This past week saw the anniversary of the death of British jazz legend Tubby Hayes (he died on 8 June 1973, aged just 38) and this year would have seen his 90th birthday. By way of a tribute this week’s column reproduces my review of an album compiled by filmmaker, author and avid Tubby Hayes fan Mark Baxter that was released in April this year and answers the question “Where do I start?”.
Splonge! An Introduction To Tubby Hayes (Decca / Fontana Jazz)
A vinyl-only release, with the following tracklisting:
Side A
Tubbsville
You For Me
Lady ‘E’ – Tubby Hayes & The All Stars
Angel Eyes – Tubby Hayes Quintet
Johnny One Note – Tubby Hayes Quintet
Side B
Pedro’s Walk – Tubby Hayes Orchestra
Bluesology – The Tubby Hayes Quartet
Blues In Orbit – The Tubby Hayes Quartet
For Members Only (Take 1) – The Tubby Hayes Quartet
Hey Jude – Tubby Hayes Orchestra
What’s the story?
Tubby Hayes, born in London in 1935, was “one of the most influential and dominating personalities on the British Jazz scene” according to his one-time band mate and fellow British jazz legend Ronnie Scott. He died in 1973 at the age of 38 following a turbulent personal life that included alcohol and drug issues.
In an attempt to answer the question “Where do I start?” this album (a vinyl only release) brings together ten tracks originally recorded for the Fontana label between 1961 and 1969 and compiled by filmmaker, author and avid Tubby Hayes fan Mark Baxter, who has also written some excellent sleeve notes: “I once heard someone say that if John Coltrane had been born in Raynes Park he would have sounded like Tubby Hayes”. Interest in Tubby Hayes and his music was in no small part renewed by musician, writer and Tubby Hayes expert Simon Spillett’s magnificent 2015 biography The Long Shadow of The Little Giant: The Life, Work and Legacy of Tubby Hayes, and the 2016 documentary film Tubby Hayes: A Man In A Hurry, written and produced by Baxter.
What’s the music like?
This is a broad and thoroughly enjoyable selection of tunes capturing the virtuosity and range of a fine jazz musician in an eight year spell of his all too short career. It encompasses glorious big band music as well as some notable smaller jazz ensemble performances.
Hayes’s own composition Tubbsville (from the 1961 album Tubbs) is a great big band opener with a compelling groove and Hayes’s astounding tenor saxophone style to the fore.
The big band format is also represented on the album by three Tubby Hayes Orchestra performances including Pedro’s Walk (from 1964’s Tubb’s Tours) with its bossa nova inflections and a take on Hey Jude (recorded in 1969 but released on 1970’s The Orchestra) of which Baxter states that whilst its commercial sound may not be to some jazz lovers taste “it still has moments when you are reminded of what a jazz great Hayes was”. He’s right. It also features a terrific Spike Wells drum intro to boot.
The other Orchestra selection is Milt Jackson’s Bluesology from the album 100% Proof (1967) which sees multi-instrumentalist Hayes getting straight into vibraphone mode (he is also credited with tenor saxophone and flute) in a mellow bluesy number that features some other greats of British jazz, not least the aforementioned former Jazz Courier Ronnie Scott (also on tenor saxophone) and Kenny Wheeler on trumpet.
The first we hear of Hayes’s vibraphone playing on the album is on Lady ‘E’ (from 1963’s Return Visit!), a Roland Kirk composition whose playing of the nose flute (amongst other things) is also a stand out feature. It’s a smooth swing produced by Quincy Jones. Hayes’s finesse on the vibraphone is again on display on the slow and more subdued ballad Angel Eyes which also features Jimmy Deuchar on muted trumpet.
Things are a bit more edgy with the Tubby Hayes Quintet’s interpretation of the Rodgers and Hart show tune Johnny One Note (from 1962’s Down In The Village), with Jimmy Deuchar’s “opening tear-arsed arrangement”, to quote Simon Spillett’s apt and graphic description, going into a fast and furious ride with Hayes concentrating on tenor saxophone duties but ably complemented by the rest of the quintet including Deuchar himself on trumpet. Hayes’s saxophone virtuosity is again on display on You For Me (from 1962’s Tubbs in New York), not least in the remarkable unaccompanied introduction.
The remaining tracks are For Members Only (Take 1) taken from Grits, Beans & Greens: The Lost Fontana Studio Sessions 1969 (released in 2019) with Hayes on tenor saxophone and flute, and Blues In Orbit from Mexican Green (1968) featuring some more flying Hayes sax solos and some ripping drums from Tony Levin who, Spillett reports in his book, says that Hayes apparently never played the tune again.
Does it all work?
Absolutely. If you are new to Tubby Hayes this does indeed answer the question “Where do I start?”. If you are more familiar with his music it is a superb reminder of the talent and virtuosity of this major figure in British jazz that will send you back to the original albums.
Is it recommended?
For sure. It’s a super compilation and with the sleeve notes and artwork (the cover image is Ed Gray’s wonderful ‘Soho Soul Tubby Hayes ‘A Man In A Hurry’’) it amounts to a great package put together with love and care and released just after what would have been Hayes’s 90th birthday. We owe Mark Baxter and Decca a debt of gratitude.
Oh, and if you’re wondering where the title Splonge! comes from, Baxter’s sleeve notes point you to the count-in on the recording of Hayes’s track Voodoo (not on the album).
Listen & Buy
To purchase Splonge! An Introduction To Tubby Hayes (available on vinyl only), visit the Decca website.
This review was first published on the Arcana website on 13 April 2025.
(Tubby Hayes on the TV show All That Jazz in 1963. Photo: ITV/Rex/Shutterstock)