Sunday, December 22, 2024

Freddie Hubbard - 1970 - Red Clay

Freddie Hubbard 
1970 
Red Clay



01. Red Clay 12:05
02. Delphia 7:25
03. Suite Sioux 8:40
04. The Intrepid Fox 10:40

Bass – Ron Carter
Drums – Lenny White
Piano – Herbie Hancock
Saxophone – Joe Henderson
Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard

Recorded at Van Gelder Studios. Recorded January 27, 28, 29, 1970.
Herbie Hancock appears through the courtesy of Warner Bros. Records.



The first Freddie Hubbard album released on Creed Taylor CTI label marked a shift away from Hubbard's recording with Blue Note Records. It was the album that established Taylor's vision for the music that was to appear on his labels in the coming decade. "Red Clay" is Freddie Hubbard's seventeenth overall album.

On Jan. 27, 1970, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, playing at the peak of his powers after a string of seven brilliant Blue Note albums and three for the Atlantic label, went into the studio to cut his first for Creed Taylor’s CTI label. With Taylor producing, a stellar cast was assembled at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio in Englewood Cliffs, N.J., for three consecutive days of recording. They emerged with Red Clay, an album that would not only define Hubbard’s direction over the next decade while setting the template for all future CTI recordings, but would also have a dramatic impact on a generation of trumpet players coming up in the ’70s.

This may be Freddie Hubbard's finest moment as a leader, in that it embodies and utilizes all of his strengths as a composer, soloist, and frontman. On Red Clay, Hubbard combines hard bop's glorious blues-out past with the soulful innovations of mainstream jazz in the 1960s, and reads them through the chunky groove innovations of '70s jazz fusion. This session places the trumpeter in the company of giants such as tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Lenny White. Hubbard's five compositions all come from deep inside blues territory; these shaded notions are grafted onto funky hard bop melodies worthy of Horace Silver's finest tunes, and are layered inside the smoothed-over cadences of shimmering, steaming soul. The 12-minute-plus title track features a 4/4 modal opening and a spare electric piano solo woven through the twin horns of Hubbard and Henderson. It is a fine example of snaky groove music. Henderson even takes his solo outside a bit without ever moving out of the rhythmatist's pocket. "Delphia" begins as a ballad with slow, clipped trumpet lines against a major-key background, and opens onto a midtempo groover, then winds back into the dark, steamy heart of bluesy melodicism. The hands-down favorite here, though, is "The Intrepid Fox," with its Miles-like opening of knotty changes and shifting modes, that are all rooted in bop's muscular architecture. It's White and Hancock who shift the track from underneath with large sevenths and triple-timed drums that land deeply inside the clamoring, ever-present riff. Where Hubbard and Henderson are playing against, as well as with one another, the rhythm section, lifted buoyantly by Carter's bridge-building bassline, carries the melody over until Hancock plays an uncharacteristically angular solo before splitting the groove in two and doubling back with a series of striking arpeggios. This is a classic, hands down.

It was a transitional period in the jazz; the tectonic shift beginning with Miles Davis’ In a Silent Way, recorded the previous year. Hubbard’s entry into this crossover territory on Red Clay was characterized by the slyly syncopated beats of drummer Lenny White on the funky 12-minute title track, an infectious groover that was soon covered by budding crossover groups all over America. Essentially an inventive line set to the chord changes of “Sunny,” Bobby Hebb’s hit song from 1966, “Red Clay” would become Hubbard’s signature tune throughout his career. As trumpeter, friend and benefactor David Weiss, who is credited with bringing Hubbard out of self-imposed retirement in the late ’90s, explains, “Later in life Freddie would always announce it as ‘the tune that’s been keeping me alive for the last 30 years.’ We played ‘Red Clay’ every night and he would quote ‘Sunny’ over it every night.”

Weiss and the New Jazz Composers Octet backed Hubbard on two recordings (2001’s New Colors and 2008’s On the Real Side) in addition to playing several gigs with him. As he notes, “What struck me when I went back to check out ‘Red Clay’ was how loose it is. It’s killing but kind of raw, and it goes on for over 12 minutes … not like what you would expect from what gets tailored to be a jazz hit.”

That looseness can be attributed in large part to drummer White, whose wide beat and interactive instincts characterize the track. “Freddie always credited Lenny with that,” says Weiss. “He said Lenny came up with the beat and that he himself had nothing to do with it. He was always happy to give Lenny credit on that track.”

Freddie Hubbard - 1973 - Sky Dive

Freddie Hubbard
1973
Sky Dive



01. Povo 12:33
02. In A Mist 7:04
03. The Godfather 7:21
04. Sky Dive 7:40

Bass – Ron Carter
Bass Clarinet – Phil Bodner
Bass Trombone – Paul Faulise
Clarinet – George Marge, Romeo Penque
Drums – Billy Cobham
Flugelhorn – Marvin Stamm
Flute – Hubert Laws
Flute [Alto] – Hubert Laws, Romeo Penque
Flute [Bass] – Hubert Laws
Guitar – George Benson
Oboe – Romeo Penque
Percussion – Airto, Ray Barretto
Piano, Electric Piano – Keith Jarrett
Trombone – Garnett Brown, Wayne Andre
Trumpet – Alan Rubin, Freddie Hubbard
Tuba – Tony Price

Recorded at Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey, October 4 and 5, 1972




Freddie Hubbard's fourth CTI recording (and the second one with Don Sebesky arrangements) certainly has a diverse repertoire. In addition to his originals "Povo" and "Sky Dive" (both of which are superior jam tunes), the trumpeter stretches out on the theme from The Godfather and Bix Beiderbecke's "In a Mist." The charts for the brass and woodwinds are colorful; there is a fine supporting cast that includes guitarist George Benson, Keith Jarrett on keyboards, and flutist Hubert Laws; and Hubbard takes several outstanding trumpet solos.

I don’t know if the assembly-line tac­tics of the ubiquitous Creed Taylor label are paying off commercially, but judging by the speed with which they’re coming off the conveyor belt, I suppose they are. This is Hubbard’s second album for CTI, with another on the way; once again it shows that he’s never recovered from his years with the Jazz Messengers.

His recent residency at Scott’s had him bopping in old Blakey style, while this album embraces a hotch-potch of music­al contexts, ranging from funk-rock to Beiderbecke to Bossa Nova and back to Blakey – all of which suggests a schizo­phrenic rather than versatile attitude. Sadly, Hubbard is lost in a period he can’t come to terms with, while fellow Messengers have either thrown in their lot, contented themselves with the past, or, like Wayne Shorter, forged way ahead. But that’s another story.

Povo drags a Hubbard composition uneasily into up-dated rock. Introduced by a Gil Evans style spread, Carter opens with a simple bass riff which continues remorselessly through the number’s absurdly drawn-out length. The equally simple melody line covers what is basically a languorous early Shor­ter 12-bar composition; add some names like Cobham, Jarrett and Benson and you’ve got a track which does Creed Taylor proud. These presumably lucra­tively enticed session men are hardly enthusiastic, but at least the ball’s roll­ing.

Cobham does especially well by waking up occasionally to change em­phases and add off-beats, only to be forced back by clumsy bouts of orches­tration. Laws alone is trying, and he provides the only solo of any listenable worth. In his other composition, Sky Dive, a piece of Quincy Jones bossa-funk, Hubbard at least bursts into a healthy and sustained playing, in uncompromised tone, of his original style. The following breaks by Benson and Jarrett are just short enough not to steal the show.

Beiderbecke’s In A Mist makes as few bones about its wallowing Messengers treatment as much as Jarrett and Cobham are unafraid to parody a ten year-old Cedar Walton and Art Blakey back­up – which leaves one wondering idly if Hubbard directed them so, or, if not, whether he was aware of what was go­ing on behind his back. Lastly, yet an­other blood-transfusion of the love theme from The Godfather already again, in which a predictable arrangement and glossy orchestration is spared only by a few neat changes in tempo, a miniscule but authentic Jarrett introduction and a brief spell when Cobham, Jarrett and particularly Carter are permitted a couple of minutes trio work.

Stanley Turrentine - 1971 - Salt Song

Stanley Turrentine 
1971 - Salt
Song




01. Gibraltar 10:20
02. I Told Jesus 7:35
03. Salt Song 7:10
04. I Haven't Got Anything Better To Do 4:30
05. Storm 7:30

Arranged By, Conductor – Eumir Deodato
Bass – Ron Carter
Cello – Alan Shulman, Charles McCracken
Drums – Airto Moreira, Bill Cobham
Guitar – Eric Gale
Percussion – Airto Moreira
Piano, Electric Piano, Organ – Eumir Deodato, Horace Parlan, Richard Tee
Tenor Saxophone – Stanley Turrentine
Viola – Harold Coletta
Violin – Harry Katzman, Joe Malin, Julie Held, Julius Brand, Leo Kahn, Paul Gershman
Voice [Voices] – Brenda Bryant, Margaret Branch, Patricia Smith

Recorded at Van Gelder Studios
Recorded July, September, 1971



An amazing album from Stanley Turrentine -- quite different than most of his other sessions for CTI, but in a really great way! Stan's playing here with arrangements from Deodato -- in a swirling, Brazilian jazz influenced mode that's similar to their work together with Astrud Gilberto on her CTI album -- save for the fact that this set's all instrumental, with Turrentine's tenor in the frontline! The sound is wonderful -- soaring, swirling, and plenty darn soulful when Stan's tenor comes into play -- and in a way, the album's almost an instrumental companion to the Gilberto CTI album. Instrumentation includes some great keyboards from Deodato and Richard Tee -- plus guitar from Eric Gale

Stanley Turrentine's stint with Creed Taylor's CTI label may not have produced any out-and-out classics on the level of the very best LPs by Freddie Hubbard, Hubert Laws, or George Benson, but the bluesy tenorist's output was consistently strong and worthwhile for all but the most stridently anti-fusion listeners. Salt Song was Turrentine's second album for CTI, and while it's perhaps just a small cut below his debut Sugar, it's another fine, eclectic outing that falls squarely into the signature CTI fusion sound: smooth but not slick, accessible but not simplistic. In general, keyboardist Eumir Deodato's arrangements have plenty of light funk and Brazilian underpinnings, the latter often courtesy of percussionist Airto Moreira. The first three cuts are the most memorable, beginning with a ten-minute exploration of the abrupt time signature shifts of Freddie Hubbard's "Gibraltar." Though a hard bop version might have returned to the theme a little less often, Turrentine's solo sections are full of ideas, befitting one of his favorite pieces of the period; plus, guitarist Eric Gale shines as both a rhythm and lead player. The traditional gospel tune "I Told Jesus" features Turrentine at his bluesiest and earthiest, with snatches of ethereal choir vocals floating up behind him. Milton Nascimento's title track, naturally, has the strongest Brazilian flavor of the program, and Turrentine skillfully negotiates its frequent shifts in and out of double time. The 1997 CD reissue also includes Nascimento's "Vera Cruz" as a bonus track. All in all, Salt Song has dated well, partly because the arrangements don't overemphasize electric piano, but mostly on the strength of Turrentine's always-soulful playing.

Tenor sax player Turrentine has often tried to gain commercial success with the help of trendy producers / arrangers. Here he is produced by Creed Taylor, and his arranger is Deodato, but the sound is not as Brazilian as you would expect. Only Milton Nascimento's "Salt Song" and the bonus track "Vera Cruz" (by Nascimento, too) have a Brazilian flavor. "Gibraltar" is a tune made quite famous by his frequent partner Freddie Hubbard, "I Told Jesus" has Gospel overtones, as you might expect.

As this is a CTI production, many outstanding musicians play in this album: Ron Carter, Billy Cobham, Airto Moreira, Richard Tee, Eric Gale, Hubert Laws ... , the usual suspects.

Glossy easy-listening jazz, much better than today's so-called smooth jazz, not challenging but nice as background music; there are times we need some, don't we ?

Stanley Turrentine - 1971 - Sugar

Stanley Turrentine
1971
Sugar



01. Sugar 10:00
02. Sunshine Alley 11:00
03. Impressions 15:30

Bass – Ron Carter
Congas – Richard "Pablo" Landrum
Drums – Billy Kaye
Electric Piano – Lonnie L. Smith, Jr.
Guitar – George Benson
Organ – Butch Cornell
Tenor Saxophone – Stanley Turrentine
Trumpet – Freddie Hubbard

Recorded at Van Gelder Studios
Recorded November, 1970


If ever there were a record that both fit perfectly and stood outside the CTI Records' stable sound, it is Sugar by Stanley Turrentine. Recorded in 1970, only three tracks appear on the original album (on the reissue there's a bonus live version of the title track, which nearly outshines the original and is 50 percent longer). Turrentine, a veteran of the soul-jazz scene since the '50s, was accompanied by a who's who of groove players, including guitarist George Benson, Lonnie Liston Smith on electric piano, Freddie Hubbard on trumpet, bassist Ron Carter, organist Butch Cornell, and drummer Billy Kaye, among others. (The live version adds Airto, flutist Hubert Laws, drummer Billy Cobham, and organist Johnny Hammond.) The title track is a deep soul blues workout with a swinging backbeat and the rhythm section fluidly streaming through fours and eights as Benson, Hubbard, and Turrentine begin slowly and crank up the heat, making the pace and stride of the cut simmer then pop -- especially in Hubbard's solo. This is truly midnight blue, and the party's at the point of getting really serious or about to break up. By the time Benson picks up his break, full of slick, shiny, warm arpeggios, the seams are bursting and couples are edging into corners. Butch Cornell's "Sunshine Alley" is a solid, funky groover, paced by organ and double fours by Kaye. Turrentine and Hubbard stride into the melody and keep the vamp in the pocket, riding out past the blues line into a tag that just revs the thing up even further. But the big surprise is in the final track, one of the most solidly swinging, from-the-gut emotional rides of John Coltrane's "Impressions" ever taken. Turrentine is deep inside his horn, ringing out in legato with everything he has -- and it is considerable. Ron Carter's bass playing flows through the modal interludes, creating a basis for some beautifully intervallic invention by Benson and Smith by building a series of harmonic bridges through the mode to solos. It's hard to believe this is Turrentine, yet is could be no one else. If jazz fans are interested in Turrentine beyond the Blue Note period -- and they should be -- this is a heck of a place to listen for satisfaction.

Soul jazz with a blues flavour, great line up, and of course had to get it when I saw Freddie Hubbard plays trumpet. Stanley Turrentine is no slouch on saxophone either. Rounding out the rest of the band, Ron Carter, great bass player, George Benson, doing his thing on guitar, the ever talented Lonnie Liston Smith (another fave of mine) on electric piano, Butch Cornell on funky organ, Billy Kaye on drums, and some conga playing, ever so subtle, from Richard 'Pablo' Landrum. Side two is one long track to sink into. Side one, two tracks, starting out with 'Sugar' tied for the best track with the one long track on side two, in which Hubbard really shows off, in fact the main guys stretch it out, Benson, Turrentine getting long play. Love this album, and it sounds so good on vinyl. Jazz and classical music were meant for vinyl, best way to hear them. Especially good because this is an original, the gatefold pressing, there are lots of reissues but there is nothing like the original. CTI records fell out of favour at one point and these originals where cheap to get but then rappers started using them for samples and the price went back up. Got this at a vinyl fair, unfortunately the price was back up. No worries, I play this lots and love it, it oozes groove.

Friday, December 13, 2024

Stan Getz - 1975 - Captain Marvel

Stan Getz
1975
Captain Marvel




01. La Fiesta 8:22
02. Five Hundred Miles High 8:07
03. Captain Marvel 5:08
04. Times Lie 9:36
05. Lush Life 2:26
06. Day Waves 8:41

Recorded with Chick Corea March 3, 1972, in A&R Studios, New York. Just a month after the recording session of Corea's "Return To Forever" album (February 2 & 3, 1972) in the same studio.

Bass – Stanley Clarke
Drums – Tony Williams
Electric Piano – Chick Corea
Percussion – Airto Moreira
Saxophone – Stan Getz



Wow. This has to be my favorite Stan Getz recording, easily. Getz took his Latin music into a whole different dimension with this one. The one-two percussion punch of Airto Moreira and Tony Williams keeps you moving. Bassist Stanley Clarke is certainly among the greatest to ever pick up the instrument. Keyboardist Chick Corea is at his best when playing more of a supportive and tinkering role, as he does for Captain Marvel. Stan Getz is his usual creamy smooth self but he almost gets fiery at times. Captain Marvel is certainly among the finest 1970s Jazz that I've heard. If any member of the band deserves the greatest credit for the success of the album it's drummer Tony Williams. Throw him in any setting, any whatsoever, and watch him thrive. The most ordinary moments of Captain Marvel are brilliant because of him. Drummers like Elvin Jones are great within their own little niche but Tony Williams consistently bestows unpredictable and spectacular playing onto the cosmos. He's in a league of his own.

Latin flavoured bliss, and who better to play latin than Chick Corea, Airto Moreira and Stanley Clarke, joining Tony Williams superb drumming and Stan Getz smooth, but sometimes fiery saxophone, on Captain Marvel. Stan Getz gives equal billing to all, especially Corea, this is a joint group endeavor, Corea wrote 5 of the 6 compositions, the lone one he did not write is a standard, 'Lush Life', which is the shortest track on the album, a moody slow number, the kind Getz does very well, but in saying that, kind of departs from the mood of the other 5 tracks and would have better been suited to put at the very end of side two. Side one is uptempo latin jazz with creative flare, especially kept tight by the percussion wizards Airto Moreira and Tony Willams drumming. Side two continues, beginning with Corea, Williams, Clarke and Moreira on 'Times Lie' with a long intro until Getz jumps in with some real sexy saxophone. A great track. I must mention Stanley Clarke as well, his bass playing stands out, in fact, everyone stands out on Captain Marvel, and all, are marvelous.

Latin flavoured bliss, and who better to play latin than Chick Corea, Airto Moreira and Stanley Clarke, joining Tony Williams superb drumming and Stan Getz smooth, but sometimes fiery saxophone, on Captain Marvel. Stan Getz gives equal billing to all, especially Corea, this is a joint group endeavor, Corea wrote 5 of the 6 compositions, the lone one he did not write is a standard, 'Lush Life', which is the shortest track on the album, a moody slow number, the kind Getz does very well, but in saying that, kind of departs from the mood of the other 5 tracks and would have better been suited to put at the very end of side two. Side one is uptempo latin jazz with creative flare, especially kept tight by the percussion wizards Airto Moreira and Tony Willams drumming. Side two continues, beginning with Corea, Williams, Clarke and Moreira on 'Times Lie' with a long intro until Getz jumps in with some real sexy saxophone. A great track. I must mention Stanley Clarke as well, his bass playing stands out, in fact, everyone stands out on Captain Marvel, and all, are marvelous.

Max Roach - 1984 - Survivors

Max Roach
1984
Survivors




01. Survivors 21:28
02. The Third Eye 2:10
03. Billy The Kid 2:57
04. Jas Me 3:37
05. The Drum Also Waltzes 3:18
06. Sassy Max (Self Portrait) 3:20
07. The Smoke That Thunders 5:47

Cello – Christopher Finckel
Drums – Max Roach
Viola – Louise Schulman
Violin – Donald Bauch, Guillermo Figueroa



Drummer Max Roach was fond of playing with string quartets in the latter part of his career, and in this case he is with one sans his regular working foursome. The cerebral nature of this music cannot be discounted, nor can the interplay and counterpoint between the drummer and string players. The lengthy title track best exemplifies this concept, which is carried throughout the project. But the majority of this recording consists of drum solos, all earmarked by the signature drum sound and complex polyrhythmic drive that only Roach can claim.While not as successful as other like-minded recordings, this serves as a powerful reminder of why Roach's drumming was so strong and visceral even in his older years, and how fertile his imagination continued to be. An unusual record – one that has Max Roach handling a fair bit of percussion, and working with a hip string quartet too!

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Yusef Lateef with Art Farmer - 1977 - Autophysiopsychic

Yusef Lateef with Art Farmer
1974
Autophysiopsychic





01. 'Robot Man 6:37
02. Look On Your Right Side 5:08
03. YL (Pronounced Eel) 7:56
04. Communication 9:21
05. Sister Mamie 10:06

Backing Vocals – Babi Floyd, Frank Floyd, Milt Grayson, Norberto Jones
Bass – Alex Blake (2) (tracks: B2), Gary King
Drums – Jim Madison*, Steve Gadd (tracks: B2)
Electric Violin – Noel Pointer (tracks: B2)
Flugelhorn – Art Farmer
Guitar – Eric Gale
Keyboards – Clifford Carter
Percussion – Sue Evans
Tenor Saxophone, Soprano Saxophone, Flute, Shanai, Lead Vocals – Yusef Lateef

Recorded at Electric Lady Studios, October 1977.





Autophysiopsychic is probably the single album that many Yusef Lateef fans either love or hate the most. Along with guest soloist Art Farmer on flugelhorn, guitarist Eric Gale, keyboardist Cliff Carter, drummer Jim Madison and bassist Gary King (except for "Sister Mamie," which features Steve Gadd and Alex Blake respectively), "Teefski" romps through five fat slices of original funk that have far more in common with the sounds of Chocolate City than with the bop sounds of 52nd Street. Autophysiopsychic is awash in the soft soul-funk-jazz sound typical of Creed Taylor's (CTI) productions in the 1970s. And even though the backing instrumentation and rhythms are not much more than mainstream R&B and funk shot through with a few oddities, Farmer and Lateef (on tenor and soprano saxes, flute and shanai) lay down solos that bite and swing so momentously that they provide musical merit to this entire project. Each seems to continually prod the other -- Lateef more robust and biting, Farmer more fluid and soft -- up to the next level. Their turns in "Robot Man" and "Look On Your Right Side" are particularly memorable, especially Farmer's closing solo in "Right Side," which seems to blend New Orleans swing with nursery-rhyme sing-song simplicity. Not the most typical album in Lateef's wide-ranging catalog, but certainly the most fun.

A strange bit of funk from Yusef Lateef – a bit of a change from his other 70s records, but pretty nice too! The record was recorded late in the CTI electric years – and it's got Yusef fronting a funky jazz group on five long tracks that have a decidedly R&B-ish current – that Kudu/CTI vibe, stretched out in arrangements by the great Dave Matthews – the maestro who maybe made the second greatest contribution to CTI charts after Bob James! Lateef plays tenor, soprano sax, flute, shenhai, and even vocalizes a bit – and Art Farmer also gets in lots of solos on flugel

Yusef Lateef - 1976 - The Doctor Is In ...and Out

Yusef Lateef
1976 
The Doctor Is In ...and Out




01. The Improvisers 7:54
02. Hellbound 6:37
03. Mystique 7:37
04. Mississippi Mud 2:51
05. Mushmouth 6:30
06. Technological Homosapien 5:16
07. Street Musicians 2:54
08. In A Little Spanish Town (T'was On A Night Like This) 

Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Oboe, Flute [Bamboo] – Yusef Lateef
Yusef Lateef (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B4)
Bass – Anthony Jackson, Robert Cunningham*, Ron Carter
Drums – Al Foster
French Horn – Jimmy Buffington*
Guitar – Billy Butler 
Keyboards – Kenneth Barron
Percussion – Dom Um Romao
Arp 2600] – Dana McCurdy
Trombone – Jack Jeffers
Trumpet – Joseph Wilder*, Leonard Goines
Tuba – Jonathan Dorn


In 1976, Yusef Lateef's as restless a spiritual seeker as there ever was in the field of music, revisited some of his earliest themes in the context of modern sonic frameworks: The Eastern modal and melodic frameworks of his Prestige sides, such as Eastern Sounds, Cry!/Tender, and Other Sounds, brought to bear in much more sophisticated, complex, and grooved-out ways -- after all, it had been 20 years or more. The groove referred to is funk and soul. Funk itself was mutating at the time, so Lateef's interpolation at the crossroads of all ports in the musical journey was not only valid in 1976, but also necessary. For this recording, he utilized an absolutely huge group of musicians, bringing them in for this or that part, or a sound, or a particular vamp. Some of those present were Kenny Barron, Ron Carter, Dom Um Romao, Al Foster, Billy Butler, Anthony Jackson, a five-piece brass section, and a synth player. Lateef, as always, was offering evocative glimpses of geographical, psychological, spiritual, and emotional terrain in his compositions, but not in predictable ways. There's the deep minor-key meditation on blues and evolving thematic variations on "Hellbound" that becomes a Latin funk tune; the airy, contemplative, and skeletal "Mystique," which may use a repeating rhythmic phrase but explores every inch of its margins via a string section and Lateef's flute solo; the smooth, urban, bluesy funk of "Mississippi Mud"; the completely out electronic musique concrète of "Technological Homosapien" that becomes a series of synth squeals and an erratically tumbling bassline; and the wonderfully warped mariachi variation (sung in white-boy English) that featured the band playing bluesy hard bop over an age-old recorded track on "In a Little Spanish Town." It's a weird way to end a record, but then, it's a weird and wonderful record.

One of Yusef Lateef's funkier albums for Atlantic -- and a record that features some great keyboard work from Kenny Barron! The liner notes indicate a current Lateef fascination with rhythm, and it tries to present this fascination in a way that implies a bigger intellectual approach to the music -- but heck, this is just some pretty darn nice 70s jazz funk, and Lateef's angular reed work sounds very nice next to the smoother electric backdrops! In addition to Barron's keyboards, the record also features guitar from Billy Butler, drums from Al Foster, and percussion from Dom Um Romao -- plus a bit of Arp from Dana McCurdy, which is mighty nice.

Yusef Lateef - 1999 - Live At Pep's Volume Two

Yusef Lateef 
1999
Live At Pep's Volume Two



01. Brother John 9:10
02. P-Bouk 4:30
03. Nu-Bouk 7:40
04. Yusef's Mood 6:40
05. I Remember Clifford
06. Listen To The Wind 4:44
07. I Loved 4:28
08. Delilah
09. The Magnolia Triangle - Alternative Version

Recorded At – Pep's Lounge

Bass – Ernie Farrow
Drums – James Black
Flute – Yusef Lateef (tracks: 1, 3, 5, 8)
Oboe – Yusef Lateef (tracks: 1)
Piano – Mike Nock
Shenai [Argol] – Yusef Lateef (tracks: 1, 9)
Tambourine – Yusef Lateef (tracks: 1)
Tenor Saxophone – Yusef Lateef (tracks: 2, 4, 6, 7, 9)
Trumpet – Richard Williams (tracks: 1 to 6, 8, 9)

Recorded live at Pep's Lounge in Philadelphia on June 29, 1964.





Recorded live at Pep's Lounge in Philadelphia on June 29, 1964, Yusel Lateef can be heard at his best. He combines his proclivity for musical eccentricity with a number of hard-swinging tunes. As usual, he plays not only tenor saxophone, but flute, oboe, and a very obscure instrument called an argol (a double clarinet that resembles a bassoon). He's backed by Richard Williams on trumpet, Mike Nock on piano, Ernie Farrow on bass, and James Black on drums, and this group really shines on bluesy versions of "Brother John" and "Nu-Bouk."

The ballads, "I Loved" and "I Remember Clifford," are lovely, subtle, and filled with brilliant climaxes and melodious tenderness. Other tracks, such as "The Magnolia Triangle" and "Listen to the Wind," push the boundaries of hard bop, as Lateef and crew experiment with moments of harsh dissonance bordering on atonality. An extremely creative and well-conceived set of music, Live at Pep's, Vol. 2 delves into the very heart of jazz, for it seeks to push the envelope of spontaneity and improvisation and stretch one's concept of structure and form.

Finally! Yusef Lateef's live set at Pep's in 1964 is the stuff of legend. Not only is it one of his best-ever recordings, but it also yielded a huge amount of material that was not issued at the time, and which only ever came out on later, badly-annotated issues. Now, the proper "part 2" set is finally issued – with all the lost cuts fully intact, and a great set of notes to explain everything. The set features one of Lateef's best cuts ever – "Brother John" – plus other great ones like "P-Bouk", "Nu-Bounk", and "Delilah". Throw away your beat up copy of Club Date, and check out this great new CD! © 1996-2024, Dusty Groove, Inc.

Yusef Lateef - 1976 - Club Date

Yusef Lateef 
1976
Club Date



01. Oscarlypso
02. Gee Sam Gee
03. Rogi
04. Brother John
05. P-Bouk
06. Nu-Bouk

Bass – Ernie Farrow
Drums – James Black
Piano – Mike Nock
Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Oboe – Yusef Lateef
Trumpet – Richard Williams

Recorded at Pep's Lounge, Philadelphia, Pa., June 29, 1964.

Previously Unreleased.



The album was issued in the 70s, but it features material from the famous Live At Pep's concert in 1964 -- but which didn't appear on that initial record. In fact, it's arguably a lot hipper than that set -- and it's pretty hip itself -- almost more in a 70s spiritual jazz mode, in keeping with the sound of post-Coltrane Impulse -- proof that Lateef was one of the most farthest-reaching players of his time! The reeds are great -- very snakey and stretched-out -- as Yusef plays tenor, flute, and a bit of oboe -- and the rest of the group stands as one of his best

This archived disc comes from the famed Live at Pep’s recordings from 1964 containing cuts that obviously did not make the original. There’s also a double disc set Impulse! Did called Live Sessions that featured more unreleased tracks on one disc alongside the OG Pep’s tracks. I was going to post that too but alas, I filed it somewhere stupid in my stacks and can’t find it.

Pep’s stands out from Yusef’s other work for the label because of its cohesiveness and obviously this is no different. I think Richard Williams trumpet adds another dimension to the music and he was missed on the albums that followed his departure as a quartet. His performance on his own “Rogi” is especially fantastic. James Black also elevates these recordings, his powerful drumming pushes the music forward and really brings it to life with his New Orleans swing.

If you like your YL oboe-y “Brother John” is a track not to be missed with wonderful soloing over an upbeat modal vamp with crashing drums. The track “P-Bouk” sounds like it’s going to get global but comes out with some fiery hard bop for the soul. “Nu-Bouk” calms things down and closes it out with a bluesy flute jam.

I highly recommend finding this one if you dig YL and if you like Live at Pep’s, it’s a no brainer. This band smokes.

http://www.filefactory.com/file/45yjnwma1jia/F1004.rar

Yusef Lateef - 1972 - The Gentle Giant

Yusef Lateef 
1972
The Gentle Giant


01. Nubian Lady
02. Lowland Lullabye
03. Hey Jude
04. Plum
05. The Poor Fisherman
06. African Song
07. Queen Of The Night
08. Below Yellow Bell

Bass – Bob Cunningham (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Bass – Chuck Rainey (tracks: A3, B4)
Bass – Sam Jones (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Cello – Kermit Moore (tracks: A2)
Drums – Kuumba "Tootie" Heath (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Drums – Jimmy Johnson (tracks: A3, B4)
Electric Bass – Bill Salter (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Flute – Kuumba "Tootie" Heath (tracks: A2, B2)
Flute, Oboe, Tenor Saxophone – Yusef Lateef
Guitar – Eric Gale (tracks: A3, B4)
Percussion [African] – Ladzi Cammera (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Piano – Kenneth Baron (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Piano – Ray Bryant (tracks: A1, B1, B3, B5)
Vibraphone, Chimes – Neal Boyer (tracks: A3)



Yusef Lateef's music from the early '70s commands large doses of both appeal and skepticism. At a time when funk and fusion were merging with the intensely volatile and distrustful mood of the U.S., Lateef's brand of Detroit soul garnered new fans, and turned away those who preferred his earlier hard bop jazz or world music innovations. Thus The Gentle Giant is an appropriate title, as Lateef's levitational flute looms large over the rhythm & blues beats central to the equation. Kenny Barron's Fender Rhodes electric piano is also a sign of the times, an entry point introducing him to the contemporary jazz scene, and on that point alone is historically relevant. The post-Bitches Brew, pre-Weather Report/Headhunters time period is to be considered, and how this music put Lateef in many respects to the forefront of the movement. While inconsistent and at times uneven, there's more to praise than damn in the grooves and unique musicianship he offers with this small ensemble of focused and singular-minded players. At once funky and cool, Barron's "Nubian Lady" sets the tone out of the gate, the tune totally trumping Herbie Mann's Memphis Underground/Push Push style. The similar-sounding "Jungle Plum" is more danceable, simpler, and less attractive. While "Aftican Song" is also in this vein, it is less about the continent in the title as it is reflective of the era, and a slower number. Perhaps that actual title and the sleigh bell-driven "Below Yellow Bell" could have been reversed, for it is more Afrocentric, with Lateef's wordless vocal counterpoint closer to sounds of the savanna over a baroque rhythm & blues. "Hey Jude," under-produced to the point of inaudibility at the outset (the caveat given is "do not adjust the playback level on your audio equipment, readjust your mind"), busts out on the incessantly repeated "na na" chorus with the Sweet Inspirations doing the honors. The other tracks lay low, as Lateef and Al "Tootie" Heath's flutes and Kermit Moore's cello go into late-night mode for "Lowland Lullabye," "The Poor Fisherman" explores the leader's interest in Asian sounds with call and response, and "Queen of the Night" is a two-minute shortie with Eric Gale's modulated guitar mixing up meters of 4/4 and 3/4 in a slightly macabre way. This recording was produced in the middle of Lateef's commercial crossroads phase that started with the Atlantic label issue Yusef Lateef's Detroit in 1969 and ended in 1977 with the CTI release Autophysiopsychic. Though these tracks are potent reminders of how jazz was willfully being manipulated by the record companies -- Creed Taylor in particular -- this album is clear evidence of how great a musician Yusef Lateef was, but not in the context of his best music.

So, it was 1972 and a lot of jazz musicians who had made their names in the 50's and 60's found the 70's difficult to adjust to. Most record companies wanted to make older jazz names "relevant" to a young record buying market firmly rooted in rock. This formula was disastrous for many but a few could ride the crest of this corporate minded wave and survive. In a couple of rare instances the artist could even continue to expand the trajectories they were already forging with only a minimum of disruption to their identity. Rahsaan Roland Kirk and Yusef Lateef are two of the few who adapted well to this corporate mindset (not that they were corporate minded), which saw that mostly white rock 'n roll buying public as a vast untapped reserve.

Well, Lateef, like Kirk, was already stretching out into territory other jazz musicians of their generation kept safely away from and considering Lateef was already embracing Eastern instruments as early as the mid 1950's, it's not at all surprising to hear a smooth rock and roll rhythm section backing him on the very nice, groovy album opener, "Nubian Lady". The drums in particular are certainly more rooted in rock than jazz along with the electric bass and piano but Yusef's flute melody is firmly tied to his persona anyway and the song itself, sans the more rock friendly rhythm section, could easily have fit on "Eastern Sounds" from 1961. And man, there's a lot of flute on this album--standard flute, bamboo flute and pneumatic flute. Next up, "Lowland Lullabye", is just cello and flute (again). Surprisingly this very pleasant little piece, which brings to mind the sun rising over an African savannah, does not feature Lateef at all. The simple but pretty flute is played by the drummer Kuumba 'Tootie' Heath.

The cover of The Beatles "Hey Jude" is the only major misstep on the album and its flow. The first half of this nine minute ten second song is almost inaudible. This was apparently done intentionally. As it states in the liner notes, "Do not adjust the playback level on your audio equipment--Readjust your mind". The volume grows at a glacially slow pace, and early 70's hippie, "groovy concept" bullshit aside, it really obliterates a great portion of an otherwise fantastic cover of this song. Nice playing all around, with Lateef on oboe, mostly lost to the ether due to lack of volume until it just STOPS mid performance. Hmmmm.

The hip electric piano vibe is back, as is Lateef's flute, on "Jungle Plum", where Lateef adds a Kirk-ish rhythmic scat talkin'/playin' technique. The flutes are out again for the next song, "The Poor Fishermen", both Yusef and Tootie Heath playing a very lovely, slightly sombre Lateef original, which, as the song implies, brings to the mind's eye poor fishermen setting out for a long days work on a sunrise dappled ocean. "African Song" and "Queen Of The Night" (one of the best grooves on the album) both have a bit of electric backing with the keyboards and bass and AGAIN that damn flute! By this point one kinda thinks the term "Gentle Giant" arises from his instrument of choice on this record.

That's the main negative, as Yusef is a superb saxophonist, not to mention one of the few big name jazz musicians to who can kick ass on the oboe (just imagine getting your ass kicked by an oboe wielding Yusef!). By limiting his wide pallet of horns, he does narrow the sound of the album, which leans towards the gauze shirted, bean bag side of mellow. The last track, "Below Yellow Bell", is a standout. Yusef does that part talking, part humming, part blowing into the mouthpiece of a horn, or maybe the pneumatic flute, to create a trippy, weird little piece. Punctuated by the odd electric keyboard stab, bells and bongos, this is the direction more of this album should have taken. But I'm sure some Atlantic records bigwig made it clear, "Yusef, baby, LOVE the flute! Yeah, my girlfriend finds the flute sexy, know what I mean? It's IN, the kids love it--Your gonna be the flute guru. Posters of ya' on kids walls baby! YEAH!!

Oh yeah, it states in the liner notes that Yusef also plays tenor sax on this album. You can hear some oboe, like I said earlier, on the audible parts of "Hey Jude" but the tenor sax is MIA. But you know, don't adjust the flutes, Readjust your MIND...

One of the greatest Yusef Lateef albums on Atlantic Records – and that's saying a lot, given the high level of quality he was hitting at the label! The album's a perfect blend of the newly-funky Lateef style with some hipper, more sophisticated touches – a mode that hints at his bigger-concept recordings to come, but which is still pretty lean and clean overall – and damn funky on most of the best tracks! Yusef plays a host of hip flutes here, plus tenor and oboe – and an almost equal star on the record is Kenny Barron, whose electric piano lines really make the album something special. The album begins with a long take on Barron's "Nubian Lady" which begins the record – and Kenny also contributed the tighter grooving "Jungle Plum".

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Yusef Lateef - 1965 - Live At Peps

Yusef Lateef
1965
Live At Peps



A1. Sister Mamie
A2. Number 7
A3. 12 Tone Blues
B1. See See Rider
B2. The Magnolia Triangle
B3. The Weaver
B4. Slippin' & Slidin'

CD Issue includes following tracks between side A and B:

04. Oscarlypso
05. Gee Sam Gee
06. Rogi

Bass – Ernie Farrow
Drums – James Black
Piano – Mike Nock
Tenor Saxophone, Woodwind [Argol], Flute, Oboe, Shanai – Yusef Lateef
Trumpet – Richard Williams

Recorded live at Pep's Musical Lounge, Philadelphia on 29, June 1964



This mid-'60s concert was one of Lateef's finest, as it perfectly displayed his multiple influences and interests. There were hard bop originals, covers of jazz classics like Leonard Feather's "Twelve Tone Blues" and an unorthodox but effective version of Ma Rainey's "See See Rider." On "Sister Mamie" and "Number 7," and drummer James Black's "The Magnolia Triangle," Lateef moves away from strict jazz, although he retained his improvisational flair. Lateef played meaty tenor sax solos and entrancing flute and bamboo flute offerings, and also had impressive stints on oboe, shenai, and argol. This was a pivotal date in his career, and those unaware of it will get a treat with this disc.

The second entry in Yusef’s Impulse! catalogue is perhaps his most well known of the set, and one of his highest regarded album from his entire discography. Recorded in front of lively crowd at Pep’s Lounge in Philadelphia. The live atmosphere, band chemistry, and overall energy of the recording elevates every tune. Peppy indeed.

"Sister Mamie” sets the tone wonderfully, as drummer Jimmy Black hammers out a nice boogaloo beat paired with a piano drone, and ostinato bass line. Then Yusef comes in just wailing on the shehnai, an Indian double reed instrument, not unlike an oboe. The result is a groovy east meets west jam that is bound to get your legs moving (if you can handle the timbre of the shehnai that is).

“Number 7” is a fantastic piece of hard bop that comes crashing out of the gate. It then slows for a middle portion that, to me sounds similar to music Wayne Shorter was making for Blue Note around the same time, with sax and trumpet working together to create mysterious mood. Unfortunately this would be the last record Lateef would make with trumpet player Richard Williams, who he had met at the Mingus Jazz Workshop. They have great chemistry and Williams gets to stretch his legs a little bit more on this album.

Other standouts are the take on the Ma Rainey classic “See See Rider” which acts as blues oboe vehicle (like Trouble in Mind from his previous record) and Jimmy Black’s “The Magnolia Triangle”. The later is driven by a 5/4 rhythm with an excellent drum performance, which is a theme throughout disc.

This album is a career highlight for sure. The energy is high, the soloing is great. It’s a mix of accessible hard bop that you can tap your toes too, while fitting in with Lateef’s penchant for musical exploration.

I also love this album cover, although there’s very limited flute on the recording, relegated to the last tune “Slippin’ and Slidin’”.

One of the greatest albums ever recorded by the mighty Yusef Lateef – and that's really saying a lot, given his fantastic legacy of albums! The set's a live one, which is a bit unusual in Lateef's catalog at this time – and the concert setting is perhaps a window onto some of his more expressive, experimental modes that didn't always show up on record, especially the Impulse studio sides he was recording at the time. Lateef's group is pure genius – with a young Mike Nock on piano, sounding all weird and dark, with amazing tones from his instrument – plus the great Richard Williams on trumpet, a player who always seems to bring something special to a record! The team of Ernie Farrow on bass and James Black on drums help create all these modal rhythms that are really fantastic – and Lateef himself blows tenor and flute, plus the more exotic reed instruments argol and shanai.

Yusef Lateef - 1961 - Eastern Sounds

Yusef Lateef
1961
Eastern Sounds




01. The Plum Blossom
02. Blues For The Orient
03. Ching Miau
04. Don't Blame Me
05. Love Theme From Spartacus
06. Snafu
07. Purple Flower
08. Love Theme From The Robe
09. Three Faces Of Balal

Bass, Rabab [Rabat] – Ernie Farrow
Drums – Lex Humphries
Piano – Barry Harris
Tenor Saxophone, Flute [Bamboo], Oboe – Yusef Lateef

First pressing has turquoise and silver deep groove Moodsville labels. Labels incorrectly say "Eastern Moods" above Lateef's name, whereas later issues of the LP correct this with "Eastern Sounds."

Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ, September 5, 1961.



The title says it all -- as Yusef Lateef works here in that wonderful mixture of hardbop, soul jazz, and Eastern stylings that he brought to all of his best early sessions as a leader! Lateef himself is playing tenor, flute, and oboe -- which he uses to craft these eerie snakecharmer lines that work perfectly with the modal grooves of the tracks -- very unusual rhythms for the time, and a real precursor to some of the world jazz experiments to come from overseas. The rest of the group features pianist Barry Harris, drummer Lex Humphries, and bassist Ernie Farrow, who also plays a strange instrument called a rabat -- which further adds to the charm of the record.

One of multi-instrumentalist and composer Yusef Lateef's most enduring recordings, Eastern Sounds was one of the last recordings made by the band that Lateef shared with pianist Barry Harris after the band moved to New York from Detroit, where the jazz scene was already dying. Lateef had long been interested in Eastern music, long before John Coltrane had ever shown any public interest anyway, so this Moodsville session (which meant it was supposed to be a laid-back ballad-like record), recorded in 1961, was drenched in Lateef's current explorations of Eastern mode and interval, as well as tonal and polytonal improvisation. That he could do so within a context that was accessible, and even "pretty," is an accomplishment that stands today. The quartet was rounded out by the inimitable Lex Humphries on drums -- whose brushwork was among the most deft and inventive of any player in the music with the possible exception of Connie Kay from the Modern Jazz Quartet -- and bass and rabat player Ernie Farrow. The set kicks off with "The Plum Blossom," a sweet oboe and flute piece that comes from an Eastern scale and works in repetitive rhythms and a single D minor mode to move through a blues progression and into something a bit more exotic, which sets up the oboe-driven "Blues for the Orient." Never has Barry Harris' playing stood up with more restraint to such striking effect than it does here. He moves the piece along with striking ostinatos and arpeggios that hold the center of the tune rather than stretch it. Lateef moans softly on the oboe as the rhythm section doubles, then triples, then half times the beat until it all feels like a drone. There are two cinematic themes here -- he cut themes from the films Spartacus and The Robe, which are strikingly, hauntingly beautiful -- revealing just how important accessibility was to Lateef. And not in the sense of selling out, but more in terms of bringing people to this music he was not only playing, but discovering as well. (Listen to Les Baxter and to the early-'60s recordings of Lateef -- which ones are more musically enduring?) However, the themes set up the deep blues and wondrous ballad extrapolations Lateef was working on, like "Don't Blame Me" and "Purple Flower," which add such depth and dimension to the Eastern-flavored music that it is hard to imagine them coming from the same band. Awesome


Willis Jackson - 1976 - Plays With Feeling

Willis Jackson
1976
Plays With Feeling




01. Racubah 4:11
02. Feelings 4:51
03. Singing Bass 4:31
04. The Young Man With A Horn 3:23
05. Do Your Super Thing 4:25
06. Bouquet 3:46
07. Do It, To It 5:
08. Something Good 4:43

Bass – Cliff Williams (tracks: A1 to B2, B4)
Cello – Seymour Barab
Congas – Bessemer Taylor
Drums – Walter "Jo Jo" Garth
Electric Piano, Organ, Clavinet – Ricky West
Harp – Eugene Bianco
Rhythm Guitar – A. C. Drummer, Jr.
Saxophone [Baritone] – Seldon Powell
Saxophone [Tenor] – Willis Jackson
Trombone – Eddie Bert
rumpet – Ernie Royal, Michael Goldberg
Viola – Julien Barber, Linda Jo Lawrence, Seymour Berman
Violin – Alfred Brown, Irving Spice, Louis Haber, Louis Stone, Noel DaCosta




The title's righter than you might think – as Willis DOES play with feeling, despite a cheesy-looking cover that might make you think otherwise! The groove here is tight and smooth 70s jazz funk – very much in the mode of some of the more fully-arranged Kudu and CTI albums of the time, with Willis out in the lead, blowing wonderfully over the top in a Stanley Turrentine sort of mode. Arrangements are by Ricky West and Bert Keyes, and the album's got a really great version of the Afro Funk classic "Racubah".

Willis Jackson - 1973 - West Africa

Willis Jackson
1973 
West Africa



01. West Africa 6:52
02. A House Is Not A Home 5:15
03. Fungii Mama 4:07
04. Don't Misunderstand 5:31
05. The Head Tune 9:22
06. I Love You, Yes I Do 4:13

Bass [Fender] – Bob Cranshaw
Congas, Percussion – Richard Landrum
Drums – Freddie Waits
Guitar – Ted Dunbar
Organ, Electric Piano – Mickey Tucker
Percussion – Sonny Morgan
Tenor Saxophone – Willis Jackson



An unusual album for Willis Jackson, in that it's got a bit of an African feel to it -- thanks mostly to added congas and percussion, and some high life-sounding guitar work by Ted Dunbar. Mickey Tucker plays electric piano and organ, which gives the set a nice mellow tone. Jackson's tone is still plenty plenty raw though.

Sunday, December 8, 2024

Wilbert Longmire - 1978 - Sunny Side Up

Wilbert Longmire
1978 
Sunny Side Up




01. Black Is The Color 8:11
02. Good Morning! 8:48
03. Love Why Don't You Find Us 6:13
04. Lovely Day 6:25
05. Starflight 5:47

Bass – Gary King
Cello – Alan Shulman, Charles McCracken
Drums – Harvey Mason
Electric Guitar – Wilbert Longmire (tracks: B2, B3)
Electric Guitar [Rhythm] – Cornell Dupree (tracks: A2, B3), Eric Gale (tracks: B2)
English Horn – George Marge (tracks: A2)
Flute [Alto] – George Marge
Flute [Bass] – Eddie Daniels
Guitar – Wilbert Longmire (tracks: A1, A2 , B1)
Oboe – George Marge (tracks: A2)
Percussion – Sue Evans
Piano – Bob James (tracks: B3), Richard Tee (tracks: A1, B1, B2)
Piano [Fender Rhodes] – Bob James (tracks: A1, A2,), Richard Tee (tracks: B1)
Synthesizer [Buchla] – Stephen Horelick
Synthesizer [Oberheim Polyphonic] – Bob James (tracks: A2, B2, B3)
Tenor Saxophone – Harvey Estrin
Trombone – Dave Taylor*, Paul Faulise, Wayne Andre
Trumpet – Alan Rubin, Jon Faddis, Marvin Stamm, Mike Lawrence, Randy Brecker
Viola – Emanuel Vardi, LaMar Alsop
Violin – Barry Finclair, Charles Libove, Harry Cykman, Harry Lookofsky, Matthew Raimondi, Max Ellen, Paul Gershman
Vocals – Wilbert Longmire (tracks: B1)



lbert Longmire’s highly celebrated debut 1978 album Sunny Side Up was produced by Bob James and features an array of talented jazz musicians. An absolute master at that smooth, jazz-fusion sound, the album is a mesmerising body of work that combines a smooth, soulful and joyful energy with more dance-centric drumming, such as on the thrilling opener “Black Is The Color”, where Wilbert Longmire’s incredible guitar plucking and playing is complemented by Harvey Mason’s incredible drum rhythms, Bob James and Richard Tee’s piano arrangements, and the plethora of wind instrumentation that creates a colourful tapestry of sounds. “Good Morning!” has a subtle, more moody and emotive tone to it, with a smooth and light melody brought by the incredible guitar playing, subtle key arrangements and drumming. The sensuality of “Love Why Don’t You Find Us” is brought by Wilbert’s soulful singing as well as the choir adding an angelic quality to the record. The Bill Withers cover of “Lovely Day” is an soulful, light version of the original, as the track feels playful and light in comparison to the soulful and more defined original. I would have loved vocals on this track, but the instrumental jam of this is pretty great regardless. The guitar-driven melody of “Starflight” is groovy, and is combined beautifully with the hypnotic wind instrumentation and basslines throughout, making it a light and beautiful way to close the album out. Wilbert Longmire created an absolute gem of an album, and I’m so glad to have found it at my local record shop. It is definitely worth purchasing on vinyl if you haven’t yet.

A standout set from guitarist Wilbert Longmire -- one of a few classics cut in the 70s for Bob James' Tappan Zee label, done with some great help from James on production and arrangements too! The vibe is very much in the best spirit of the Kudu Records label at the time -- plenty of room for Longmire's guitar in the lead, wrapped up in some tight arrangements with a nice undercurrent of soul -- grooving a bit upbeat on a few cuts, but mostly laying back in a sweet mellow vibe on the rest! Wilbert sings a bit on one cut -- and other players include Richard Tee on piano and Fender Rhodes, Bob James on Fender Rhodes, Cornell Dupree and Eric Gale on guitars, and Harvey Mason on drums


Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Webster Lewis - 1976 - On The Town

Webster Lewis And The Post-Pop Space-Rock Be-Bop Gospel Tabernacle Orchestra And Chorus 1976
On The Town




01. On The Town 5:58
02. Saturday Night Steppin' Out 4:38
03. Since I've Been Gone 5:41
04. Love Is The Way 4:55
05. Do It With Style 4:56
06. Song Of Joy 6:48
07. Goodnight Baby Girl 2:07

Baritone Saxophone – Howard Johnson
Bass Trombone – Dave Taylor
Bass [Fender] – Anthony Jackson, Bob Babbitt, Herb Bushler
Cello – Charles McCracken, Jon Abramowitz, Seymour Barab
Congas – Juma Santos
Double Bass [String Bass] – John Beal
Drums – Grady Tate, Victor Lewis
French Horn – Brooks Tillotson
Guitar – Carl Lynch, Cliff Morris, Cornell Dupree, Freddie Harris, Joe Beck, Keith Loving, Lance Quinn, Richie Resnicoff
Keyboards – Webster Lewis
Percussion – Alyrio Lima, Richie Crooks
Steel Drums – Freddie Harris
Synthesizer [Moog & Arp] – David Horowitz
Tenor Saxophone – Harold Vick
Trombone – Bill Watrous, Jackie Jeffers, Tom Malone
Trumpet – Allan Rubin, Lou Soloff, Randy Brecker, Virgil Jones
Viola – Emanuel Vardi, Rose Tillotson, Selwart Clarke
Violin – David Nadien, Harold Kohon, Harry Lookofsky, Matthew Raimondi, Max Ellen, Max Hollandef, Max Pollikoff, Michael Comins, Noel DaCosta, Peter Dimitriades, Sanford Allen



The first album released on this artist's Epic contract continued the stylistic narrative begun on a live album earlier in the decade, only on a much larger scale. Webster Lewis -- a keyboardist, clarinetist, composer, conductor and arranger from Baltimore -- had gotten in the ears of some soul and jazz fans by using an Isley Brothers tune, "It's Your Thing," to set off his own improvisations. Miles Davis was even said to have been a fan of Lewis, whose name sometimes comes up in connection with the mysterious personnel assembled On the Corner.

On the Town is incredibly typical of projects from this era, attempting to combine jazz and soul sensibilities, originally seeming to please nobody at all but over time apparently mellowing into a broth quite pleasing to listeners fond of newly simmered genres such as rare groove or golden soul. No expense was spared, no stone unturned, when it came to gathering studio session talent for this event. At least eight of the instrumentalists taking part either were, or became, solo artists in their own right. A total of approximately 50 players were contracted by the time

Lewis had completed the seven featured tracks. This artist's reputation and accomplishments are not worth arguing about, a point worth making since the predicitable outcome of these '70s blockbuster productions inevitably seems to be to almost yet not quite totally hide the star's talents. A certain number of elements considered necessary for popularity are always a big part of the action, among them cheesy background vocals, string sections with the creative implications of an armed guard, and of course all the latest keyboard technology. Unlike the yo-yo or the super-ball, the latter items have only gotten more popular by becoming out-dated. Lewis teamed up with fellow keyboard noodler David Horowitz for "Saturday Night Steppin' Out." The track wears its funk credentials like Wyatt Earp's badge, Cornell Dupree wrapping his curly cable around Carl Lynch's neck while maestro Lewis looks down the throat of a tiger that seems to be nibbling on a Casio -- obviously not true since that keyboard hadn't been invented yet.

Horowitz, showing the brazen audacity to overdub an accordion on one track, composed the grimacing "Song of Joy" all on his own, perhaps influenced by the session contractar's commission check. Lewis' pretty "Goodnight, Baby Girl" is a wise choice for the closer, its honest warmth and sentimentality busting through the overgrown trappings like a pinata.

Classic club from Webster Lewis – and much more of an all-out disco affair than some of his later work! The record introduces Lewis' all-encompassing style – as he writes, arranges, and produces the album at a level that easily matches that of Barry White – who would later emerge as a mentor for Lewis, introducing him as part of the later Love Unlimited Orchestra records. The group here is billed as "Webster Lewis & The Post-Pop Space-Rock Be-Bop Gospel Tabernacle Orchestra & Chorus" – a pretty good way to describe the soaringly full sound of the album – one that's built up from Webster's keyboards with lots of added strings and rhythms, plus occasional backing vocals from a female chorus. Most of the focus here is instrumental, though

Saturday, November 30, 2024

The Southern University Jazz Ensemble - 1973 - Goes to Africa With Love

The Southern University Jazz Ensemble 
1973
Goes to Africa With Love




01. Samba Dee
02. Ah Ja Ge Da Ba
03. Clean Air
04. Music Came
05. Nanigo
06. Holdin' Meetin'

Bass – Charles Singleton
Clarinet, Vocals – Alvin Batiste
Congas – Bennie Robertson
Congas, Electronics – George Mitchell
Congas, Vocals – Juan Mosquera
Drums – Herman Jackson
Guitar – Alphonso Rodriguez
Organ – Antonio York
Percussion – Richard Hunter
Saxophone – James McElroy
Trumpet – Ernest Nation, Willie Singleton
Vocals – Eddie Perkins



That one of the great Spiritual Jazz albums of the era could be found in duplicate New Orleans thrift store in the 1980s goes a long way in illustrating the lack of acclaim this special and overlooked album maintained, even in a city where the Batiste name is musical royalty. The Southern University albums Alvin Batiste offered the world were novelies, not worthy of serious consideration, a moment captured, but not necessarily worthy of being collected or preserved by anyone not immediately involved in its creation.

That changes now. With the release of the two Southern University albums, Now-Again continues a conversation begun with the late Kashmere Stage Band director Conrad O. Johnson and the issue of his high school students’ music as 'Texas Thunder Soul', and the continued belief that beautiful music created by youth – even under the most adverse circumstances – can always inspire us.

A really incredible spiritual jazz treasure from the New Orleans scene – one that features a student group led by legendary Nola musician Alvin Batiste, but delivered in a style that's much more like some of the hipper jazz collectives in cities like Detroit, Chicago, or Philly at the time! The tracks are long and flowing – filled with rhythm progressions that run deep, often with some modal energy – and almost all tracks have these really great vocals from Eddie Perkins, a soulful singer with a style that's in the territory of Andy Bey or Joe Lee Wilson – which, as you can imagine, makes for a really great addition to the music! Other players include Batiste on clarinet, James McElroy on soprano, Ernest Nation on trumpet, Alphonso Rodriguez on guitar, Richard Hunter on percussion, and a young Charlie Singleton on bass – and this rare set was only originally given away as a souvenir for the group's trip to West Africa in 1973.