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Thelonious Monk & Sonny Rollins (1955-1986 – Label: Prestige)

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Since a 50th Anniversary edition of this recording was released only several years ago, it’s possible that this recent RVG edition was seen by the parent company, Concord, as an opportunity to capitalize on the success—critical and popular—of the Monk/Coltrane Carnegie Hall concert (Blue Note, 2005). Regardless, this early meeting of masters, while yielding music of undeniable historical significance and timeless interest, is no match for the later one.
To begin with, the title is deceptive. Rollins and Monk play together on three of the five tracks on the album, which comprises three separate sessions recorded between November 1953 and September 1954. On the opening “Way You Look Tonight Monk’s solo is a mere half chorus—played in a fairly conventional bebop style. This leaves but two tunes, “I Want to Be Happy and “Friday the 13th, on which the two strong musical personalities seek to negotiate a happy result.
The proceedings are enjoyable, frequently original and illuminating, but not as miraculous as some reviews of earlier editions have suggested. It’s instructive to hear the “real” Monk emerge on “Happy,” allowing the beat to establish itself before he plays off of and around it, making the piano another polyrhythmic, percussive voice—as opposed to a solo voice accompanied by rhythm section or simply another member of the accompanying team itself.
The individualist/pianist solos for three choruses, each discretely original in conception and execution. After a chorus of connected, seamless lines played in the middle register, he leaps to the upper register for the second chorus, jabbing dissonant chord clusters at irregular intervals in the unfilled space. The third chorus finds him relinquishing his left hand to its independent devices while maintaining an elliptical melody in the right. Always an authoritative solo voice, Rollins seems emboldened by Monk’s example, playing with unmistakable conviction, especially compared to his work on an earlier session like Miles Davis’ Diggin’ (Prestige, 1951), where the tenorist clearly was aiming to make an impression.
Still, after hearing the Monk/Coltrane concert this encounter is inescapably anticlimactic. Rollins, whose playing anticipates some of the melodic/rhythmic characteristics of his successor Charlie Rouse, lacks the light articulations and responsive quickness of the less-renowned player. Compared to Rouse’s sportive playfulness, the tenor colossus sounds somewhat heavy and ponderous in Monk country. On the other hand, Coltrane’s intensity meshes with Monk’s whimsy because the piano “grounds the rapturous, altissimo flights of the tenor saxophone, as though Monk’s insistent harmonies and unyielding time are the falconer around which the falcon’s gyres are free to expend themselves without spiraling out of control.
Julius Watkins adds his solo voice for Monk’s extended and challenging (certainly for the listener) four-bar composition, “Friday the 13th, and the album is rounded out by the two trio numbers which, though they include Blakey, aren’t the equal of the later dialog between the pianist and the percussionist on Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers with Thelonious Monk (Atlantic, 1957)—a fascinating and lively, yet ultimately one-sided conversation that might just as well have been titled “The Thelonious Monk Quintet.”
Samuel Chell  – All About Jazz

Tracklist:
1.Way You Look Tonight, The   
2.I Want to Be Happy   
3.Work   
4.Nutty   
5.Friday the 13th
Personnel:
Thelonious Monk (piano);
Sonny Rollins (tenor saxophone);
Julius Watkins (French horn);
Percy Heath, Tommy Potter (bass);
Willie Jones, Art Blakey,
Arthur Taylor (drums).

Recorded in the 1955 and reissued in 2006 – Label: Prestige

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Written by crossrhythm

December 10, 2010 at 10:40 pm

Benny Golson: The Best Of Benny Golson (2009 – Concord Music)

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The seductive charm that makes Benny Golson’s “Whisper Not” so appealing has not diminished in half a century, as is evident when listening to the two performances found here, one recorded in 1956, the other just last year. The latter, with Al Jarreau singing the Leonard Feather lyrics with surprising sensitivity, comes from Golson’s latest version of the sextet he originally formed with the late Art Farmer in 1959. The 1956 instrumental recording, by a nonet, is an opulent rendering with heraldic flourishes by Julius Watkins’ French horn plus solos from Farmer’s trumpet, Gigi Gryce’s alto and Golson’s rococo climactic tenor sax.
“Whisper Not” is one of many tunes that have made Golson one of jazz’ leading composers. He has displayed an unfailing gift for suave melodies combined with elaborate and sophisticated harmonies, all spiced with rhythms ranging from sultry saunters to high-stepping marches. And his playing, like his compositions, never relinquishes melody, no matter how baroque or extravagant his bebop-inspired harmonic flights may soar.
“The Best Of” album concentrates as much on presenting Golson the improviser as it does the composer, with his early work represented by tracks featuring mostly quintets with trombonist Curtis Fuller. His solos reflect the influence of Lucky Thompson with intimations of John Coltrane’s explorations, especially on an aggressive “Are You Real?” The heavy, breathy vibrato of Thompson, most prominent on a very slow “April in Paris” from 1959, became much less pronounced over the years, as tracks from the ’80s on confirm, but Golson never lost that edge of velvet in his tone, nor that commitment to melody that make his solos on “Five Spot After Dark” (1997) and “Killer Joe” (2004) so warmly engaging.
George Kanzler (All About Jazz)

Track List:
1. Whisper Not
2. Reunion
3. Are You Real?
4. Blues After Dark
5. I Didn’t Know What Time It Was
6. April in Paris (5:11)
7. Along Came Betty (Live)
8. Five Spot After Dark
9. Killer Joe

Personnel: Art Blakey, Ray Bryant, Paul Chambers, Kenny Dorham, Ray Drummond, Art Farmer, Tommy Flanagan, Curtis Fuller, Gigi Gryce, Barry Harris, Eddie Henderson, J.J. Johnson, Wynton Kelly, Marvin “Smitty” Smith, Arthur Taylor, and others.

Original Release Date: January 20, 2009 – Label: Concord Music Group
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