Showing posts with label Art Taylor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Art Taylor. Show all posts

Bud Powell -The Scene Changes: The Amazing Bud Powell, Vol. 5 (2015) [24-192]


Pianist Bud Powell made several fine recordings for Blue Note during the 1950s, including The Scene Changes, his last album for the label in 1958. He's joined by bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Art Taylor on a handful of his own compositions. Powell is in excellent form, and there's a simple elegance to the small setting with each of the players sharing equal space in the stereo spectrum. The title cut bops along at a snappy pace before taking time out toward the end for a Taylor solo, while 'Down With It' is pushed forward by Powell's forceful, driving rhythm. Extra touches here and there, like the piano intro on 'Cleopatra's Dream' and the drum roll that kicks off 'Duid Deed,' lets the listener know these players are in the groove. Only 'Boderick' sticks out as minor, and the fact that the players only devote two minutes to this parlor-piano piece seems to indicate they felt the same way. Powell, Chambers, and Taylor make amends for this on the eight-minute 'Coming Up,' a medium-tempo piece with idiosyncratic piano lines and a thumping beat (the bonus cut includes a shorter version of the composition). The Scene Changes is a fine album filled with good compositions and nice interplay between three musicians in top form.“ 

Lou Donaldson Quintet - Wailing With Lou (1957/2014/FLAC)


 Wailing With Lou is an appropriate title for this enjoyable set of straight-ahead bop. Whether he's riding the propulsive rhythms of 'Caravan' or settling down into a ballad, Donaldson takes the center stage with his surprisingly full alto tone. He still displays a clear Charlie Parker influence, but he is beginning to break free and develop his own style. In particular, he relies on bluesy runs more than Bird, which give his music a soulful edge. But what makes Wailing With Lou so enjoyable is the hot interplay between Donaldson, trumpeter Donald Byrd, pianist Herman Foster, bassist Peck Morrison and drummer Art Taylor. All five musicians give enthusiastic, infectious performances. There's nothing out of the ordinary here -- just hard-driving bop and sensitive ballads, which are sure to please fans of the style.





  • Lou Donaldson, alto saxophone
  • Donald Byrd, trumpet
  • Herman Foster, piano
  • Peck Morrison, bass
  • Art Taylor, drums

Recorded January 27, 1957 Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack
Produced by Alfred Lion
Engineered by Rudy Van Gelder
Digitally remastered

01. L.D. Blues (5:20)
02. Caravan (5:57)
03. Old Folks (6:20)
04. That Good Old Feeling (6:50)
05. Move It (5:53)
06. There Is No Greater Love (6:53)

Art Taylor - Taylor's Wailers (1957/2012/FLAC)


Five of the six selections on this CD reissue feature drummer Art Taylor in an all-star sextet of mostly young players comprised of trumpeter Donald Byrd, altoist Jackie McLean, Charlie Rouse on tenor, pianist Ray Bryant, and bassist Wendell Marshall. Among the highpoints of the 1957 hard bop date are the original version of Bryant's popular "Cubano Chant" and strong renditions of two Thelonious Monk tunes ("Off Minor" and "Well, You Needn't") cut just prior to the pianist/composer's discovery by the jazz public. Bryant is the most mature of the soloists, but the three horn players were already starting to develop their own highly individual sounds. The remaining track (a version of Jimmy Heath's "C.T.A.") is played by the quartet of Taylor, tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, and bassist Paul Chambers and is a leftover (although a good one) from another session.

  • Art Taylor - drums
  • Donald Byrd (#1,3-6) - trumpet
  • Jackie McLean (#1,3-6) - alto saxophone
  • Charlie Rouse (#1,3-6), John Coltrane (#2) - tenor saxophone
  • Ray Bryant (#1,3-6), Red Garland (#2) - piano
  • Wendell Marshall (#1,3-6), Paul Chambers (#2) - bass

Recorded at the Van Gelder Studios, Hackensack, NJ on February 25 (#1,3-6) and March 22 (#2), 1957.

01. Batland (Sears) - 9:53
02. C.T.A. (Heath) - 4:44
03. Exhibit A (Sears) - 6:15
04. Cubano Chant (Bryant) - 6:36
05. Off Minor (Monk) - 5:38
06. Well, You Needn't (Monk) - 8:01 






Blue Note Works 4000-4100 series [4041-4050]

 
...The Modern Jazz Series continued into the 1970s with the LPs listed below. Many were issued in both monaural versions (BLP series) and stereo versions (BST 84000 series).  Most of the 4000 series have been reissued by Toshiba-EMI in Japan ("Blue Note Works 4000" series); the catalog numbers are TOCJ-4###



BN.4041- Tina Brooks- 1960- True Blue {RVG Remaster}
BN.4042- Horace Silver- 1960- Horace-Scope {RVG Remaster}
BN.4043- Horace Parlan- 1960- Speakin' My Piece
BN.4044- The Three Sounds- 1960- Moods
BN.4045- Freddie Redd- 1960- Shades of Redd {RVG Remaster}
BN.4046- Duke Jordan- 1960- Flight To Jordan {RVG Remaster}
BN.4047- Art Taylor- 1960- A.T.'s Delight {RVG Remaster}
BN.4048- Donald Byrd- 1960- Byrd in Flight
BN.4049- Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers- 1960- A Night In Tunisia {RVG Remaster}
BN.4050- Jimmy Smith- 1959- Home Cookin' {RVG Remaster}