Across Rhythm

Just another WordPress.com site

Archive for the ‘Bobby Hutcherson’ Category

Bobby Hutcherson: Stick-Up! (1966 – Blue Note)

leave a comment »


One of Bobby Hutcherson’s best albums, Stick-Up! was also his first official release not to feature drummer Joe Chambers, who was a major part of Hutcherson’s outside leanings. Instead, Stick-Up! stakes out the middle ground between hard bop and the avant-garde, offering a set of structured yet advanced modal pieces indebted particularly to Coltrane. Hutcherson’s originals (five out of six selections) show him at the top of his game as a composer, and the ensemble’s playing is tight and focused throughout, but what really lifts Stick-Up! to the top tier of Hutcherson’s discography is its crackling energy. It’s quite possibly the hardest-swinging album he ever cut, and part of the credit has to go to the stellar rhythm section of McCoy Tyner on piano, Herbie Lewis on bass, and Billy Higgins on drums, who lay down a driving, pulsating foundation that really pushes Hutcherson and tenorist Joe Henderson. Tyner in particular is a standout, charging relentlessly forward on the intricate “8/4 Beat” and “Black Circle” and lending a Coltrane-ish flavor to the spiritually searching “Verse.” The lone non-Hutcherson piece, Ornette Coleman’s sometimes overlooked “Una Muy Bonita,” is given a fantastic, rollicking treatment as catchy as it is progressive, proving that the piece is a classic regardless of whether it’s interpreted freely or with a steady groove and tonal center. Hutcherson’s originals are uniformly strong and memorable enough to sit very well next to it, and that — coupled with the energetic performances — ranks Stick-Up! with Dialogue and Components  as the finest work of Hutcherson’s tenure at Blue Note.
Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Track List:
1. Una Muy Bonita   
2. 8/4 Beat       
3. Summer Nights       
4. Black Circle       
5. Verse       
6. Blues Mind Matte
Personnel:
Bobby Hutcherson (Vibraphone & Marimba)
McCoy Tyner (Piano)
Joe Henderson (Tenor Sax )
Billy Higgins (Drums)
Herbie Lewis (Bass)

Original Release Date: July 14, 1966  –  Label: Blue Note Records

But at Amazon
Download

Written by crossrhythm

March 11, 2010 at 1:51 am

Eric Dolphy – Out to Lunch! (February 25, 1964 – Blue Note Records)

with one comment


In 1964, Dolphy signed with the legendary Blue Note label and recorded Out to Lunch (once again, the label insisted on using “out” in the title). This album was deeply rooted in the avant garde, and Dolphy’s solos are as dissonant and unpredictable as anything he ever recorded. Out to Lunch is often regarded not only as Dolphy’s finest album, but also as one of the greatest jazz recordings ever made.
After Out to Lunch and an appearance as a sideman on Andrew Hill’s Point of Departure, Dolphy left to tour Europe with Charles Mingus’ sextet (one of Mingus’ most underrated bands and without a doubt one of the most exciting) in early 1964. From there he intended to settle in Europe with his fiancée, who was working on the ballet scene in Paris. After leaving Mingus, he performed with and recorded a few sides with various European bands and was preparing to join Albert Ayler for a recording.
On the evening of June 28, 1964, Dolphy collapsed on the streets of Berlin and was brought to a hospital. The attending hospital physicians, who had no idea that Dolphy was a diabetic, thought that he (like so many other jazz musicians) had overdosed on drugs, so they left him to lie in a hospital bed until the “drugs” had run their course.
Out to Lunch is one of the finest records of its kind. This record is easily at the caliber of A Love Supreme and The Shape of Jazz to Come. That may seem a mighty bold statement. But this is an outstanding reality once we consider how Dolphy shows himself as solid bandleader and arranger who opens up plenty of room for his players. Much in the ideology of his fellow avant-garde players, the solos exude experiment. Yet Dolphy’s control is masterful and no matter how far out he gets, you can feel his passion and know his path has been well articulated.

Track List:
1. Hat and Beard
2. Something Sweet, Something Tender
3. Gazzelloni
4. Out to Lunch
5. Straight Up and Down
Personnel:
Eric Dolphy  [(bass clarinet (1 & 2), flute (3), alto saxophone (4 & 5)]
Freddie Hubbard  (trumpet)
 Bobby Hutcherson  (vibraphone)
Richard Davis  (bass)
  Tony Williams  (drums)

Original Release Date: February 25, 1964 (Label: Blue Note Records)
Buy at Amazon 
Download

Written by crossrhythm

February 25, 2010 at 1:09 am