You’re how old? 19! Jeebus, you’re the Sidney Crosby of Jazz, I guess. This album is surprisingly great. Although I would say it’s really the baritone sax of Pepper Adams that makes this album as good as it is. Still, friggin’ 19???? Overall this is a keeper — 4/5 stars
What a great album. I think the AMG sums it up best:
Blue Delight is a great late-period Arkestra recording, notable for several reasons: 1. This is a very large, impeccably recorded Arkestra featuring special guests Tommy Turrentine and Don Cherry AND a number of Arkestra alumni returning for the date. 2. Although synthesizers are present, the majority of Ra’s solos are on piano. 3. John Gilmore solos on nearly every cut. 4. The band swings mightily from start to finish. Blue Delight also features a program of a handful of standards mixed with Ra originals that don’t head too far into outer space
It came to my attention that some people might not know of this country’s 2nd best songwriter (2nd to …) . If you don’t, stop right now and go buy his eponymous classic.
This album was a bit of a surprise, I thought I remember it being subpar but upon my recent listen, it delivers. It’s not his best but it is a solid effort with such classics as “Be Here to Love Me Today” and “Our Mother The Mountain” (plus I like the way he says “Tecumseh Valley”).
I’m not sure I can even describe this album properly. It is subdued yet intricate, soft yet hard driving, mellow yet intense. The piano and composition provide a great canvas for the real stars — the bass and drum rhythm section. Andrew does one of my favorite techniques where the piano will provide a soft, mellow main rhythm while the drums and bass add their own, often quite intricate, rhythms to create a challenging polyrhythmic piece. 4/5 stars
I have a lot of Monk albums and sometimes each one doesn’t particularly stand out. This is especially true, I think, of his later work. However, this is a nice exception. The pieces are mostly Monk classics but Charlie Rouse on Tenor Sax and, notably, Charlie Higgins on drums make these stand-out performances. The highlights for me are Epistrophy and Evidence but every track is good. The AMG review is underservedly light. This is a 5 star album in my book
A pretty good album by ELP. And sometimes they have what I like to call an “ELP button” . Lucky Man is a good example — perfectly good acoustic song and then keyboard effects overwhelm it out of nowhere. But, I digress. There are a few boring songs like Abaddon’s Bolero but some undiscovered gems like The Sheriff not to mention the famous Hoe-down.