Cozzetti & Gemmill Bob Cozzetti and Tim Gemmill (best known as Cozzetti & Gemmill) met in Seattle, Washington in 1965 and became good friends In 1967. Tim was playing tenor saxophone & flute in the Jimmy Hanna Big Band. Bob and Jim Ogilvy (Jimmy Hanna) had grown up together on Capital Hill, in Seattle. He was helping Jim with some management duties and occasionally playing trumpet in the band, as well. They soon formed a musical partnership marketing themselves as a trumpet, saxophone and flute section for hire (primarily for rock and rhythm & blues bands). In 1968, they drove to Los Angeles and spent a year playing with different groups; mostly rock. They then traveled back east to Boston, Massachusetts. Their intent was to visit the Berklee College of Music and check out the local jazz scene. After a few months, they returned to Seattle to help form a six-piece avant-garde jazz orchestra: Cosmic Revolution Jazz Sextet. Group members included Pete Leinonen (acoustic bass), Mike Jacobsen (cello), Steve Swartz (drums) and Charles Jefferson (trumpet). Cozzetti performed on acoustic piano, while Gemmill played tenor saxophone and flute. After the Cosmic Revolution Jazz Sextet broke up, Tim and Bob (along with drummer Steve Swartz) joined a newly formed rock and R&B band: Ron Holden & Good News. Ron Holden is remembered for his 1959 ballad Love You So, which became an international top 10 hit, climbing to #7 in Billboard. Other members were Toby Cyer (electric guitar) and Gary Snyder (electric bass); known for his work with Jimmy Hanna and the Dynamics. Cozzetti & Gemmill (and Swartz) spent a total of eight months with Ron Holden & Good News. Beginnings (1970-1972) In 1970, Tim, Bob and Steve left Ron Holden and formed a jazz-fusion group: Music Projection Trio, noteworthy for its lack of a bass player. MPT got their first big break when they were invited by promoter and tenor saxophonist Joe Brazil to open for the Herbie Hancock Sextet, in October 1970, at Club Ebonee (Central District) Seattle. Also, in November, Music Projection Trio performed at the Jazz Ragtime Festival with Ramsey Lewis, the late John Lee Hooker, the late Jo Jordan and the late Eubie Blake. Another setting for the trio was an appearance at a Seattle promotional event June 6, 1971, for the opening of the racing film Le Mans (starring Steve McQueen). In August, 1971, Music Projection Trio performed for Rock Kaleidoscope at the Seattle Center Mural Amphitheatre; event sponsored by Seattle mayor Wes Uhlman (mayor from 1969-1978). Cozzetti received a letter from the mayors office thanking him: in the letter, dated September 9, 1971, Mayor Uhlman wrote, May I take this opportunity, on behalf of the people of Seattle, to thank you for the hours of help and participation you gave to Festival 71 at the Seattle Center. In May 1972, MPT performed as an opening act for the Charles Lloyd Quartet at the Fresh Air Tavern; Seattle. Many well-known jazz and blues artists performed at this club, including Albert Collins, Johnny Otis and Muddy Waters. New York City Period (1972-1977)
After moving to Hackensack, New Jersey in September 1972, Cozzetti, Gemmill and Swartz continued to perform as Music Projection
Trio. One significant performance in Manhattan was appearing at the
Mercer Arts Center,
where they were regulars in the 'Blue Room' with
Albert Dailey. On
November 11-13, 1972, MPT performed at a Guest Appearance Showcase event at the
Village Gate
in Greenwich Village (NYC). They were asked back to perform at a later date.
Seattle: Late 1970s and 1980s
In late 1977, Cozzetti & Gemmill moved back to Seattle, where they continued to perform as Rorschach with Fred Taylor and
Steve Bartlett before changing the name of the group to the Cozzetti & Gemmill Quartet. They were hired to perform at
Parnells on January 13, 14 and 15, 1978. Parnells was the top jazz club in Seattle at that time. As the Cozzetti
& Gemmill Quartet, the group recorded its first album at Pacific West Recorders (Concerto for Padr) March 16, 1981
and asked jazz critic
Lee Underwood (who was
the West Coast editor of
Down Beat at that time) to
write liner notes. Concerto For Padré, released on Cozzetti & Gemmill's own label Cozgem Records, has Cozzetti on
trumpet & acoustic piano, Gemmill on tenor & soprano sax, acoustic piano and Fender Rhodes electric piano, Steve Bartlett
(electric bass) and Fred Taylor (drums). In his liner notes, Underwood wrote, As composers, conceptualizers and improvisers,
Cozzetti and Gemmill are well aware of the rich legacy handed them from the masters of the American jazz past. Their influences
include the immortal
John Coltrane, the
unique
McCoy Tyner, the funky
Horace Silver, and the
Prince of Darkness himself, the great
Miles Davis. Underwood
also commented on the LPs combination of acoustic and electric instruments and noted that the title Concerto For Padr was
dedicated to Cozzettis father, Louis S. Cozzetti, who had passed away in 1974.
The 1990s and Beyond
After the 1980s, Cozzetti & Gemmill
continued to perform and write music but expanded into a variety of Web based projects. Rocka Records was started in 1994 in order to
release a new CD: Timeless (compilation of vinyl recordings Concerto for Padré & Soft Flower in Spring).
Rocka Studios was involved in audio projects, A La Carte Web Design offered Web design & development and
Rocka.com (1999-2004) was a professional Internet Service Provider with 24/7 Web hosting services;
setting up
POP3/
SMTP email server accounts, full service website maintenance and free links on MallontheWeb.com and/or
MusicontheWeb.com. Customers included a
hip-hop record label in Manhattan, national artist (guitarist) in Nashville and a film production company in Los Angeles,
Cailfornia. Cozgem Studios now provides all graphic design and/or animations for Music on the Web®,
as well as the graphics for albums produced by Cozgem Records.
Cozgem Records in the 2010s
Cozgem Records has released three CDs in the last five years. Timeless (2010) was digitally remastered (engineer;
Ashley Shepherd), with new graphics. Voyage of the Mummy (2011) has never-before-released material from their
1977 'live' performance at
Gerde's Folk City in Greenwich Village (NYC). The lineup is Gemmill (soprano saxophone), Cozzetti (Fender Rhodes
electric piano), the late Midge Pike (bass) and Wes Jensen (drums). Except for a performance of John Coltranes Cousin Mary,
Cozzetti & Gemmill perform original songs on Voyage of the Mummy. In December 2013, Cozzetti & Gemmill co-produced
a new CD by Tim Gemmill: Road Songs, which was released on the Cozgem label under his own name.
Gemmill's sequel to Road Songs, titled Road Songs 2, was released by Cozgem Records in 2017. In his liner
notes for Road Songs 2, journalist Alex Henderson noted that Cozzetti & Gemmill produced the album together but described
Gemmill as the one in the drivers seat. According to Henderson, In addition to playing all of the instruments himself and
providing the sounds of everything from drums and bass to keyboards, Gemmill composed most of the material on Road Songs 2.
Hendersons liner notes quoted Gemmill as saying, Bob was a consultant on Road Songs 2. When I was recording this album,
Bob would come over and listen and comment on what I was doing. I would show Bob what I was working on and get his input.
Gemmill, Henderson said, composed six of the seven selections on Road Songs 2, including Super Cool, Proteus 2,
Moog Blues, A Little Something, Groove On and the Asian-flavored Domo Arigato. The only track on Road Songs 2
that Gemmill didnt compose, according to Henderson, was an arrangement of John Williams and Leslie Bricusses Can You Read My
Mind?, originally heard in the late 1970s movie Superman (which starred
Margot Kidder
and the late
Christopher Reeve). Henderson wrote, In its 1979 incarnation, Can You Read My Mind? was an adult contemporary
ballad performed by singer
Maureen McGovern. Gemmill, however, performs Williams melody without Bricusses lyrics, putting a funkier spin on
the song and taking it more in the direction of fusion. And while Gemmill employs sampled wordless background vocals on Can
You Read My Mind?, it is essentially an instrumental performance.
Henderson's liner notes quoted Gemmill as describing his work on Road Songs 2 as that of a digital orchestra. According
to Henderson, Road Songs 2 finds Gemmill using synthesizers that range from the UltraProteus to the Memorymoog.
Henderson quoted Gemmill as saying, I really do have a digital orchestra on this album. Im writing the parts for all the
instruments, and I play everything. Thats the fun part about it: being able to sit there at the computer and feel like Im
composing for a whole band, a whole orchestra. To me, thats enjoyable.
Henderson described Road Songs 2 as an album that combines jazz, funk, soul and rock elements. Henderson said, It is no
coincidence that some of the song titles on Road Songs 2, especially Super Cool and Groove On, would not have been
out of place on a
Kool & the Gang, Parliament/Funkadelic or
Bar-Kays album
from the 1970s. Henderson quoted Gemmill as saying, Bob and I grew up on John Coltrane, but Road Songs 2 has more of the
R&B and funk influence. When Im working, I sometimes find myself asking, What would James Brown do? And sometimes, What
would Miles Davis do? Miles would create some really interesting sounds.
Discography
2017: Tim Gemmill -
Road Songs 2 (Cozgem)
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