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THAT'S GOOD HERBGUITARIST ELLIS IS AN ISLAND OF RARE TALENT IN A SEA OF GENRESBy Dave McElfreshPublished on May 11, 1994The pantheon of major Texas blues guitarists would have to include the late, flamboyant Stevie Ray Vaughan, the brilliant albino Johnny Winter--and a quiet, 71-year-old jazzman named Herb Ellis. The aging Texan is a major link between the parallel developments of jazz and blues, as well as one of the very first guitarists to go electric. Forty years of recordings include stints with saxophonists Stan Getz, Gerry Mulligan and Ben Webster, as well as jazz diva Ella Fitzgerald. Most notably, though, was a five-year workout in the company of bassist Ray Brown and pianist Oscar Peterson--a group generally considered to be the hardest-swinging piano trio in the history of jazz. Oddly, Ellis readily attributes both his sound and success to the dreadful surroundings in which he was raised--memories that to this day he admits he can't shake. "Farmersville, Texas, was a pretty bleak town with a population of about 2,000," Ellis recalls in a conversation from his home in Arkansas. "And it was even bleaker out where I grew up, four miles south. Very few houses, mostly a mile or half a mile apart. It was so lonesome that it affected the sound of my playing. Everything I play sounds like I'm doing the blues, no matter what it is." "Very early on, maybe when I was 8 years old, I knew I was going to be a guitarist, I knew I was going to be good, and that somehow I would become famous," recalls Ellis. "I've been truly blessed with the fact that it all happened. "Growing up on the farm, we had very few records to learn from, and I can only remember one record that had a guitarist on it. Mostly, I listened to the radio and heard all different kinds of music." "I was playing millions of notes. And playing too much is the problem of most youth. When you're young, you think the more you play, the better the music is. "But when I went to North Texas State Teachers College, some of the other guys had records by Benny Goodman that featured Charlie Christian. He was playing less than me, and playing much better." Ellis swears he went from hillbilly guitarist to jazz guitarist overnight, thanks to Christian. Christian died of tuberculosis in a sanitarium in 1942, about the same time Ellis joined Glen Gray's Casa Loma Orchestra. A few years with Jimmy Dorsey's famous big band followed. "Barney Kessel and I were the earliest electric guitar players in the Charlie Christian mode," Ellis says proudly of his contribution to the Forties jazz scene. Ellis later took Kessel's place in monster pianist Oscar Peterson's trio. Peterson's frequent tempo changes and key modulations made slobbering fools of lesser players--an ironic gig for a guitarist specializing in three-chord blues. Stints with Ella Fitzgerald and the rest followed, leading to some less-than-fond memories of some well-paying studio gigs. "I'm telling you, I'm glad those days of studio work are over," says Ellis, speaking not only of his recording sessions but also of his time in the TV bands of Steve Allen, Joey Bishop and Merv Griffin. In 1984, Ellis told Guitar Player Magazine that "frequently you have people in charge that don't know half of what the guys in the band do. . . . All that is not worth one 12-bar chorus of the blues to me." Ellis himself has recently made a return of sorts to his own roots: After more than 30 albums with the conservative jazz label Concord Records, he has signed up with the much smaller Justice Records, straight out of Houston, Texas (and home also to Willie Nelson). The fiery "Scrapple From the Apple" is the opening cut of his last disc, Texas Swings. Ellis is not content here in merely playing jazz and blues, but chooses to emphasize Texas swing, a style of country music rooted in both jazz and blues. Cuts like "It Had to Be You" and "Rosetta" are permeated with the same Texas twang a young Ellis picked up from the radio. Fiddles and pedal steel everywhere sandwich his jazz playing, and sound much more natural than jazz fans might first expect. Even "America the Beautiful," with the assistance of Willie Nelson's guitar, becomes a bluesy tune that far transcends the cornball interpretation expected.
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