Showing posts with label Freddie Redd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freddie Redd. Show all posts

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Freddie Redd - Reminiscing

Styles: Piano Jazz
Time: 61:47
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 141,9 MB
Art: Front

(6:08) 1. Oh! So Good
(7:46) 2. Love Is Love
(7:39) 3. Shadows
(8:30) 4. Blues Extra
(9:15) 5. Once In A Lifetime
(9:28) 6. Reminiscing
(6:19) 7. Blues X
(6:40) 8. There I Found You

Reminiscing is a slate of eight Redd compositions, on which New York ace Matt Wilson plays drums and Baltimorean Michael Formanek takes the bass. (There are also two guest saxophonists tenor Brian Settles on six tracks and alto/soprano Sarah Hughes on two.) Redd’s batch of tunes impress. They’re soulful, swinging, and deceptively lyrical; the phrases are so simple and catchy that the unconventional forms Redd deploys slip right past you. The title tune, for example, stitches together no less than five different four-bar sections; the moody ballad “Shadows” cycles through four. While the opener, “Oh! So Good,” has only two strains, it lures you in with an A so pithy it could be an ostinato, then sends you reeling with a linear, complex B.

It’s Redd’s piano playing, though, that delivers the knockout. There are no breakneck tempos here the leader has nothing left to prove. He doubles down on the melodicism instead. The solo on “Love is Love” is a reduction of the theme (albeit one with dense harmonies), and Redd’s spaces and condensations of the phrases are expressive. Where the speed does ramp up, as on “Blues X,” he takes it in stride, keeping pace through a scorching Settles solo. When it’s his turn, though, you can almost see him pulling the reins: He lets the first four bars go by without a single note, then digs deep into the blues at a leisurely, in-my-own-good-time gait, only to pick up again to comp for Linde’s solo.

Then comes Baltimore Jazz Loft, on which it’s quickly clear that Warren has also turned to making his point without fireworks. It’s Redd who’s the loquacious one on “Among Friends,” in which he unfurls chorus after improvised (if well-crafted) chorus. When Warren takes the spotlight, he doesn’t even break the walking bass cadence, firing off three measured blues choruses that could have been accompaniments. He does the same on “A Little Chippie,” which also has Warren playing the sly lead melody line, making him a bit more forthright here, though that melody is not flashy either.

When he lets loose with a more conventionally melodic solo, on the bossa nova “Barack Obama,” it’s tight, carefully constructed, and succinct. (He audibly says “OK” to the band after one chorus.) It’s also remarkably thoughtful and beautiful. Yet one quickly realizes that Warren expresses himself as clearly in his supporting role as in improvising. As lovely as he can get on “Barack Obama” or the standard “I Can’t Get Started,” there’s something profoundly declarative in the deep, resonant notes he places under Redd and Linde’s work on those same tracks.

Teaching a lesson on mastery through economy doesn’t seem to have been Linde’s goal with the releases. Throughout both albums, he’s not a run-on player, but not taciturn either. All the same, Linde has aged eight years since they were recorded and watched both revered veterans pass away in the meantime. One wonders how he, and his multitudes, will process their legacies in projects to come. https://washingtoncitypaper.com/article/511940/two-new-releases-keep-freddie-redd-and-butch-warrens-legacies-alive/

Personnel: Freddie Redd - piano; Brad Linde - tenor saxophone; Michael Formanek - bass; Matt Wilson - drums; Sarah Hughes - soprano saxophone (on track 5), alto saxophone (on track 3); Brian Settles - tenor saxophone (on tracks 1,2,4,6-8)

Reminiscing

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Butch Warren & Freddie Redd - Baltimore Jazz Loft

Styles: Bebop, Hardbop, Jazz
Time: 55:29
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Size: 127,7 MB
Art: Front

(1:25) 1. Prelude
(8:41) 2. Nothing But The Blues
(7:01) 3. I Can't Get Started
(6:41) 4. I Remember Monk
(5:33) 5. A Little Chippie
(7:50) 6. I Hear You
(9:09) 7. Among Friends
(4:26) 8. Barack Obama
(4:38) 9. There Will Never Be Another You

This music comes from a performance complementing a session that was organized to record unheard compositions from Freddie Redd. The album title recognizes a kinship with the informal loft sessions of the fifties and sixties where a special style of jazz was refined. Present here from that golden age are two of the most singular voices on their instruments who, over fifty years hence, retain the relentlessly creative spirit that forged this music. Both have a signature sound that is instantly identifiable, and both are outstanding, though under recognized, composers. The group is completed by two players who have consistently linked the past and future of this music. The genesis of this effort was Matt Wilson's desire to meet and make music with Butch Warren, though it was Brad Linde's organizational abilities and contacts that brought it all together. Despite being contemporaries on the New York scene of the early 60's and sharing a recording label then by both their memories Butch and Freddie first played together at a joint event in December 2010 and since then did perform together several times in the greater Washington, DC area. Sadly these songs reflect their last performance together, as Butch passed to ancestry on October 5, 2013.

What you will hear is a spontaneous and joyous selection of music performed on a snowy evening in Baltimore - without rehearsal or set list or in most instances lead sheets - and with no overdubs, retakes or "do-overs". The intimate atmosphere lent itself to a sense of musical exploration and adventure that held the audience spellbound through a special evening. Fine examples of Freddie's characteristic inventiveness abound as he teases melodic ideas from each other and his limitless musical imagination. When Matt is not leading the exchange of ideas (Butch's style lends extra space to creative drummers) his attentive and sympathetic counterpoints draw rhythmic interactions from both of the masters. Butch's deceptively easygoing walking quarter note pulse provides the swinging foundation that also highlights his punctuation and solos. Brad deftly managed the stand throughout an open-ended evening and contributed strategic statements to enhance the musical framework. Together the group brought new inspiration to a particular style of jazz that remains timeless in their hands.

Tracks 1 and 2 are indeed the first notes the core trio played together and exemplify the melodically rooted improvisation that defines Freddie's musical conception (here within a remarkable spontaneous composition that seems to have leaped from his mind fully formed). With this show being Butch's evening, several of his most notable compositions are featured, along with another spontaneous creation and a standard or two. This date was not planned for a release since the performance was scheduled primarily as an opportunity for Matt to get acquainted with Butch. The recording captured some of the joy of that moment and reflects the cohesion in a different approach to making music than a practiced formal repertoire. Perhaps the most difficult thing for a musical collective is to freely improvise over structure. Within this set the spirit never wanes while the creative spark flickers and burns. With the foresight to leave recording equipment in place we are pleased to have the opportunity to present this unique insight into the musicians' collective artistry.

We wish to thank the musicians, Henry of An Die Musik for providing an outlet for fine music in Baltimore, Sean, Michael Formanek, Bertrand, Marc Goodman, and all fans and supporters of this music, present that night or not. ~John Cook https://bradlinde.bandcamp.com/album/baltimore-jazz-loft

Baltimore Jazz Loft

Saturday, May 5, 2018

Freddie Redd - Freddie Redd & His International Jazz Connection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 74:17
Size: 170.0 MB
Styles: Piano jazz
Year: 1998
Art: Front

[ 9:34] 1. Speak Of The Blues
[ 7:42] 2. Don't Lose The Blues
[10:16] 3. Waltzin' In
[ 8:40] 4. Emily Reno
[ 8:22] 5. Let's Split
[ 7:46] 6. That Dancin' Man
[ 9:49] 7. I'm Gonna Be Happy
[12:04] 8. And Time Marches On

Freddie Redd is a world class jazz composer and pianist. Since his emergence as composer of the score for Jack Gelber's harrowingly exact play, The Connection, winner of three off-broadway awards, Freddie Redd has finally been gaining some of the recognition that has eluded him for much of his playing career. Freddie was born in New York, May 29th, 1928. His inspiration to play began while serving in the Armed Forces. By 1953, Freddie had joined Cootie Williams and spent a stimulating year traveling mostly through the South. Back in New York, Freddie started working with vibist Joe Roland and began to be heard quite often at Birdland's informal Monday night sessions. In 1954, Freddie was with Art Blakey. Shortly after, he was touring Sweden with Rolf Ericson and also was part of Charlie Mingus's Jazz workshop in 1956. Freddie has been at the Living Theatre on Sixth Avenue ever since. Freddie Redd was right in the middle of the NYC bop scene and was privy to the likes of Bird,Bud Powell, Dizzy and Monk.

"In the summer of 1956, I toured Sweden as a member of an all-star, Swedish-American jazz group that included jazz vocalist Ernestine Anderson. In July of 1991, I was invited to the Pori Jazz Festival, and while there I becoame aware that Sweden was just an overnight ferry ride away. My wife and I went to Stockholm, and I met the artists with whom I wanted to work. Thus the International Jazz Connection was born. Each and every take is a first take. What you will hear is just half of what we recorded that day. It was simply amazing how these artists - Krister Andersson, Maffy Falay, Tobjorn Hultkranz, and Gilbert Matthews, Bernt Rosengren, Bengt Stark, and Andres Ulberg - came together and created magic." ~FR

Freddie Redd & His International Jazz Connection mc
Freddie Redd & His International Jazz Connection zippy

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

Freddie Redd Trio, Hampton Hawes Quartet - Piano East Piano West

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 41:59
Size: 96.1 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1956/1991
Art: Front

[2:44] 1. Terrible T
[2:47] 2. Fanfare
[2:59] 3. Just Squeeze Me (But Don't Tease Me)
[2:58] 4. I'll Remember April
[2:59] 5. Hamp's Paws
[1:57] 6. Move
[2:35] 7. Once In A While
[2:39] 8. Buzzy
[4:16] 9. Debut
[5:47] 10. The Things We Did Last Summer
[5:20] 11. Lady J Blues
[4:53] 12. Ready Freddie

This CD reissue has two unrelated early sessions from pianists Hampton Hawes and Freddie Redd. Hawes, heard in a quartet with vibraphonist Larry Bunker, bassist Clarence Jones and drummer Larence Marable, already ranked as one of the top bop-based pianists in 1952. He performs eight straight-ahead numbers (five bop standards and three originals like "Hamp's Paws"), including a two-minute version of "Move" that lives up to its name. Redd, who recorded much less during his longer career, stretches out a bit more on four numbers (including three originals) in a trio with bassist John Ore and drummer Ron Jefferson. Excellent music, easily recommended to bop collectors. ~Scott Yanow

Piano East Piano West 

Wednesday, December 20, 2017

Freddie Redd - San Francisco Suite

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1957
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:57
Size: 95,1 MB
Art: Front

(13:30)  1. San Francisco Suite
( 3:37)  2. Blue Hour
( 3:47)  3. By Myself
( 4:05)  4. Old Man River
( 5:02)  5. Minor Interlude
( 6:34)  6. This is New
( 4:19)  7. Nica Steps Out

This early recording by pianist Freddie Redd (a straight CD reissue of the original Riverside LP) features Redd's trio of the time, with bassist George Tucker and drummer All Dreares. The CD reissue is highlighted by the 13½-minute title piece, a suite that in its five melodies depicts the jazz life in San Francisco during the era. Redd shows potential both in his writing and his boppish playing. The remainder of the fine set has the group's interpretations of three other Redd originals and a trio of standards. An excellent effort. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/san-francisco-suite-for-jazz-trio-mw0000309826    

Personnel: Freddie Redd (piano); George Tucker (bass); Al Dreares (drums).            

San Francisco Suite

Sunday, December 17, 2017

Freddie Redd - Freddie Redd In Sweden

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2007
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 68:08
Size: 158,1 MB
Art: Front

(2:55)  1. Dawn Mist
(3:18)  2. Beautiful Adela
(4:29)  3. I'll Remember April
(2:35)  4. Reminiscing
(2:11)  5. Get Happy
(3:02)  6. Bye Bye,Blackbird
(3:06)  7. Blues X
(3:45)  8. People's Park
(2:35)  9. A Night In Nalen
(3:38) 10. Blue Hour
(3:12) 11. Studio Blues
(3:58) 12. Farewell To Sweden
(4:17) 13. Debut (bonus track)
(5:20) 14. Lady J. Blues (bonus track)
(5:48) 15. Things We Did Last Summer (bonus track)
(4:52) 16. Ready Freddie (bonus track)
(5:19) 17. I'll Remeber April (bonus track)
(3:39) 18. These Foolish Things (bonus track)

CD release that contains the complete 1956 LP Freddie Redd in Sweden plus the pianist's first trio session and the only two trio tracks from Redd's only recorded live performance in Sweden. Freddie Redd is a very talented yet obscure and underrated pianist. Despite enjoying a long life in which he never stopped playing, Redd has left behind a rather sparse body of recorded works. Although he played with such great Jazz names as Art Blakey, Coleman Hawkins, Tina Brooks, Sonny Rollins, Charles Mingus and Lou Donaldson, the quantity of his recordings is sorely lacking. The quality of these recordings, however, is of the highest order. When Swedish trumpeter Rolf Ericson was commissioned to find American musicians to travel to Stockholm for a series of modern Jazz concerts, Redd was chosen along with bassist Tommy Potter and drummer Joe Harris. All his trio recordings during that tour are included on this release. 18 tracks. Lone Hill Jazz. ~ Editorial Reviews https://www.amazon.com/Sweden-FREDDIE-REDD/dp/B000W7YX4U

Personnel: Piano – Freddie Redd;  Bass – John Ore, Tommy Potter;  Drums – Joe Harris , Ron Jefferson

Freddie Redd In Sweden

Thursday, December 14, 2017

Freddie Redd - Under Paris Skies

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 1971
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:24
Size: 88,4 MB
Art: Front

(6:22)  1. Diane I Love You
(5:59)  2. Bleeker Street Blues
(6:47)  3. To Bud With Love
(6:38)  4. This Heart Is Mine
(8:49)  5. You
(3:46)  6. My God Is Love

This recording of a 1971 date pairs legendary hard bop pianist Freddie Redd with an obscure French rhythm section. Didier Levallet and Didier Carlier on bass and drums, respectively, are certainly good musicians; they comp and center very well around the changes Redd sets out in his original tunes such as "Diane I Love You," "Bleeker Street Blues," "To Bud With Love," "This Heart of Mine," "You," and "My God Is Love." Their backing is tight and organized, and that's the problem. Redd is well-known for his occasional firebrand solos and rhythmically driven flights of fancy in improvisation. This pair is no match for his intricate melodic architecture, his gorgeous, shimmering ostinato phrasing that comes right out of the blues, and his swinging post-bop harmonic sense. The music here just floats along, adequate, beautifully played, but devoid of fire or emotion. It's all mechanics. Even though Redd had been known at the time to delve deeply into balladry, even here, there is no sense that the rhythm section feels these tunes any differently than they do a midtempo swinger. There are many Freddie Redd recordings out there, most of them very fine, so it's best to look elsewhere. ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/under-paris-skies-mw0000732290

Personnel: Piano – Freddie Redd;  Bass – Didier Levallet;  Drums – Didier Carlier

Under Paris Skies

Thursday, March 9, 2017

Freddie Redd Quartet, Jackie McLean - Music From The Connection

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:27
Size: 88.0 MB
Styles: Bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1960/1995
Art: Front

[5:20] 1. Who Killed Cock Robin
[5:55] 2. Wigglin'
[5:49] 3. Music Forever
[6:21] 4. Time To Smile
[4:42] 5. Theme For Sister-Salvation
[5:38] 6. Jim Dunn's Dilemna
[4:39] 7. O.D. (Overdose)

Alto Saxophone – Jackie McLean; Bass – Michael Mattos; Drums – Larry Ritchie; Piano, Composed By [Music] – Freddie Redd. Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey on February 15, 1960.

Freddie Redd composed the music for Jack Gelber's The Connection, a gritty play about musician junkies. Gelber had originally thought that the play would feature real musicians -- who would also double as actors in minor roles -- improvising on blues and jazz standards in the tradition of Charlie Parker, but Redd convinced him to use an original score. The two weaved Redd's original compositions into the score, making it an integral part of the play, but the music holds up superbly on its own. Using the direction "in the tradition of Charlie Parker" as a starting point, the pianist wrote seven pieces of straight-ahead bop, wide open for improvisations, and then assembled a sterling quartet featuring himself, alto saxophonist Jackie McLean, bassist Michael Mattos, and drummer Larry Ritchie. The end result was a set of dynamic straight-ahead bop. While both Redd and McLean show signs of their influences -- the pianist blends Monk and Powell, while the saxophonist has built off of Bird's twisting lines -- they have developed their own voices, which gives the driving, bluesy bop on Music From the Connection an edge. McLean's full, robust tone often dominates, but he never overshadows Redd's complex, intricate playing, and both musicians, as well as Mattos and Ritchie, effortlessly keep up with the changes from hard-hitting, up-tempo bop numbers to lyrical, reflective ballads. Musically, Music From the Connection might not offer anything unexpected, but whenever straight-ahead bop is done this well, it should be celebrated. ~Stephen Thomas Erlewine

Music From The Connection

Sunday, August 14, 2016

Freddie Redd - With Due Respect

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2016
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 62:59
Size: 144,6 MB
Art: Front

(6:49)  1. A Night In Nalen
(7:09)  2. Reminiscing
(7:20)  3. Blue Hue
(3:20)  4. With Due Respect
(7:16)  5. I'm Gonna Be Happy
(7:13)  6. O.D.
(6:23)  7. Olé
(8:10)  8. Lady J. Blues
(9:16)  9. Melanie

Freddie Redd is one of the last living links to the golden age of modern jazz. He started playing the piano after hearing Charlie Parker in the 1940s and made his mark on the scene in 1959 with his score for Jack Gelber's avant-garde play "The Connection." This told the story of a group of junkies, most of them jazz musicians, waiting for their man. When he arrives, everyone shoots up and one of the company dies from an overdose. Happy days! It was later turned into a movie. Redd starred in both play and film. Initially, Gelber wanted the musicians to improvise on blues and standards but when the play was being cast met Redd who suggested an original score which would attempt to depict musically what was happening on stage. The idea was deemed to work well, one critic likening the Redd-Gelber collaboration to that of Kurt Weill and Bertolt Brecht. Alas, posterity didn't agree. During the years that followed, kitchen sink drama went where else? down the drain. Redd continued playing in New York and in Europe but was never able to equal the notoriety fame, if you like he'd experienced with "The Connection."

So in the end he stopped trying to and concentrated instead on writing and playing intelligent, swinging music. At the age of 88, he's still doing just that. Here the "forgotten" pianist/composer leads a sextet of far younger musicians in an excellent, varied program of his own compositions, dusted off and arranged for the modern age by saxophonist Chris Byars. In the opening number, "A Night In Nalen," based on the chords of "Cherokee," Redd captures the restless energy generated at the old Stockholm bop venue, paying a brief homage to Bud Powell in the second chorus. But this album is no easy trip down memory lane. The accent is on creating something new, not old, borrowed or blue. Byars' father, James, a member of the New York City Ballet Orchestra, plays oboe on "Reminiscing," the best track, with a lovely, lilting theme and lazy, "old time" feel that has little to do with bebop. And it's interesting to compare "O.D," from Redd's score for "The Connection" with the same song on his 1961 Blue Note album of music from the play, which featured Jackie McLean on alto a new take but based firmly on the original. In the sleeve note, Byars explains Redd's music as a fusion of the 32-bar AABA popular music framework with jazz and blues. He says, "From a songwriting perspective it's like Bird meets Cole Porter. These tunes are built for speed." The title track reflects on the ups and downs of Redd's life in music with no bitterness, just resignation. To Byars the last word: "Freddie is a storyteller, in his solos and as a composer." ~ Chris Mosey https://www.allaboutjazz.com/with-due-respect-freddie-redd-steeplechase-records-review-by-chris-mosey.php
Personnel:  Freddie Redd: piano;  John Mosca: trombone;  Chris Byars: alto saxophone, flute;  Stefano Doglioni: bass clarinet;  James Byars: oboe;  Jay Anderson: bass;  Billy Drumond: drums.

With Due Respect

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Freddie Redd - Redd's Blues

Bitrate: MP3@320K/s
Time: 38:29
Size: 88.1 MB
Styles: Hard bop, Piano jazz
Year: 1988/2002
Art: Front

[7:12] 1. Now
[6:13] 2. Cute Doot
[7:00] 3. Old Spice
[5:00] 4. Blues For Betsy
[5:53] 5. Somewhere
[7:08] 6. Love Lost

Many times in the history of jazz, album titles have played word games with artists' names. Think of Grant Green and Green Street and Green is Beautiful. There is also Freddie Hubbard, with Ready for Freddie, Hub-Tones, and Hub-Cap. You may not have heard of the bop-pianist Freddie Redd, who not to be left out, made Shades of Redd and Redd’s Blues. The latter album, recorded in 1961, has been released now for the first time as part of Blue Note’s limited edition Connoisseur series.

Why would this album interest you? Well, you may not have heard of Freddie Redd, but you will have definitely heard of sidemen Jackie McLean, Tina Brooks and Paul Chambers. The other good news is that Freddie Redd had a good ear for a nice bop melody, and most of the themes feature great harmonic interplay between the three horns. One reason for the obscurity of Freddie Redd may be his rather lacklustre soloing, which although melodic, lacks the necessary pyrotechnics. As a consequence the three horn players take the more interesting solos. Still you can’t complain; this CD has an all-star cast and is classic 1960s Blue Note. Not only that, but unreleased 1960s Blue Note. The ultimate deciding factor in this album is your opinion of Jackie McLean. I personally find his off-sharp tone a little grating. But many listeners like it, in which case you'd be almost certainly be Reddy for Freddie (groan). ~Keiran Smalley

Freddie Redd: piano; Benny Bailey: trumpet; Jackie McLean: Alto saxophone; Tina Brooks: tenor saxophone; Paul Chambers: Bass; Sir John Godfrey: drums.

Redd's Blues  

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Freddie Redd - Music For You

Size: 170,6 MB
Time: 73:39
File: MP3 @ 320K/s
Released: 2015
Styles: Jazz: Hard Bop
Art: Front

01. There'll Never Be Another You (7:17)
02. Blues For You (7:43)
03. How High The Moon (6:30)
04. All The Things You Are (10:39)
05. Cherokee ( 6:30)
06. Round About Midnight (7:33)
07. Perdido (8:45)
08. Lover Man (8:32)
09. I'll Remember April (10:05)

Survivors of the original hardbop era are an ever-dwindling fraternity, although attrition isn’t surprising for musical school that had its start well over a half-century ago. At 86, pianist Freddie Redd is still thankfully amongst that persistent number. He was a member of the New York jazz subculture in the Fifties that also included peers like Jackie McLean, Tina Brooks, Kenny Drew and others. An allergy to studio recording kept his discography comparatively slim, but his performance schedule remained healthy.

In 1959 Redd aligned with the city’s Living Theater Company, composing the music for and starring in both the stage production and film version of Jack Gelber’s influential play The Connection. He secured a record contract with Blue Note contemporaneously although only a third of his work for the label was released at the time. His last recording as a leader is nearly thirty years old. As such, Music For You wears its intentions simply and unequivocally as a gift to listeners both seasoned and nascent.

Recommended to producer Nils Winther at the behest of saxophonist Chris Byars, Redd lined up the session. Illness initially curtailed his participation and Stanley Cowell was called in to complete a session with the on-hand rhythm section of bassist Jay Anderson and drummer Billy Drummond in his absence. That music was released under Cowell’s name earlier this year. The session as originally planned is a different animal comprising eight standards that are all well-worn to the point of common currency. Only Redd’s “Blues For You” scripted specifically for the date deviates and it’s a fairly forthright example of its titular form.

Redd’s faculties are sharp and his mood congenial, but it’s clear from the debonair rendering of “There Will Never Be Another You” that he isn’t interested in placing himself or his sidemen through anything resembling a rigorous aggregate of challenges or paces. What then to recommend this date from an august veteran in his advanced age? The answer to that largely rhetorical question arrives in Redd’s measured and instantly ingratiating delivery. “Cherokee”, the perpetual steeplechase of bop tunes, unfolds at a tempo that’s more leisurely stroll than land speed sprint and in the offing is all the better for it. “Round Midnight” trades angular edges and overt melancholy for high melodicism against a gentle, subterranean bass throb and deft brush play before an eleventh hour flirtation with Latin rhythm.

There’s a quote in the liners that distills Redd’s creative philosophy down through colorful imagery: “I’m never going to play like Bud Powell. I could get all the plastic surgery in the world and drink anything I want, but it’s still going to come out Freddie Redd.” As applied in the liberal fashion the pianist favors it’s an approach indicative of resilient audience endearment and an affirmation that there’s much more than mere muscle memory happening here. ~Derek Taylor

Music For You

Saturday, December 27, 2014

Art Farmer - When Farmer Met Gryce

Styles: Trumpet Jazz
Year: 1954
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 42:09
Size: 100,5 MB
Art: Front

(5:09)  1. A Night At Tony's
(5:01)  2. Blue Concept
(5:48)  3. Stupendous-Lee
(4:23)  4. Deltitnu
(6:08)  5. Social Call
(5:02)  6. Capri
(5:19)  7. Blue Lights
(5:16)  8. The Infant's Song

When Farmer Met Gryce features trumpeter Art Farmer, altoist Gigi Gryce and two rhythm sections with either Horace Silver or Freddie Redd on piano, Percy Heath or Addison Farmer on bass, and Kenny Clarke or Art Taylor on drums. The early hard bop music is highlighted by "Social Call" (one of Gryce's best-known compositions), "Capri," "A Night at Tony's" and "Blue Concept" but all eight numbers will easily be enjoyed by straight-ahead jazz fans. ~ Scott Yanow  http://www.allmusic.com/album/when-farmer-met-gryce-mw0000234769

Personnel: Trumpet – Art Farmer; Alto Saxophone, Bass – Addison Farmer (tracks: 5 to 8), Percy Heath (tracks: 1 to 4); Drums – Arthur Taylor (tracks: 5 to 8), Kenny Clarke (tracks: 1 to 4); Piano – Freddie Redd (tracks: 5 to 8), Horace Silver (tracks: 1 to 4)

When Farmer Met Gryce