Archive for the ‘Henry Grimes’ Category
Roy Haynes: Out of the Afternoon (1962 – Impulse! Records)
This splendid-sounding CD reissues a 1962 set from the Roy Haynes Quartet — which, at the time, consisted of Haynes, Henry Grimes on bass, Tommy Flanagan on piano, and Roland Kirk on saxes, manzello, stritch, and flutes. The album is a delightful mix of techniques in arrangement and performance, with all of the musicians delivering terrific work — Haynes’ drumming is absolutely wonderful here, lightly dancing around the other instruments, Flanagan’s piano playing is equally light and delicate, Grimes’ bass work is outstanding (during “Raoul” you have a chance to hear one of the few bowed bass solos on records of that era), and there’s not much that can be said about Kirk’s sax and flute work that hasn’t already been said a hundred times, apart from the fact that the flute solos on “Snap Crackle” help this cut emerge as particularly outstanding.
Steven McDonald, All Music Guide.
1. Moon Ray
2. Fly Me To The Moon
3. Raoul
4. Snap Crackle
5. If I Should Lose You
6. Long Wharf
7. Some Other Spring
Personnel:
Roland Kirk: Ten sax & flute
Tommy Flanagan: Piano
Henry Grimes: Bass
Released in 1962 – Label: Impulse! Records
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