Showing posts with label Bobby Hutcherson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bobby Hutcherson. Show all posts

Sunday, 17 February 2013

Review: Grant Green - Street Of Dreams

A huge Grant Green fan, I have pretty much written reviews for everything he ever recorded (so much, and yet so little). My struggle now is to stagger these so this doesn't become the Grant Green Blog. At some point I'll post some of his less favourable albums, but in the meantime here is the 'companion' recording to his masterpiece 'Idle Moments' - 'Street Of Dreams'.


Sometimes referred to, quite rightly, as the godfather of acid jazz, Grant Green is surely now one of the most sampled guitarists of all-time. Whereas his earlier material and records took on a cool slant on jazz, his work from the late 60’s till his death in the late 70’s became increasingly funk driven, often built around extended and, crucially, infectious  jams.

His legacy has tended to be vastly overshadowed by Wes Montgomery, who in truth was a more rounded and polished player, but his albums with Blue Note, especially those from the early part of his career have endured incredibly well, of which ‘Street Of Dream’ is definitely in the list of top picks.

‘Idle Moments’ is arguably his finest effort, and ‘Street Of Dreams’, though not as strong, breathes that same late-night atmosphere, also boasting a welcome reunion with vibes-man Bobby Hutcherson. A line-up featuring no bass or horns in any form, the group is completed courtesy of organ player Larry Young and, borrowed from John Coltrane’s quartet, Elvin Jones on drums.

Four tunes make up the album, including the much covered, usually as a vocal number, ‘Lazy Afternoon’. Structurally different to its normal performance, Green makes it the best tune here. Throughout, his guitar is so fluid and smooth; he makes it sound effortless and dreamlike. By listening here you can clearly see the influence he paved for future guitarists, notably George Benson, and to a lesser extent Nigel Price.

What really makes the album cook though is Young’s organ playing. Indispensable  he plays with a soulful and gentle touch that many others could never reach. Jones makes some some strong poly-rhythmic work, which when combined with Hutchersons subtle vibes work, works to create a nice richly-textured background.

The title track alone needs to be heard, and is one of Green’s best covers, but also very worthy of note is the ‘Naked City’ TV series theme ‘Somewhere In The Night’, which after the version played here would go on to be picked up by many more jazz players.

A mellow groove permeates the whole of ‘Street Of Dreams’ with some slick and astounding lines from all three soloists. A great Green recording, and clearly one of his best, it’s one of the most soulful jazz albums to ever be released and should be in any guitar jazzers collection.

*****

Review: Bobby Hutcherson - Oblique


'Oblique' is probably my favourite Bobby Hutcherson album of the sixties. Odd then that it sat in the vaults unreleased for almost 15 years. Such is the way of prolific Blue Note recording artists...


‘Oblique’ was Bobby Hutcherson’s second session both leading a quartet and attempting a more commercially viable take on his normally more avant-garde stylings. Sharing three-quarters of the band from ‘Happenings’, Herbie Hancock and Joe Chambers both make a welcome return, while Albert Stinson replaces the more well-known Bob Cranshaw on bass. Not that this should be seen in any way as ‘Happenings 2’; here there’s much less focus on Hutcherson the composer, with Hancock and Chambers both contributing - for the better - and also whereas before everything both benefitted and suffered from a little too much simplicity, ‘Oblique’ revels in it’s greater complexity.

The opening sweet samba-light ‘’Til Then’ sounds, at first glance, like a simple number, but underneath there’s a huge amount going on, and both the vibes and the piano get some exhilarating solos. As does ‘My Joy’, which starts at first as a waltz, before moving into a harder territory, and serves as a perfect launchpad for a blinding solo by Stinson.

The third piece though raises the bar. Hancock’s classic ‘Theme From Blow-Up’ is given perhaps the most straight jazz reading that he was ever involved in, with some stellar complementing between Hancock and Hutcherson, and the only real downside being that it highlights just how much stronger the pianists compositions are than that of the bandleaders.

‘Subtle Neptune’ returns to samba and gives the vibesman his best solo of the album, while intriguingly Hancock delivers his worst. Not outright bad, it’s merely long and winding without really adding anything. Afterwards though, we hit the double winning hit of the title track and ‘Bi-Sectional’. ‘Oblique’ is the emotional peak, with thoughtful traded moves between piano and vibes, while ‘Bi-Sectional’ begins almost playfully, before Hutcherson and Chambers begin a full-on percussion attack.

Bobby Hutcherson’s ‘Oblique’ is along with ‘Happenings’ only one of two quartet dates he recorded for Blue Note, but unlike that earlier album, was another of the label’s sessions that stayed in the vault until 1980 for it’s first release – and then only in Japan. And the truth is, it’s actually a far superior date than ‘Happenings’, boasting greater energy, creativity, compositions and even band. Albert Stinson is a wonderfully inventive player, who if listened to closely is doing a great many things under the rest of the band. Tragically, he would die only two years after this recording, aged just twenty-four.

One of Hutcherson’s greatest albums, its infrequent availability only serves to heighten its status. Not that it needs it by any means; the whole recording is a clear winner from start to end. Anyone with any interest in Hutcherson at all should seek this perfect five-star session out immediately.

Oblique artworks - 1980 Japan-only release, and the more traditional Blue Note style 2005 RVG Remaster.
*****

Saturday, 16 February 2013

Review: Bobby Hutcherson - Happenings

Bobby Hutcherson is probably my favourite vibraphone player. I say 'probably' as I love the music and playing of Gary Burton, but Hutcherson's sheer variety of sound in his work is absolutely incredible. Personally I'm a fan of his more avant-garde material, and his work from the 1970's in particular. But for a first Hutch album review, why not something a little less cerebral, and a little more easy to get into...



Bobby Hutchersons ‘Happenings’ marked a new direction for the vibraphonist. Moving away from the avant-garde and his adventurous compositions that had made his name, it’s sometimes seen as perhaps less important than the work that he recorded just before, and that he would create later. It’s a perhaps uninformed opinion, with the album being the first to present the vibesman as the soloist leading a conventional rhythm section of piano, bass and drums, instead of the experimentally focused larger groups he’d played with earlier in his career. As a consequence it’s probably one of the easiest of his albums to get into and also one of the the best introductions to his music.

Another first is that the entire album, barring one track, is composed by Hutcherson, whereas previously he had relied on other writers. Much of it is very good too, right from the stomping opener ‘Aquarian Moon’. It’s balanced nicely too, from the swinging of ‘Head Start’, to the soft and gentle ‘Bouquet’, while taking in funky Latin grooves on the excellent ‘Rojo’, and on ‘When You Are Near’, showcasing some strong ballad playing that also stands as Hutchersons best composition here, but somewhat frustratingly it’s also the shortest. The best overall though is the take on Herbie Hancocks classic ‘Maiden Voyage’, which has always been an outstanding piece and here is given a brilliant treatment. Hancock of course is here too, and he’s on fire as he always was throughout the sixties, with the remainder of the rhythm team being made up by Bob Cranshaw and Joe Chambers.

Most of the pieces in truth though are more nicely composed than being exceptional, but the playing on each of them is second to none, and it is this that elevates everything to sounding absolutely terrific. The only disturbance to this highly listenable and accessible music comes with the final track ‘The Omen’. An ambitious sprawl that sounds more at home with the far experimental music of his earlier records, its stop-start cacophony doesn’t sit at all with the rest of the album - and its likely to make most listeners confused as to what they’re hearing, having just experienced the much easier sounding grooves a few minutes earlier. Its inclusion here really on this record is a very big mis-step.

Having laid down highly memorable work on other Blue Note alumni’s recordings, such as Eric Dolphy’s much-lauded ‘Out To Lunch’ and Grant Green’s outstanding double-excellence of ‘Idle Moments’ and ‘Street Of Dreams’, Hutcherson with ‘Happenings’ launched himself as a more acceptably closer-to-the-mainstream artist, and the gamble largely paid off. Just over a year later the same band, with Cranshaw replaced by Albert Stinson, would go on to record Hutchersons ‘Oblique’. He and Hancock’s exquisite partnership would even better highlight just how good they could be together, and with the upping of the quality of the writing the session would be even better.

‘Happenings’ is Hutchersons bid for mainstream jazz acceptance and it works a treat. A classy recording, it’s one of the vibes players most easy and relaxed dates as a leader, and only one of two ever dates leading a quartet, as well being a simply great showcase for Hancock. For the best introduction to the Bobby Hutcherson, this is for most a good starting point – but there is much greater music worth exploring in Hutcherson’s catalogue for anyone wanting to dip more than just a toe in the water.


****