- I've Got Just About Everything (Dorough) 4:08
- Love For Sale (Porter) 6:31
- I Should Care (Weston/Cahn/Storhdal) 3:34
- A Dry Guy (Greensill) 4:16
- Stella By Starlight (Young/Washington) 5:09
- I'll Never Stop Loving You (Brodzsky/Cahn) 5:26
- It Ain't Necessarily So (Gershwin's) 5:21
- Blues Noir (Greensill) 4:35
- A Time For Love (Mandel/Webster) 5:22
- Better Than Anything (Loughborough/Wheat) 4:35
- Wonder Why/Be My Love (Brodzsky/Cahn) 3:47
- I Thought About You (Van Heusen) 5:07
- Girl Of My Dreams (Sunny Clapp) 4:44
- Small Day Tomorrow (Landesman/Dorough) 5:39
Mike Greensill, Piano/Vocals Named outstanding Jazz Pianist in 1987 and 1988 by the San Francisco Council on Entertainment, Mike Greensill has been in San Francisco residency since 1977. Well known for his role as musical director for vocalist Wesla Whitfield he is also the resident piano player on KALW’s live radio show West Coast Live. Mike has also played various San Francisco boites from Mooses and Stars to the Fairmont Hotel. Mike is a graduate of Leeds College of Music in England
Donald ‘Duck’ Bailey, Drums
Duck has performed with all the greats - Jimmy Smith, John Coltrane, Barry Harris, Freddie Hubbard, Carmen McCrae, Sarah Vaughn, Peggy Lee, Jimmy Rowles, Harold Land, Grant Green, etc. He has recorded a combined 150 Albums on the Blue Note label as well as overseas in Europe and Japan.
John Wiitala, Acoustic Bass
John Wiitala has worked with some of the greatest names in jazz, including Joe Henderson, Junior Cook, Charlie Rouse, James Moody, Bud Shank, and Cecil Payne. He has toured with Richie Cole, Arturo Sandoval, Shorty Rogers, and Jessica Williams, and has played at jazz festivals around the world, including Monterey, North Sea, Montreux, Detriot, and JVC/Concord. His recording credits include work with Scott Hamilton, Jessica Williams, Wesla Whitfield and Mark Levine
Recording Engineer - Phil Edwards
Sound Engineer/Lights - Brian Morse
Assistant Engineer - Brian Edwards
Producer - Mike Greensill with invaluable help from Orrin Keepnews and Wesla Whitfield
Liner Notes
I’ve happily spent my musical career as an accompanist to many fine singers, especially Wesla Whitfield. But I’ve been cajoled into making a trio album of my own. Very scary, and made even scarier by my decision to record live!
Why a live recording session. Because some of the best musical experiences I’ve had are those gigs when, through the magic of the common language of jazz, musicians get together and just 'play some tunes.' I have to own up though, for this gig we did have 'one' rehearsal.
Of course success for such a venture depends on superb musicians, and I was lucky enough to have two of the finest on this recording. John Wiitala is the dean of San Francisco bass players, as much at home playing those solid, swinging and harmonically interesting bass-lines as he his in his role of lyrical soloist. 'Duck' Bailey is not only one of the most creative and swinging drummers I know. he’s a painter of sounds, and has played with everyone imaginable including one of my heroes, pianist Jimmy Rowles.
As for the tunes, I love the Great American Songbook, and my favorite quote by a jazz musician is Paul Desmond’s Sometimes the best chorus I play is the melody. Me too! So there are some great songs here, especially the ballads. The Hollywood composer, Nicholas Brodzsky, not a household name, composed three of them, 'I'll Never Stop Loving You', 'Wonder Why' and 'Be My Love'. Johnny Mandel wrote my favorite 'modern' ballad, 'A Time For Love', and 'I Should Care' by Paul Weston is a great standard.
I've included two of my own compositions. Both are blues based and feature John's soulful playing. There are a few of vocals as well, my first on record since I sang 'O For the Wings of A Dove' in London’s St. Paul's Cathedral many years ago at the age of eleven. Two are written by another of my heroes and the hippest guy I know, Bob Dorough. The waltzes 'It Ain't Necessarily So' and 'Better Than Anything' show off Duck's palette of sounds to perfection.
This is the spot where the interminable ‘thank you’s’ usually appear, and I’ll spare you most of them. But I do want to thank the audience at the Plush Room on that fateful night. Their warmth and enthusiasm almost made me forget the red light was on!
Mike Greensill
I’ve happily spent my musical career as an accompanist to many fine singers, especially Wesla Whitfield. But I’ve been cajoled into making a trio album of my own. Very scary, and made even scarier by my decision to record live!
Why a live recording session. Because some of the best musical experiences I’ve had are those gigs when, through the magic of the common language of jazz, musicians get together and just 'play some tunes.' I have to own up though, for this gig we did have 'one' rehearsal.
Of course success for such a venture depends on superb musicians, and I was lucky enough to have two of the finest on this recording. John Wiitala is the dean of San Francisco bass players, as much at home playing those solid, swinging and harmonically interesting bass-lines as he his in his role of lyrical soloist. 'Duck' Bailey is not only one of the most creative and swinging drummers I know. he’s a painter of sounds, and has played with everyone imaginable including one of my heroes, pianist Jimmy Rowles.
As for the tunes, I love the Great American Songbook, and my favorite quote by a jazz musician is Paul Desmond’s Sometimes the best chorus I play is the melody. Me too! So there are some great songs here, especially the ballads. The Hollywood composer, Nicholas Brodzsky, not a household name, composed three of them, 'I'll Never Stop Loving You', 'Wonder Why' and 'Be My Love'. Johnny Mandel wrote my favorite 'modern' ballad, 'A Time For Love', and 'I Should Care' by Paul Weston is a great standard.
I've included two of my own compositions. Both are blues based and feature John's soulful playing. There are a few of vocals as well, my first on record since I sang 'O For the Wings of A Dove' in London’s St. Paul's Cathedral many years ago at the age of eleven. Two are written by another of my heroes and the hippest guy I know, Bob Dorough. The waltzes 'It Ain't Necessarily So' and 'Better Than Anything' show off Duck's palette of sounds to perfection.
This is the spot where the interminable ‘thank you’s’ usually appear, and I’ll spare you most of them. But I do want to thank the audience at the Plush Room on that fateful night. Their warmth and enthusiasm almost made me forget the red light was on!
Mike Greensill





