Yesterday, singer/songwriter Bobby Hebb passed away at age 72 after losing a battle with lung cancer. Maybe the name isn’t familiar to you, but his #2 hit song from 1966 “Sunny” should be. Aside from his original version, it was covered by Cher, Georgie Fame and Stanley Turrentine before the year was out, and later interpreted by such big stars as Frank Sinatra, Marvin Gaye and Jose Feliciano. Pat Martino’s live blazing rendition of it in 1972 is one of the more memorable jazz versions of this timeless tune.
Below is our take on the Martino performance, as we pay our last respects to Bobby Hebb. May his afterlife be as bright as the song that brought a little sunshine to millions of listeners for over four decades:
You’ve seen it many times before and probably joined the fray a time or two. I’m talking about that never-ending debate on “Who is the greatest guitarist of all time?”
Man, there’s so many outstanding ones out there with so many different styles, how can you choose? I sure as heck won’t, but the one that makes me shake my head in disbelief the most when I listen to him is Pat Azzara…also known as Pat Martino.
Martino’s remarkable return to form after completely losing memory of the skill due to an operation to repair a brain aneurysm is a story unto itself. In fact, his records of late have been among his very best (Mark Saleski did a fine write-up on Pat’s 2006 Wes Montgomery tribute CD just a few months ago). But Martino’s legacy was already well established before his rehab because his pre-surgery records were either good or head shaking good.
A bop-oriented guitarist of the highest order from the Montgomery school of fretmasters, Pat Martino was already considered a “guitarist’s guitarist” by the early seventies. And you would expect him to really show off his abilities in a live setting.
Fortunately, he did record a club date in 1972 with Ron Thomas on electric piano, Tyrone Brown on Fender bass and Sherman Ferguson on drums. Live is a set of three extended pieces that were conducive for extended jams. The first two songs were modal workouts that included changing tempos and knotty chord changes in the head followed by Pat stretching out for several minutes on the solo spaces.
But I chose to spotlight the third tune because it proves that Pat didn’t need complex material to astound the living begeezus out of you. He can take a familiar, straightforward pop tune like the 1966 Bobby Hebb smash hit “Sunny” and blow you away all the same.
Following a minute in which the theme is played out, Martino launches into his solo carefully building intensity over the next four minutes and forty-five seconds. Through it all he is always locked into the groove. His tone is soft and while his guitar is a tad undermiked, you can still hear every note, because he plucks his notes clearly.
In his trademark style, Martino makes judicious use of repeating lines and peppering his fluid climbs up and down the scales much like Charlie Parker did with his sax. Tyrone Brown always seem to be listening to what the leader is doing as his melodic bass lines ebb and flow with the guitar in perfect sync, as well as Ferguson’s drums. As he finally reaches the climax of his solo, the audience is clearly appreciating the six string display and he breaks clean to make way for the keyboard solo before returning for another go around with the theme and some more soloing in the coda.
By the way, I actually had two tracks in mind, as “Sunny” barely beat out the 1976 power fusion exercise “Line Games” for today’s topic, but I’ll throw in that track anyway so you can hear Pat sounding like Grant Green on steroids. Yup, it’s yet another head shaker.
“One Track Mind” is a weekly drool over a single song selected on a whim and a short thesis on why you should be drooling over it, too.
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