Jazz Sermon
23Feb/100

Miles Davis Quintet – “So What”

Live on the Steve Allen Show, 1964.  Miles, Herbie, Wayne, Ron and Tony.  Nuff said !!

30Nov/090

Listening Room – Expansions

Expansions

McCoy Tyner - Vision

McCoy Tyner - Smitty's Place

From "Expansions" : 1968 : Blue Note BST 84338

A classic (but out-of-print) session from a post-Coltrane McCoy Tyner.  With a group of all-star players - including Wayne Shorter, Woody Shaw, Gary Bartz and Ron Carter - this album deserves a wider audience.  The album opens with Vision which fully showcases the soloing skills of all the players, with Carter's cello and Shaw's trumpet playing really standing out.  Smitty's Place has a great enthusiastic feeling as the group bounces and swings with each other.  Overall the record is a nice blend of the hard-bop and post-bop styles, with just the right amount of free-jazz and avant-garde elements to make the record a nice summation of Tyner's career up to this point and where it would soon be heading in just a few years with his outstanding albums of the 1970's.

Players:
McCoy Tyner - Piano
Woody Shaw - Trumpet
Gary Bartz - Alto Sax, Wooden Flute
Wayne Shorter - Tenor Sax, Clarinet
Ron Carter - Cello
Herbie Lewis - Bass
Freddie Waits - Drums

28Oct/090

Listening Room – “Weather Report”

Weather Report

Weather Report - Eurydice

Weather Report -Tears

Weather Report - Orange Lady

From "Weather Report" : 1971 : Columbia KC 30661

This 1971 album (not to be confused with the group's 1982 album of the same name) was the debut record from Weather Report.  At this point, the music was still very classic fusion in the vein of "Bitches Brew" and "In A Silent Way", although with much more concise compositions.  There will always be debate over which Weather Report line-up was the best, but for my money the music on this album is still some of the strongest the group ever made.

Players:
Wayne Shorter - Soprano & Tenor Sax
Joe Zawinul - Piano, Electric Piano
Miroslav Vitous - Bass
Airto Moreira - Percussion
Alphonse Mouzon - Drums

24Sep/090

Wayne Shorter – Live at Montreux 1996

Live at Montreux

JAZZ TIMES
April 2009
By Bill Meredith

From the 1950s through the 1980s, saxophonist Wayne Shorter played with some of the greatest bands in jazz, including Art Blakey’s Jazz Messengers, the Miles Davis Quintet and Weather Report. Shorter also started his solo recording career during the 1950s, but didn’t primarily become a solo artist until Weather Report’s 1985 coda. Yet as his new Live at Montreux DVD shows, some of the saxophonist’s subsequent touring units (and there are three on display here, counting the bonus tracks) merited comparison with those supergroups.

Shorter opens the set on tenor with “On the Milky Way Express,” from his Grammy-winning 1996 album High Life. The band of keyboardist James Beard, guitarist David Gilmore, bassist Alphonso Johnson and drummer Rodney Holmes contributes to a dramatic intro buildup, and Shorter’s old Weather Report bandmate Johnson delivers a melodic solo. A showy 1991 bonus version of the same tune, with the lineup of keyboardist Herbie Hancock, bassist Stanley Clarke and drummer Omar Hakim, provides contrast near disc’s end.

Other tracks showcase the primary band’s interaction, and go far beyond their contemporary recorded versions. “At the Fair,” with Shorter on soprano, features a soaring solo by Gilmore and creative accents on the entire drum kit by Holmes. Both musicians also stand out on the frenetic “Over Shadow Hill Way,” from Shorter’s 1988 album Joy Ryder. Another gem is “Children of the Night,” with a muscular mid-tempo funk arrangement that bears little resemblance to the version Shorter played with Blakey. The final bonus cuts, “Pinocchio” and “Pee Wee/Theme,” feature Shorter reuniting with the other members of Davis’ great 1960s quintet (Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, drummer Tony Williams). Captured the year after Davis’ death, and featuring trumpeter Wallace Roney, the acoustic tracks provide fitting and fascinating closure.

3Sep/091

Listening Room – “Schizophrenia”

Schizophrenia

Wayne Shorter - Kryptonite

Wayne Shorter - Tom Thumb

From "Schizophrenia" : 1967 : Blue Note BST 84297

Players:
Wayne Shorter - Tenor Sax
James Spaulding - Alto Sax, Flute
Curtis Fuller - Trombone
Herbie Hancock - Piano
Ron Carter - Bass
Joe Chambers - Drums

7May/090

Listening Room – “Kelly Great”

This 1959 record teams Wynton Kelly with fellow Vee-Jay Records artsits Wayne Shorter and Lee Morgan for a satisfying hard-bop session.  This album was pretty rare before it was re-released on CD and hopefully the original tracks (one each by Morgan (What I Know) and Kelly (Wrinkles), two by Shorter) might now get of the attention they deserve.

Kelly Great
Buy at Amazon

Released 1960  :  Vee-Jay Records  :  Catalog # LPS-1016

Players:
Wynton Kelly - Piano
Wayne Shorter - Tenor Sax
Lee Morgan - Trumpet
Paul Chambers - Bass
Philly Joe Jones - Drums

Wynton Kelly - Wrinkles from "Kelly Great"

Wynton Kelly - What Now from "Kelly Great"

7May/090

Listening Room – “Night Dreamer”

This was Wayne Shorter's first album for Blue Note and contains six original tracks from a guy who would become one of the most important composers of jazz in the 1960's.  The 1964 album has a slight Coltrane influence, but it definitely shows Shorter finding his own style (after five very succesful years with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers).  A classic Blue Note album that features a great line-up including Lee Morgan, McCoy Tyner and Elvin Jones.

Night Dreamer
Buy at Amazon

Released 1964  :  Blue Note Records  :  Catalog # BLP 4173

Players:
Wayne Shorter - Tenor Sax
Lee Morgan - Trumpet
McCoy Tyner - Piano
Reggie Workman - Bass
Elvin Jones - Drums

Wayne Shorter - Night Dreamer from "Night Dreamer"

Wayne Shorter - Virgo from "Night Dreamer"

9Feb/090

Listening Room – “Caravan”

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - "Caravan"

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers - "Skylark"

From "Caravan" : 1962 : Riverside Records

This was Art Blakey and The Jazz Messengers first of several great albums recorded for Riverside starting in 1962. The players Blakey assembled are some of the best hard bop players of that or any era. Standout tracks include their take on Ellington's classic Caravan and the pop standard Skylark.

Players:
Art Blakey - Drums
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet
Curtis Fuller - Trombone
Wayne Shorter - Tenor Sax
Cedar Walton - Piano
Reggie Workman - Bass