Wednesday, September 17, 2014

Don Patterson - These Are Soulful Days (1973) [re-rip]

On this 1973 date, organist Don Patterson and guitarist Pat Martino again show themselves to be equally at home with gritty, organ combo sounds and the more refined vocabulary of hard bop. Brothers Jimmy Heath (tenor sax) and Albert Heath (drums) round out the band. They are bop-oriented players who also have an affinity for the Patterson and Martino blend of brains and barbecue sauce. The quartet comes together nicely on all five tracks, beginning with the long, melodic line of Cal Massey's mid-tempo title track and winding up with the slow-cooking, 18-minute "Muse Blues." As for the group's cover of "Whistle While You Work," Patterson, Martino, and the Heaths transform the Disney ditty into a solid, straight-ahead, swinger, with intelligent solo work and without a speck of corn. Patterson's pianistic approach and sparing use of bass pedals creates lots of space for his bandmates. Martino, who is known for his fleet, single-note solo work spends considerable time playing behind the soloists on this set, demonstrating what a staggeringly accomplished accompanist he can be. Heath draws on his history with Dizzy Gillespie, Milt Jackson, and Art Farmer, and as a leader in his own right, to build tenor solos that have force, logic, and passion. These Are Soulful Days is easily recommendable to fans of classic organ, guitar, sax combos, as well as to listeners who simply enjoy the playing of top-flight jazz musicians who have a healthy respect for the music's blues roots. ~ by Jim Todd, Allmusic.com.

Muse Records, MR 5032, 1973
Recorded 17th September, 1973

Personnel:
Don Patterson - Organ
Pat Martino - Guitar
Jimmy Heath - Tenor Saxophone
Albert Heath - Drums

Track Listing:
A1. These Are Soulful Days {Cal Massey} (8:19)
A2. Whistle While You Work {Frank Churchill, Larry Morey} (7:33)
A3. Skylark {Hoagy Carmichael, Johnny Mercer} (9:13)
B1. Blue 'N' Boogie {Dizzy Gillespie, Frank Paparelli} (4:11)
B2. Muse Blues {Don Patterson} (17:54)

Credits:
Producer - Don Schlitten
Engineer - Paul Goodman

“These Are Soulful Days” is a very rewarding set; it catches Don Patterson at his very best. It features Don in a fine quartet which includes Jimmy Heath on tenor sax, Pat Martino on guitar and Albert Heath on drums. Right from the start the quartet presents an exhilarating interpretation of Cal Massey's and the album's title tune. This is followed by two standards ”Skylark” and an unusual but rewarding version of “Whistle While You Work”; and finally two blues compositions “Blue 'N' Boogie” by Dizzy Gillespie and Patterson's own lengthy “Muse Blues”. All players have opportunities to solo; Patterson in particular shows great sensitivity. Jimmy Heath excels on “Whistle While You Work” and “Blue 'N' Boogie” and indeed Pat Martino has no trouble blending seamlessly with Patterson on all tunes adding some amazing solos, especially heard on the slower tracks. However he really comes into his own and truly expresses his expertise on the faster numbers.

According to Douglas Payne this is Patterson’s ‘best recorded work and offers proof that this melodic bop organist is a neglected talent that, even a decade after his death, remains deserving of wider recognition.'

4 comments:

  1. Thanks Chris. Really like the Morgan/McLean version of the title track and looking forward to hearing this version. I always find Cal Massey compositions to be a notch above most hard bop tunes.

    ReplyDelete