Some Time Ago is the 37th album by American jazz vocalist Mark Murphy. It was recorded in 1999 when Murphy was 68 years old and released by the HighNote Records label in the United States in 2000. The album is a collection of jazz bebop tunes and standards with Murphy backed by a jazz quintet.
Background
Some Time Ago was Murphy's first of five releases on Joe Fields' label HighNote after Fields sold Muse Records to Joel Dorn.[1] Fields. inspired by mentor Bob Weinstock's development and sale of Prestige Records to Fantasy Records for a large profit, had always intended to sell Muse. He almost immediately formed HighNote Records with his son and signed on Murphy.[1]
Murphy started professionally in the 1950s when bebop was flourishing. In the liner notes, James Gavin describes the loneliness and financial hardships that the life of a touring jazz singer involves.[2] He says, Murphy "takes us from the wild exhilaration of bebop to a darker place that Mark knows well".[2]
Murphy won the 2000 Downbeat Magazine Reader's Poll as Male Vocalist of the Year and would win again in 2001.[3]
This the first recording made by saxophonist Allen Mezquida with Murphy. But Mezquida was part of the inspiration for Murphy's "Song for the Geese" on Song for the Geese. Murphy heard Mezquida playing the melody of Sean Smith's song in a nightclub appearance with Smith's band and was inspired to write lyrics for the tune. "I never forgot the way he played," Mark said in the liner notes.[2] Trumpeter Dave Ballou knew Murphy from a teaching job in Italy.[2] "I was amazed at how he played outside the song harmonically," said Murphy.[2] Ballou had previously recorded with Roseanna Vitro and Steve LaSpina.[8]
Don Sickler suggested the bebop tunes on this album.[4]Tadd Dameron's bebop tune "A Blue Time" later became "There's No More Blue Time" with Georgie Fame's lyrics added in the 1990s. Murphy said, "It's the most wonderful natural jazz tune. It's what I call a time song. It was almost written for a drummer to sing."[2] "Bohemia After Dark" is a tribute to New York City jazz club Cafe Bohemia written by Oscar Pettiford. It became a Julian "Cannonball" Adderley staple in his live performances. The lyrics were added later by pianist Ronnie Whyte, a friend of Murphy's.[9] "Mark's jagged scat chorus, with its yelps, trills, and leaps into falsetto, owes as much to the avant-garde of the '60s as it does to bop," writes Gavin.[2]Cedar Walton's "Mosaic" recorded by Art Blakey and Jimmy Rowles became "Life's Mosaic" years later when lyrics were added by Joan and Paula Hackett. It was also recorded by Vanessa Rubin.[10] Jazz pianist and composer James Williams, who worked with Art Blakey, wrote "You're My Alter Ego", his best known melody, with lyrics by Pamela Watson.[11]
Gavin call the ballads on the album "painfully raw".[2] Murphy previously recorded "That Old Black Magic" in 1958 on This Could Be the Start of Something with arrangement by Bill Holman, and it became a minor hit for Murphy.[12] Peter Jones, in his Murphy biography This is Hip: The Life of Mark Murphy, says of Jimmy Rowles's "The Peacocks", it is "a terrifyingly difficult tune to sing, which Murphy nailed in one take".[3] Murphy said of Norma Winstone's lyrics, "The way she twines in the words fascinated me. The song just takes you away to a different place."[2] Rowles had previously accompanied Murphy on his Capitol Records albums, This Could Be the Start of Something, Mark Murphy's Hip Parade, and Playing the Field.[13] Rowles had also been the pianist for singers Billie Holiday, Ella Fitzgerald, and Peggy Lee.[13]
AllMusic assigns the album 2.5 stars. David R. Adler writes, "One either loves Mark Murphy's style or one does not. The veteran vocalist is at his best when scatting...On the other hand, he seems a little rough-edged and indelicate on ballads".[15] But he singles out for praise his be-bopscat on "There's No More Blue Time", his "breakneck version" of "That Old Black Magic", the hard bop "You're My Alter Ego" and "Life's Mosaic," the ballads "Some Time Ago", and the closing standards medley, "Why Was I Born / I'm a Fool to Want You." He highly praises each of the accompanying musicians. He says, "Hip and adventurous, yet always tasteful, the band makes these tunes come alive as much as Murphy does".[15]
Scott Yanow, in his book The Jazz Singers: The Ultimate Guide, includes the album in his list of "other worthy recordings of the past 20 years" by Mark Murphy.[18]
Colin Larkin assigns the record 4 stars in The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music.[16] Four stars means, "Excellent. A high standard album from this artist and therefore highly recommended".[16]
The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings assigns 4 qualified stars ***(*).[17] This means "An excellent record, with some exceptional music, only kept out of the front rank by some minor reservations".[17] Richard Cook and Brian Morton write, "Here approaching 70, Murphy has all the command and serene eloquence of the great jazz instrumental seniors. Of course the voice isn't the limber trumpet of his youth, but listeners shouldn't expect some kind of old man's wisdom as the premier emotion - "I'm A Fool To Want You", ... is as torn and uncomprehending as any tyro in romance could express. At the same time, it takes enormous mastery to make such a convincing, beautiful matter out of 'The Peacocks' (with Norma Winstone's exceptional lyric)".[17]
Murphy biographer Peter Jones says, "Allen Mesquida on alto sax and Dave Ballou on trumpet (Murphy had met Ballou in Italy while both were teaching there)...are in dazzling form, the tracks being long enough for them to stretch out".[3] He writes of Murphy's performance, "He keeps his scatting to a minimum, and amid the thrilling bebop of Cedar Walton's "Life's Mosaic" and "That Old Black Magic", there is also darkness. On the medley of "Why Was I Born" and "I'm a Fool to Want You", the first done as a ballad, the second as a slow rhumba, Murphy sings some desperately sad and lonely a cappella lyrics, ruminating on the purpose of a life lived alone".[3]
Will Friedwald said that,"Murphy comes up with more good, not overdone tunes than just about anyone else...As soon as he started singing "The Peacocks, virtually every singer in New York started singing "The Peacocks."[19]
Describing Murphy's voice and performance, James Gavin says, "time has only made his reedy bass-baritone richer. His vocal trademarks remain: the Ben Webster-like slides, the flashes of off-the-wall humor, the horn-player approach combined with a stark insight into words. He's not afraid to let his voice break or drop down to a husky whisper; pretty sounds alone would not suit the story he has to tell".
^ abJones, Peter (2018). This is hip: the life of Mark Murphy. Popular music history. Sheffield, UK ; Bristol, CT: Equinox Publishing. p. 127. ISBN978-1-78179-473-9.
^ abcdefghijklGavin, James. (2000). Some Time Ago (Liner notes). Mark Murphy. HighNote Records.
^ abcdefJones, Peter (2018). This is hip: the life of Mark Murphy. Popular music history. Sheffield, UK ; Bristol, CT: Equinox Publishing. p. 139. ISBN978-1-78179-473-9.
^Jones, Peter (2018). This is hip: the life of Mark Murphy. Popular music history. Sheffield, UK ; Bristol, CT: Equinox Publishing. p. 25. ISBN978-1-78179-473-9.
^ abcLarkin, Colin (2002). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music. Colin Larkin, Muze UK Ltd (eds.) (Concise 4th ed.). London: Virgin. pp. 899–900. ISBN978-1-85227-923-3.
^ abcdCook, Richard; Morton, Brian (2006). The Penguin Guide to Jazz Recordings (8 ed.). London: Penguin. p. 963. ISBN978-0-14-102327-4.