At Basin StreetClifford Brown/Max Roach Quintet (Jazz)
Release Date: 08/07/1990
Original Release:
1956
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 60891_CD
UPC # 042281464829
Label: Polygram
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Disc: 1
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Performer: Clifford Brown/Max Roach Quintet (Jazz)
Artist: Harold Land; Sonny Rollins Distributor: Universal Distribution Notes: Personnel: Clifford Brown (trumpet); Max Roach (drums); Sonny Rollins (tenor saxophone); Richie Powell (piano); George Morrow (bass). Producer: Bob Shad. Recorded in New York, New York on January 4 and February 16, 1956. Personnel: Clifford Brown (trumpet); Max Roach (drums); Harold Land (tenor saxophone); Richie Powell (piano); George Morrow (bass). Recorded on August 2, 3, 6 & 10, 1954. BROWN & ROACH INC. is a specially imported, limited-edition reissue with 3 bonus tracks. All tracks have been digitally remastered (24-bit). Personnel: Clifford Brown (trumpet); Max Roach (drums); Sonny Rollins (tenor saxophone); Richie Powell (piano). Audio Remasterer: Kiyoshi Tokiwa. Recording information: New York, NY (01/04/1956-02/16/1956). Recorded mere months before Clifford Brown died in a car crash, 1956's AT BASIN STREET finds the revered trumpeter in top form, co-leading an ensemble with drummer Max Roach that included saxophonist Sonny Rollins and pianist Richie Powell (who was also killed in the accident). Morbid associations aside, this record is a vibrant hard-bop outing with Brown's amazingly agile horn lines always commanding attention even when compared to Rollins's robust sax work. Standout tracks include a swift, swinging rendition of "Love Is a Many-Splendored Thing" and the bright, uplifting take on "I'll Remember April." When Clifford Brown and Max Roach passed through Chicago in the latter part of 1955, a pregnant Mrs. Harold Land wired her husband to come back home to Los Angeles; so Sonny Rollins filled the tenor chair. The rest would have been history, except that Clifford Brown and pianist Richie Powell perished in an auto accident the following summer. But AT BASIN STREET remains, marking Rollins' debut and documenting the emergence of the decade's most innovative small combo and three of its greatest solo voices. Still, much of this band's enduring grace emanates from the charts and accompaniments of their underrated pianist, Richie Powell--Bud Powell's kid brother. He transforms a sappy popular standard such as "Love Is A Many Splendored Thing" through the use of multiple meters, rhythm changes and radical harmonic plumbing, while the witty intro to his own "Gertrude's Bounce" parodies "Santa Claus Is Coming To Town" before breaking into a spirited bebop line. Elsewhere, his punctilious phrasing is a studied contrast to the Olympian effusions of Brown, Roach and Rollins, and his varied vamps and shifting backgrounds give each piece big-band depth. And what monumental soloing: "I'll Remember April," a standout on an album of classics, begins with Roach, Powell and bassist George Morrow in a sprightly Afro-Cuban vamp, before Brownie's glorious rendition of the head and Rollins' cunning reprise of the bridge. Brownie's crackling lyric variations over Roach's swift, brushfire beat are brimming with harmonic and rhythmic intricacies, while Rollins plays cat and mouse with the changes, creating tremendous tension. And Roach follows Powell's wonderful harmonic contrasts with a study in rhythmic architecture, before ushering Brownie and Rollins back in for some epic out choruses. Given all the Clifford Brown compilations that have saturated the market, it's nice to hear a full original album by the lauded trumpeter. On this 1954 release, Brown--who died in a '56 car wreck at age 25--teams up with drummer Max Roach, and the result is a classic set of bebop. Standards "I Don't Stand a Ghost of a Chance with You" and "Stompin' at the Savoy" are played with mastery, and originals "Sweet Clifford" and "Mildama" by Brown and Roach respectively, highlight the two virtuosos' technical and conceptual abilities; breathtaking trumpet and drum solos are heard on both cuts. However, it is the wistful "Darn That Dream" that steals the show on this record. A gorgeous ballad in the hands of any professional, the De Lange-Van Heusen standard really shines when played by these jazz greats.
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Bebop |