Showing posts with label Roy Brooks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roy Brooks. Show all posts

Friday, July 29, 2022

Charles Mingus - The Lost Album From Ronnie Scott's

Styles: Bop, Post Bop
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 145:32
Size: 334,2 MB
Art: Front

( 1:01) 1. Introduction
(30:44) 2. Orange Was The Color Of Her Dress (Then Silk Blues)
(19:52) 3. Noddin' Ya Head Blues
(29:57) 4. Mind-Reader's Convention In Milano (Aka Number 29)
( 0:44) 5. Ko Ko (Theme)
(35:00) 6. Fables Of Faubus
( 7:35) 7. Pops (When The Saints Go Marching In)
(18:33) 8. The Man Who Never Sleeps
( 2:02) 9. Air Mail Special

After the emotional and economic bankruptcies of the late 1960s that nearly took him out of the picture entirely, 1972 broke well for Charles Mingus. He had re-signed with Columbia and delivered the revered Let My Children Hear Music. (He would, a year later, be part of the great Clive Davis jazz purge of 1973 which included Keith Jarrett, Bill Evans, and, some argue Ornette Coleman.) Grants and commissions were coming in and his music, in all its bold, gnarly, swooning vehemence, was being performed far and wide. His irascible, erotic, and essential autobiography, Beneath the Underdog, had finally been published. More and more, Sue Mingus was becoming the edifying force in his life, a beacon for his health, his creativity, his business. Most importantly, as first evidenced by Charles Mingus And Friends In Concert (Columbia, 1972) it was all coming together for him onstage.

Even though his multiple demons (all the usual human foibles but magnified by genius) were never too far from the forefront of his garrulous self, history, while it often casts shade on even our most beloved icons, has been kind to Mingus. He's recognized in the same breath as Duke Ellington, Charles Ives, and Claude Debussy. Now, just in time for a loud and rowdy celebration of his 2022 centennial (April 22) and Record Store Day (April 23) another very sweet slice of history is heard gloriously on The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott's.

Why it takes fifty years for music of this muscle and magnitude to be released is just one of the great eternal questions, but here it is so let's rejoice. Fully authorized by Jazz Workshop, Inc., and given the full Resonance Records grand treatment: interviews with Charles McPherson, Eddie Gomez, Christian McBride; anecdotes from Mary Scott, Sue Mingus, and Fran Lebowitz, as well as archival and production liner notes. But it's the music that spins the head, spikes the pulse, and whips the carpet out from under one. It's what Mingus would want.

So it's the two nights in August at the end of a successful European run and the players are in flux but wasn't flux at the crux of Mingus' most inspired moments? Nineteen year old trumpeter Jon Faddis was not only trying to hone his young brilliance, he was trying to do so through the Mingus maze. Little known pianist John Foster succeeds Jaki Byard and drummer Roy Brooks has taken over for Mingus stalwart Dannie Richmond, who left to soak in some short lived pop rock with Mark Almond Band. It begins as most great jazz moments do. Immediately. Ronnie Scott intros the sextet. Mingus rumbles a happy birthday, thanks the audience for letting their claps be recorded, and it's off to the races with the unapologetic zest and swagger of "Orange Was the Color of Her Dress, Then Silk Blues," a full half hour of stunning, multi-part alchemy. Foster proves he's up to the task, keeping up with the turns and tides precipitated by alto saxophonist Charles McPherson and his tenor counterpart, Bobby Jones.

Variation upon variation. Creation on the fly. "Ysabel's Table Dance" (one of the many glories from Tijuana Moods (RCA, 1962) knits in and out of the general creative mayhem. There's some church, some New Orleans, some breakdowns and fanfares. Faddis and Foster, with Jones on soprano sax, hold court, hand off. Mingus guides and goads. It's an unstoppable momentum that moves into a burly bass solo intro "Noddin' Ya Head Blues" a slow, low down blues that brings Foster to the vocal forefront telling his woman "I need it every morning, I need it every night" as the horns slink and slur. So expansive is the setting that Brooks gets a musical saw solo, as well he should.

Spoiler alert: From here The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott's just gets better and better. Cascading for another riotous half hour, the recently minted Mingus twister "Mind-Readers' Convention in Milan" puts one and all to the test and just can't be described with any real justice. It needs to be heard. It needs to be experienced.

Though by its very nature any jazz moment can be considered one of kind, the barely contained madcappery that ensues in this truly one-for-the-ages performance of the seismic "Fables of Faubus" is the stuff of legend. It noodles, it sprawls, it quarrels. It reaches for the London skies and returns to the stage with ether to burn. Mingus roils as Faddis blows beyond his years, the saxophones cut and weave, Foster veers from stride to barroom to bop and Brooks drives headlong into the hijinks. In a word, remarkable. Ditto The Lost Album from Ronnie Scott's.~Mike Jurkovic https://www.allaboutjazz.com/the-lost-album-from-ronnie-scotts-charles-mingus-resonance-records__7280

Personnel: Charles Mingus: bass, acoustic; Charles McPherson: saxophone, alto; Bobby Jones: saxophone, tenor; Jon Faddis: trumpet; John Foster: piano; Roy Brooks: drums.

The Lost Album From Ronnie Scott's

Saturday, August 7, 2021

Roy Brooks - Duet In Detroit

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1993
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 69:50
Size: 170,5 MB
Art: Front

( 0:56)  1. Introduction
( 8:12)  2. Zulu
( 6:26)  3. Waltz For Sweetcakes
(12:07)  4. Elegy For Eddie Jefferson
( 2:37)  5. Jeffuso
( 0:36)  6. Introduction
(11:45)  7. Forever Mingus
(15:00)  8. Healing Force
( 4:33)  9. Samba Del Sol
( 7:33) 10. Duet In Detroit

This CD features drummer Roy Brooks (who also plays musical saw on one piece) on two duets apiece (recorded live over a period of six years) with trumpeter Woody Shaw and pianists Randy Weston, Don Pullen and Geri Allen. The music is full of surprises and generally holds one's interest with the trumpet-drums duets being the most unusual. 
~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/duet-in-detroit-mw0000095280

Personnel:   Roy Brooks - drums, percussion, musical saw, composer;  Randy Weston - piano, composer;  Woody Shaw - trumpet, composer;  Don Pullen - piano, composer;  Geri Allen - piano, composer

Duet In Detroit

Friday, August 6, 2021

Roy Brooks, Woody Shaw - Understanding

Styles: Post Bop, Trumpet Jazz
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 123:33
Size: 283,6 MB
Art: Front

( 0:25) 1. Introduction
(21:34) 2. Prelude to Understanding
(20:10) 3. Understanding
(21:06) 4. Billie's Bounce
(23:18) 5. Zoltan
(32:25) 6. Taurus Woman
( 4:31) 7. The Theme

Roy Brooks was a preeminent hard-bop drummer who early on participated in seminal recording dates led by Horace Silver, Yusef Lateef and Sonny Stitt. In this release entitled Understanding, produced by Cory Weeds and Zev Feldman for Reel To Real Records, Brooks is documented live by The Left Bank Jazz Society at The Famous Ballroom in Baltimore on November 1, 1970. The limited-edition 180 gram 3-LP gatefold set of previously unreleased material, features a stellar band including trumpeter Woody Shaw, tenor saxophonist Carlos Garnett, pianist Harold Mabern and bassist Cecil McBee.

The start of the 1970s set out a movement towards freer improvisation to offer a path for expansion in harmony, structure and character. As a result, the listener was expected to adopt a new set of standards for listening, comprehending and dissecting the music. The five compositions that are presented in this recording fall into this category, and while they may appear to be arbitrary and unstructured, they do have a fundamental and textural construct. Additionally, the compositions are unusual in length, each taking the complete side of the LP. The playing is intense and demanding and the rhythm is propulsive, with Brooks ferocious behind the drum kit.

Disc One features two Brooks compositions, "Prelude to Understanding" and "Understanding." On the first, following a rubato introduction, the band begins its lengthy excursion into the lines, harmony and character of the number. Shaw is exhilarating, with intense playing for an extended period. He hardly seems to draw a breath. Mabern and McBee work together to build a rapport, while Brooks is working overtime to create a dynamic of rhythm, accents and shapes to move the number forward. With "Understanding," the style shifts to a 16+16 bar form with a Latin rhythm. Garnett dives into the fray with his high-tailing sound and fluent approach. McBee offers an extended fleet-fingered solo that has some similarities to flamenco strumming. Shaw and Mabern continue to demonstrate that they are soloists of energy and quicksilver brilliance.

Disc Two rides the Charlie Parker composition "Billie's Bounce" for a full twenty-one minutes. This bebop classic was written as a 12 bar blues, but the version offered here is a far cry from the original intent. The last two tunes are Shaw's "Zoltan" and Garnett's "Taurus Woman." The former is a 32 bar structure in the Lydian mode. Shaw is in full control as he tears through the changes. Brooks pushes the tempo up throughout the number, almost leaving Mabern behind. Garnett, of Panamanian heritage, is the key player in his own composition, one evolves into a Latin groove with Afro-Cuban references as created by Brooks. Garnett's tenor solo is coherent for the most part, although it does include what you might consider to be unnecessary squeals and squawking. The twenty page high-gloss booklet that accompanies this set is a treasure trove of information about the recording and the participants. There are photos, interviews, essays and stories, all of which add to the experience.~ Pierre Giroux https://www.allaboutjazz.com/understanding-roy-brooks-reel-to-real

Personnel: Roy Brooks: drums; Carlos Garnett: saxophone, tenor; Woody Shaw: trumpet; Harold Mabern: piano; Cecil McBee: bass.

Understanding

Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Abdullah Ibrahim - The Enja Heritage Collection: Banyana

Styles: Piano, Saxophone Jazz
Year: 1987
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 40:15
Size: 92,8 MB
Art: Front

( 2:04)  1. Banyana - The Children Of Africa
( 6:17)  2. Ishmael
( 8:17)  3. Asr
( 6:25)  4. The Honey Bird
( 6:45)  5. The Dream
(10:24)  6. Yukio-Khalifa

Abdullah Ibrahim sings and plays soprano on "Ishmael" but otherwise sticks to piano on this trio set with bassist Cecil McBee and drummer Roy Brooks. As usual Ibrahim's folkish melodies (this CD has six of his originals plus a previously alternate take of "Ishmael") pay tribute to his South African heritage and Islam religion without becoming esoteric or inaccessible. Some of the unpredictable music gets a bit intense (Ibrahim is in consistently adventurous form) but his flights always return back to earth and have an air of optimism. An above average effort from a true individualist. ~ Scott Yanow https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-banyana-children-of-africa-mw0000204709

Personnel: Piano, Soprano Saxophone, Composed By – Abdullah Ibrahim;  Bass – Cecil McBee; Drums – Roy Brooks.

The Enja Heritage Collection: Banyana

Monday, December 3, 2018

Roy Brooks & The Improvisational Sphere - Live at Lelli's

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 2011
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 44:38
Size: 102,2 MB
Art: Front

(11:48)  1. Ha-Ya !
(13:06)  2. Samba Del Sol
(13:44)  3. Basketball
( 5:58)  4. Her Blues Is Mine Ra

Roy Brooks ! what can i say about one of the greatest jazz drummers ?! a man who paid his dues, who lived an hard life...who's Detroit Jazz ! started to play in the 50's with Yusef Lateef, spent 5 years with Horace Silver doing the hard and the bop, then with Dexter Gordon, Lee Morgan, Jackie McLean, two years with Mingus, played with Max Roach M'Boom... plus many others... in the 80's he formed The Artistic Truth & The Aboriginal Percussion Choir... the rec. on this album is even more precious since this is the sole available rec. of this innovative group who had been assembled by Roy for this occasion only ! surely a unique sphere with very eclectic instrumentations and varied exotic flavors coming from Africa, the Caribbean/Cuba, Brazil, not to mention the blues from the deep South... Mr. Brooks latest proper release came out in 1983, so nearly 30 years ago ?! higher forces were in motion to make this happens... " ep https://www.soundohm.com/product/live-at-lelli-s/pid/16781/
 
Personnel:  Drums, Marimba, Steel Drums – Roy Brooks;  Congas, Bells, Percussion – Ray Mantilla;  Guitar – Rodney Rich; Organ [Hammond B-3 Organ] – Claudine Myers; Shaker, Cuica, Percussion, Tabla – Jerry LeDuf

Live at Lelli's

Sunday, December 2, 2018

John Wright - Makin' Out

Styles: Piano Jazz
Year: 2000
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 37:57
Size: 87,2 MB
Art: Front

(4:53)  1. Makin' Out
(4:31)  2. Like Someone In Love
(4:13)  3. Back In Jersey
(4:36)  4. Sparkie
(4:33)  5. Soul Search
(4:18)  6. It Could Happen To You
(3:14)  7. Street
(7:36)  8. Kitty

John Wright was born in Louisville, Kentucky in 1934 and moved to Chicago with his family two years later. As a child, he was immersed in the gospel music of his mother’s church; he learned jazz piano while stationed in Germany in the U.S. Army during the Korean War, where he also met Dizzy Gillespie and Dexter Gordon. His first recording in 1960, with the John Wright Trio, was entitled South Side Soul, a phrase that became his nickname. Over a lengthy musical career, and work as a librarian in the Cook County Department of Corrections, he has also had many political involvements. In 2008, he was inducted into the Wendell Phillips High School Hall of Fame, and in 2009 he was awarded the Walter Dyett Lifetime Achievement Award by the Jazz Institute of Chicago. ...Read More.. https://never-the-same.org/interviews/john-wright/

Personnel:  Piano –John Wright;  Bass – Wendell Marshall;  Drums – Roy Brooks;  Tenor Saxophone – Eddy "Cat-Eye" Williams

Makin' Out

Saturday, November 24, 2018

Roy Brooks and the Artistic Truth - Ethnic Expressions

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 48:45
Size: 112,4 MB
Art: Front

(16:03)  1. M'Jumbe
( 8:13)  2. The Last Prophet
( 5:53)  3. The Smart Set
( 5:33)  4. Eboness
(13:00)  5. Eboness (Kwanza)

Ethnic Expressions by Roy Brooks & the Artistic Truth is one of two recordings drum master Roy Brooks cut for the tiny Afrocentric New York imprint Im-Hotep. Released in 1973, it has been one of the most sought-after "Holy Grail" recordings on the collector's market, with copies selling at auction for over $1,200. The reason is not merely its rarity, but the stellar quality of its music and the focus of its vision reinventing the unity of African-American self-determination through music. Recording at Small's Paradise in Harlem on the tenth anniversary of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, this large collective of musicians created a positive, musically sophisticated, emotionally powerful performance that epitomized 1970s jazz as it incorporated the free, progressive, and spiritual jazz elements of the 1960s in a setting that also included soul and blues expression. The personnel includes Brooks on drums and percussion; Olu Dara and Cecil Bridgewater on trumpets and flügelhorn; Hamiet Bluiett, Sonny Fortune, and John Stubblefield on saxophones, flute, and bass clarinets; pianists Joe Bonner (acoustic) and Hilton Ruiz (Rhodes); bassist Reggie Workman; and Richard Landrum and Lawrence Williams on African percussion. Vocalist Eddie Jefferson also appears on the "The Smart Set" and "Eboness," at his most expressive and soulful. The album's five tracks include two longer pieces in "M'Jumbe" (whose arrangement reflects the time Brooks spent with Charles Mingus a year earlier) and the closing "Eboness (Kwanza)," as well as three middle-length pieces  The 16-minute "M'Jumbe" begins in a free call and response between trumpet, percussion, and bowed bass, gradually adding more instruments until its groove emerges at two minutes and its melody unfolds near the three-minute mark. Even as the horn sections quote the theme, improvisation moves in and out, funky themes are introduced with another melodic statement, and brief moments of free playing slip through before formal solos are taken. 

The tune is always circular due to its impeccably preeminent rhythmic elements. "The Last Prophet" showcases the band's groove side with stellar piano work from Bonner and a horn section in full swagger. The interplay between Workman and Brooks is magical. Jefferson's hip R&B roots are brought into play on the finger-popping "The Smart Set" and his blues authority on "Eboness," with some deep soul work from Workman and Ruiz as well as a fine flute solo from Fortune. On "Eboness (Kwanza)," the vocalist referred to as "Black Rose" is Dee Dee Bridgewater. This is a bona fide jazz classic; its importance as an example of the best that jazz had to offer in the 1970s cannot be overstated. [Ethnic Expressions slipped out of print in 1975, and remained out of print until Japan's P-Vine made it available for a limited time on CD in 2009. In 2010, however, Great Britain's Jazzman was able to license and reissue it on both CD and LP, making it widely available and affordable worldwide.] ~ Thom Jurek https://www.allmusic.com/album/ethnic-expressions-mw0001746882

Personnel:  Roy Brooks – drums & various percussion instruments;  Olu Dara – trumpet & E-flat horn;  Hamiet Bluiett – baritone sax & clarinet;  Reggie Workman - bass;  Joseph Bonner - piano; Black Rose – ethnic expressionist;  Eddie Jefferson – vocalist;  Cecil Bridgewater – trumpet & flugelhorn;  Sonny Fortune – alto sax & flute;  John Stubblefield – tenor sax, flute & bass clarinet; Hilton Ruiz – piano (Fender Rhodes);    Richard Landrum – African percussion;  Lawrence Williams – African percussion

Ethnic Expressions

Sunday, November 11, 2018

Roy Brooks - Beat

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop 
Year: 1963
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 31:13
Size: 71,7 MB
Art: Front

(5:16)  1. Homestretch
(4:48)  2. If You Could See Me Now
(4:36)  3. Passin' The Buck
(4:31)  4. Soulin'
(5:07)  5. Soulsphere
(6:54)  6. My Secret Passion

Recorded for Berry Gordy's short-lived Workshop Jazz imprint, Roy Brooks' simply but authoritatively titled Beat fuses the intellectual rigors of the modern idiom with the physical prowess of soul-jazz to create a record of uncommon scope and reach. Working with Horace Silver Quintet colleagues Blue Mitchell, Junior Cook, and Gene Taylor alongside Detroit contemporaries George Bohannon and Hugh Lawson, Brooks channels influences spanning the breadth of the Motor City scene, resulting in a clutch of challenging but engaging performances with the unmistakable patina of the embryonic Motown sound. While their technical proficiency is stunning, Brooks' rhythms never lose sight of the almighty groove, and for its hard bop stridency, the record has the proverbial good beat and you can dance to it. ~ Jason Ankeny https://www.allmusic.com/album/beat-mw0000383433

Personnel: Drums – Roy Brooks;  Bass – Eugene Taylor;  Piano – Hugh Lawson;  Tenor Saxophone [Tenor Sax] – Junior Cook;  Trombone – George Bohanon;  Trumpet – Blue Mitchell

Beat

Friday, November 9, 2018

Roy Brooks & the Artistic Truth - Black Survival

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1973
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 29:13
Size: 67,1 MB
Art: Front

( 5:04)  1. Black Survival
( 4:09)  2. Black Survival - Here and Now
( 7:30)  3. Sahel
(10:15)  4. Relief
( 2:15)  5. Black Survival - Prologue

"Roy Brooks and the Artistic Truth's Black Survival album is a true holy-grail for deep and spritual jazz collectors around the world. Black Survival is reissued here, digitally remastered and cased in bespoke original artwork exact reproduction on hardboard Japanese-style box case CD. This album was originally independently released to raise funds to combat the ongoing drought in the Sahel region of Africa (an area covering parts of Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Nigeria, Chad, Darfur, Sudan and Ethiopia). In his long and distinguished career, the legendary Detroit-born drummer Brooks played with everyone from Yusef Lateef, Pharoah Sanders, Max Roach, Charles Mingus. From 1959-64 he was in the Horace Silver Quintet performing on classic Blue Note albums such as Song For My Father. During his lifetime Brooks released precious few solo albums. His debut, Beat, was released in 1963 on Motown's then new off-shoot jazz label Jazz Workshop. His connection with his hometown label dated back to his time working with The Four Tops. In 1972, Brooks formed the Artistic Truth. Black Survival, the Sahel Concert at the Town Hall was originally released on the small independent Im-Hotep Records in Harlem in 1974 (which also released Brook's earlier Ethnic Expressions). After many years on the New York jazz scene, Brooks returned to Detroit in 1975, where he continued to perform with the Artistic Truth as well as forming the collective Musicians United to Save Indigenous Culture (MUSIC) along with Strata founder Kenny Cox and members of the Tribe collective, Wendell Harrison and Harold McKinney."

Personnel:  Bass – Reggie Workman;  Congas – Lawrence Williams;  Drums – Roy Brooks;  Oboe – John Stubberfield;  Piano – Joe Bonner;  Saxophone – Sonny Fortune;  Trumpet – Cecil Bridgewater;  Vocals – Dee Dee Bridgewater, JorDora Marshall

Black Survival

Wednesday, November 7, 2018

Roy Brooks - The Free Slave

Styles: Jazz, Post Bop
Year: 1970
File: MP3@320K/s
Time: 46:05
Size: 106,0 MB
Art: Front

(12:15)  1. The Free Slave
(10:55)  2. Understanding
( 9:08)  3. Will Pan's Walk
(13:45)  4. Five for Max

Originally released on the Muse label, this album is of vital importance not only because it is one of Brooks' few dates as leader, but also because it introduced much of the jazz world to trumpeter Woody Shaw, tenor saxophonist George Coleman, pianist Hugh Lawson, and bassist Cecil McBee. Recorded at the Left Bank Jazz Society in Baltimore, MD, Brooks and company reflect the music of the day, from straight post-bop and soul-jazz to ultra-modern sounds and unique percussion musings. There are four lengthy selections three written by Brooks, one by McBee. The set starts with the title track, which features soaring horn lines and a steady feel-good boogaloo fueled by ostinato piano and bass. Coleman's smooth tenor and Shaw's pungent trumpet contrast each other to good effect on this number. "Understanding" features a head where lead trumpet meets harmonious tenor. Shaw's trumpet solo intensifies Brooks' lovelight beat, and the piece ends in ticktock mode with counterpointed horns and delirious gong ringing. "Will Pan's Walk" has the seeds of a classic, with McBee's heavy ostinato contrasting Lawson's delicate shadings. On the finale, "Five for Max," Brooks cops many of Max Roach's signature trappings and adds a few of his own, including using a breath-a-tone device that allows him to heighten or lower the pitch of his drums by exhaling or inhaling through a pair of plastic tubes. Brooks can drive 'em completely wild and does on this exciting piece of modal modern jazz. Of course, Coleman, Shaw, Lawson, and McBee are nothing less than world-class. This is a band for the ages. ~ Michael G.Nastos https://www.allmusic.com/album/the-free-slave-mw0000037801

Personnel:  Roy Brooks - drums;  Woody Shaw - trumpet;  George Coleman - tenor saxophone;  Hugh Lawson - piano;  Cecil McBee - bass

The Free Slave