"Exactly when the first tenor "battle" took place is a fact we have been unable to pin down. Tenor saxophone was not used too much until the mid-1930s, so it is unlikely to have started before then. There was a rivalry between Lester Young and Herschel Evans in Count Basie's band but their solos were usually widely separated by the arrangements. The beginning may have been in Lionel Hampton's band with Arnette Cobb and Illinois Jacquet at the Harlem Square in Houston during the late '30s, or on 52nd Street in 1941 when Coleman Hawkins' small band also featured another tenor player of note, Don Byas.
"At any rate, a tradition had begun to evolve, Jacquet and Dexter Gordon were brought together on a number called 'Pork Chops' with Hampton in the early '40s. Then, in the mid-'40s, Gordon and Gene Ammons continued the tradition with 'Blowin' the Blues Away' in the Billy Eckstine orchestra. A few years later, Dexter teamed with Wardell Gray for 'The Chase' and other tenor-tandem numbers in a small group context of sessions and on record. In 1950, at New York's Orchid Room (the old Onyx), Grey and Sonny Stitt blew against each other. The next step was taken by Ammons, who teamed with Stitt on a permanent basis for club and concert engagements as well as recordings from 1950 to 1952.
"Since then there have been many tenor pairs on record dates, but the first to appear regularly in clubs after the break-up of Ammons & Stitt was the Al Cohn-Zoot Sims team. Then, in May 1960, came a vital new addition to the two-tenor combo ranks - Eddie 'Lockjaw' Davis and Johnny Griffin. 'Griff & Lock' are stylistically closer to Stitt and Ammons than to Sims and Cohn, but they share one important characteristic with the latter pair. While Gene and Sonny were dedicated to a heated (even though not vicious) saxophone swordplay, Eddie and Johnny are always enhancing each other. In a 'Down Beat' interview (June 22, 1961), 'Lock' explained the group's intent to Pete Welding. 'It's not really a battle at all. What we are doing is presenting, side by side, two different style of playing tenor - a contrast, not a contest.'
"Although both Davis and Griffin are rough and ready, extrovert players, there is a definite contrast. This helps sustain interest in the solo portions. The well-balanced ensembles show that there is enough similarity of basic approach in their respective style to weld them into a cohesive unit.
"Both men have served in big bands (Griffin with Hampton; Davis, most importantly with Basie) and in small groups (each has led his own combo as well as working as a sideman). 'Lock' has one of the most personal, immediately recognizable styles in jazz. In many ways it is unorthodox; intriguingly freakish. On ballads, his Ben Webster influence is evident but it isn't often that he is heard at ballad tempo in this group. (The first chorus of 'Good Bait' is the only instance here). Davis explained in 'Down Beat': 'We very rarely play slower ballads. It's not that we have anything against them, it's just that they don't seem to fit into our approach... The patrons don't really want us to slow down.'
"Griffin, who takes the second tenor solo on all six selections here, is still 'the fastest gun alive' but is a calmer player than his pre-Thelonious Monk days. This is not to say that he has lost any of his tremendous drive, but he is more in control of his own powers than before. Occasionally, Johnny gets that hollow Dexter Gordon sound in the upper register and sometimes he reminds me of Gene Ammons, but like Davis he is essentially an individualist who multi-toned style is unmistakable.
"The individual and combined powers of the two tenor 'terribles' (used in the most positive jazz sense of the word) is a constant good groove. Junior Mance, his authentically funky piano and his strongly rhythmic cohorts, Larry Gales and Ben Riley, help to make this album a delight from start to finish. Perhaps the most important factor in the success of this set is the excellent choice of tunes. The six selections here inspire the players to do their best. The only standard is 'I'll Remember April' and that one has a way of refurbishing itself through the years which does not let its interest for player or listener diminish. The other are each, in their own way, special. Guts and beauty in combination are to be found in James Moody's 'Last Train from Overbrook', 'Hey Lock!' is a David original with its own bridge separating body and soul. Bob Gonzales' 'Midnight at Minton's' is a minor-key swinger. 'Second Balcony Jump' was written by Jerry Valentine for the Earl Hines band of the 1940s and later reworked for Billy Eckstine. Griff and Lock introduce it with a bit of 'The Theme' before leaping over the balcony rolling. Tadd Dameron's 'Good Bait' (written in collaboration with Count Basie) is also from the '40s and was first recorded by a Dizzy Gillespie quintet. Davis brings out its stately minuet-like qualities for a chorus and then Griffin joins in to help him swing it.
"If you have either of the group's other albums, ('Tough Tenors' and 'Lookin' at Monk') you know what to expect in terms of spirited performances. This one is every bit as good and what is more important, accomplishes it with a quality and feeling all its own." (Ira Gitler. From the liner notes.)
Performers: Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis (t-sx), Johnny Griffin (t-sx), Junior Mance (pi), Larry Gales (bs), Ben Riley (dr)
A1. Last Train From Overbrook
A2. Hey, Lock!
A3. Midnight At Minton's
B1. Second Balcony Jump
B2. I'll Remember April
B3. Good Bait
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