DB Hall of Fame

SOLO  FLIGHT

THE  CHARLIE  CHRISTIAN  WEB  SITE

DB Hall of Fame


 


ROSE ROOM


Aircheck


JUNE  6,  1941 Friday “MONTE PROSER DANCE CARNIVAL”

MADISON SQUARE GARDEN,  NYC

Mutual Radio Network




32  BARS     (ABAB) Key of
Ab Quarter Note =
114 Time:
2:25



2  CHORUSES:


»   4  bars  –  CC  &  clarinet (Intro)


32  bars  –  clarinet (Melody) (over ts & tpt obbl)


» 24  bars  –  CC

  8  bars  –  ensemble (free improv)




Personnel: Issued Recordings:


Benny Goodman & his Sextet Incomplete:   *

CHARLIE CHRISTIAN.....Guitar

GEORGIE AULD................tenor sax [LP] Musica Jazz 2MJP 1058

BENNY GOODMAN.........clarinet

COOTIE WILLIAMS.........trumpet [CD] Definitive DRCD11177   (disc 4)

TEDDY WILSON...............piano JSP JSP909            (disc 4)

WALTER IOOSS...............bass Masters of Jazz MJCD 75

NICK FATOOL..................drums Suisa JZCD 379


 

* All issues are missing the first bar of the intro.



Composed by: Art Hickman - Harry Williams

© VALDÉS 4/3/00

 


 

Transcription Page:     Rose Room  — 6 June 1941

 


 

C&A:

Recorded at the “Monte Proser Dance Carnival,” this turned out to be the final Rose Room Charlie Christian would ever record.  The slowest version by far and only two choruses long, CC is again the featured soloist and again solos on the second chorus but this time it’s only for 24 bars (the ensemble comes in for the last eight bars of the chorus).

As on the 28 October 1939 aircheck of Rose Room, Charles takes one aback with his solo opening on this version.  Bars 6-8 are well worth comparing to two other CC solos on this tune—it’s a revised sequence of what he played almost two years earlier (2 & 28 October 1939) on the same measures.  The Gb7 (relative dominant of the Dbm) that begins on the last beat of bar 8 starts out with same line as the Ab7 that begins at bar 4.

Measure 12:  CC runs through a F7 sequence closely related to the one he played on the 2 October 1939 studio date but whereas he played triplets on the much earlier date, here he double-times it with 16ths.  Bars 15-16 (Eb7) also have a phrase related to the October 2nd date.

Bars 20-22 contain the beautiful Ab7 sequence that first appeared on the first chorus of his second solo at the 13 March 1941 Rose Room studio jam.  The double-time closing of the solo (mm 23-24) can be found in various guises on several other tunes—sometimes inverted, sometimes reversed—almost always over a major chord, at least once over a dominant chord.

Despite the similarities in some of the sequences, this beautiful solo is very different from the other three sextet versions (all three recorded in 1939), especially in the phrasing.

Rose Room may well have been Charles’ favorite tune to solo on.   This rendition was one of his very last recorded solos.  Interestingly, it was also one of three tunes on which he soloed in his first public performance in his early teens when he sat-in with Don Redman’s band at Honey Murphy’s in OKC.

 


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