Michael Garrick Sextet with Norma Winstone
1970
The Heart Is A Lotus
01. The Heart Is A Lotus 8:19
02. Song By The Sea 4:28
03. Torrent 3:44
04. Temple Dancer 9:57
05. Blues On Blues 6:48
06. Voices 6:49
07. Beautiful Thing 5:28
08. Rustat's Grave Song 4:50
Clarinet – Art Themen (tracks: 5, 7, 8), Jim Philip (tracks: 7)
Double Bass – Coleridge Goode (tracks: 4, 7, 8), Dave Green (tracks: 1 to 3, 5, 6)
Drums – Trevor Tomkins
Flugelhorn – Ian Carr (tracks: 3, 8)
Flute – Art Themen (tracks: 1, 2, 6 to 8), Don Rendell (tracks: 6), Jim Philip (tracks: 7)
Harpsichord – Michael Garrick (tracks: 1, 7)
Piano – Michael Garrick (tracks: 2 to 7)
Saxophone [Soprano] – Art Themen (tracks: 4, 6), Don Rendell (tracks: 6)
Saxophone [Tenor] – Art Themen (tracks: 3, 5), Don Rendell (tracks: 3), Jim Philip (tracks: 8)
Trumpet – Ian Carr (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 7)
Vocals – Norma Winstone (tracks: 1, 2, 4 to 7)
Recorded January 20 to 22, 1970.
Keeping contact with the now-defunct RCQ, Garrick soldiers on in his solo career and for the present Lotus album, he calls on his usual suspects (minus Harriott, thankfully), but adding new-comer Art Themen and John Phillips (both reedmen) and the superb Norma Winstone on vocals. Indeed, Garrick had been toying around with spoken poetry for most of the 60’s, and these poems appeared here and there on his albums, but by the end of the decade, he’d switched to using sung-vocals (with words) as an instrument, and HiaL is the first attempt, a quite successful one, if I may say. If the whole of the RCQ is on the present album, we can’t say that the musical realm is the same at all, but in many ways it’s at least as good as their later releases. Recorded over two days in early 70’s and graced with an evocative Eastern flower and bird illustration, it was released later that year on the small Vocalion label, and “recently” reissued in 05 on Cd.
The immediate result of a Harriott-less Garrick album is that it jumps and leaps at least one decade ahead, and HiaL is an amazing album, where you’ll find some spell-binding ambiances, not least because Garrick keeps experimenting with the harpsichord, but loads of flutes and delicious Norma(l) vocals (on 6 of the 8 tracks), but this is going much further than the Fitzgerald and Armstrong scat-vocals. Indeed, that classy lady can almost sound as a Norma(l) trumpet in her wailings, but she never gets screechy like Julie Tippetts or Ann Miller do. The album opens on some harpsichord, some enchanted vocals and tense bass lines, and Carr’s muted-trumpet and Themen’s orgiastic flute transport you directly in the troposphere on a raga-like cloud train, with Norma answering Carr’s trumpet calls and response, while Green’s bass lines are awesome, contrasts-ing with Garrick’s harpsichord, and Tomkins’ drums are over-volumed in a Sun Ra fashion. Fucking awesome stuff!!!
The following Song By The Sea is a full-group orchestration re-take of the Marigold album track, with the poem now sung. It’s too bad that such standard-y jazz tracks as the thankfully-shortest Torrent are present on the album, because they tend to ruin the cohesion and continuity of the musical direction, but it’s just one track. The 10-mins Temple Dancer has a hypnotizing rhythm that could charm a cobra, but Norma’s wailings will humble your dragon mother-in-law’s vicious tongue, while her ugly mutt will chase around the house that muted-trumpeted mosquito.
Across the slice of wax, a jumpy flute and Norma are directly pouncing on your attention, but the track develops is a slow bluesy-jazz (hence the title), but Carr’s trumpet will throw your eardrums in a panic, before realizing another aural orgasm is on the way as Norma’s squeals hers in your ear. The haunting Voices should floor you for the KO count, with everyone pounding notes into your saturated mind. You’ll get a bit of a rest with the Beautiful Thing track, which starts slowly out fine enough, but peaks in Gypsy-type jazz before a bowed-bass ends the tune unexpectedly. The closing Grave Song is another awesome sounds like a march-type thingie at first, but soon evolves into an astounding slow-death end.
The Question is: are we still in the jazz-realm (outside Torrent) or are we in the progressive rock idiom, because the variety of climates (jazz & non-jazz) is so extended that the Norma(l) boundaries are happily transgressed and have been sooooo totally erased, that the aural experiences are almost orgasmic. In the British-jazz realm, only Collier’s best album and Carr’s early Nucleus can match this, but this album is sometimes so amazing that I feel like removing the “English” part in that first part of the sentence.
anks to this outstanding Vocalion edition we can delight with this extraordinary album, that aged very well and stands as one of the best european jazz albuns of all time!!!! It's really amazing how beauty sparkles all over the record time, but specially "Temple Dancer" (incredible bass cadence!!), "Beautiful Thing" (astonishingly beautiful, really!!) and the eponymous title are superior music!!!! It is sad that musicians/composers with the quality of Michael Garrick never been mentioned in jazz anthologies and All Music Reviews, what kind of attitude is this??? if it is for not knowing, they are missing important things, but if it is the fact that this record never had a digital version, well, here it is available now and so don't loose time including it in the next Jazz Anthology, people!!!
Certainly we need to mention first the lovely voice of Norma Winstone that shines in six of the eight themes of this record, often reminding us the darkened beauty of Barbara Gaskin, in her Spirogyra/Hatfield And The North/National Health years, but Norma is supreme in this context...and the top-class full talented musicians that perform with true passion and heart...
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Many thanks
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