Monday, October 14, 2024

Bill Mason - 1972 - Gettin' Off

Bill Mason
1972
Gettin' Off




01. Gettin' Off 7:20
02. Let's Stay Together 8:00
03. Now Run And Tell That 6:55
04. Stone 5:40
05. Mister Jay 4:07

Congas – Ron Coleman
Drums – Idris Muhammad
Electric Bass [Fender] – Gordon Edwards
Guitar – Wilbert Longmire
Organ – Bill Mason
Tenor Saxophone, Flute – Hubert Laws
Trumpet – Gary Chandler



Originally hailing from Columbus, Ohio, where he was born in July 1948, Bill Mason, the son of a Baptist minister, had first learnt music in church. Starting out on piano he switched to organ in his late teens. Mason had come to Bob Porter's attention when as part of the Bryant group he recorded at Prestige on two sessions in March and October 1971. These sessions produced Bryant's hottest and funkiest albums for the label-.-Fire Eater (originally PR 10014 and now available on PCD 10014) and Wildfire (PR 10037). For his debut (only?) album as a leader, Porter lined up the same studio - Rudy Van Gelder's - and the same drummer - Idris Muhammad - as the Bryant dates. The other musicians included the well known sounds of Hubert Laws on reeds, and guitarist Wilbert Longmire, the lesser-known talents of conga player Ron Coleman, and bass player Gordon Edwards, as well as Eastbound's other new signing, trumpeter Gary Chandler.

Chandler, by no small coincidence, had been playing around Columbus, where he had ended up after leaving the United States Air Force in 1963. A full ten years older than Mason, he had played with many of the names on what appears to have been a thriving Ohio club scene, including Don Patterson, Hank Marr and Benny Maupin. This led to him joining the Motown Revue and eventually in joining Lou Donaldson's group where he remained (at least) until the recording of his debut album. Strangely, he never appeared on any of Donaldson's recordings of the time - although on a six month break from Lou he made two dates for Charles Earland, another of Donaldson's alumni. Those two albums Living Black (originally PR 10009 and now available on CDBGPD 118) and Soul Story (PR 10019) were both produced by Porter, who decided it was time for him to make a record in his own right. Joining Gordon Edwards and Muhammad this time were Caesar Frazier, Cornell Dupree, Buddy Caldwell, Dick Griffin and Harold Ousley, to create the band that made the trek up to Van Gelder's studio.

Both albums showed the players to be in command of the idiom, as the blues there were also covers of recent hits but most importantly, the funky originals really ruled the roost. Look no further than the tightened groove of Chandler's Kaleidoscope or Mason's fantastic Stone for definitive proof. These albums meant little at the time and are now sought-after collector's items. Get your hands on them now whilst you can.

Best known for his supporting work on Rusty Bryant's Prestige dates Fire-Eater and Wildfire, Bill Mason proves himself a formidable leader with his lone solo session, the aptly titled jazz-funk outing Gettin' Off. Recorded with the estimable talents of drummer Idris Muhammad and tenorist Hubert Laws, the album's physicality is astounding; Mason is a superbly soulful Hammond organist, conjuring spiraling, spellbinding grooves that seem to grow deeper and more relentless with each successive track. He's also a fine composer with originals like "Mister Jay" and the scorching title cut standing tall alongside covers highlighted by Al Green's immortal "Let's Stay Together." (Gettin' Off was reissued on CD in 1999 as half of a Westbound two-fer with Gary Chandler's Outlook.)

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