I was floored. Byas plays the song brilliantly. His time is incredible. His note choices are flawless. And his tone is incredibly "contemporary" for his time period. I have been lucky enough to have worked with many of the top sax players in the industry today. Bill Evans, the great sax player from Miles Davis' 1980's bands, and Kirk Whalum are some of the most respected tenor players in the current crop of new jazz stars. Kirk actually told me that one of the reasons he made the move to Nashville years back was "to breathe the same air that Boots did." So in the same way that these young musicians revere Boots, Boots is giving something back on this record.
-Tim Smith
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