Tuesday, July 24, 2018

Shirley Scott & Kenny Burrell - Travelin' Light (1964) [re-rip]

Kenny Burrell joins the trio of organist Shirley Scott for this sweet little album – a set that seems to burn a bit more than usual for Shirley, probably because of the cool-toned guitar lines from Kenny! The album's got the same laid back feel as other Scott albums of the time, but Burrell really digs in during his solos - adding a bit more bite, and inspiring Shirley to do the same on her own Hammond lines. Bass is by Eddie Khan and drums are by Otis Finch – and titles include "Solar", "The Kerry Dance", "They Call It Stormy Monday", "Nice N Easy", and "Baby It's Cold Outside". © Dusty Groove, Inc.

In February 1964 - sandwiched between two recording sessions with then husband and tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine - organist Shirley Scott recorded with guitarist Kenny Burrell. She had just wrapped Hustlin' with Turrentine at the end of January and would be back in the studio for Blue Flames at the end of March. Backing Scott and Burrell on this Ozzie Cadena-produced album for Prestige were bassist Eddie Khan and drummer Otis "Candy" Finch. What makes this album so exciting is what's missing - a boss. Turrentine's appeal on Scott dates was his soulful command and searing reed statements before and after Scott solos. Here, Scott and Burrell play off each other in tender ways. It's a hip rhythm-section date - with all the swinging, playful interchanges you find when the sax on an organ date sits out. After Scott's solos, instead of the Turrentine train roaring out of the tunnel, you get Burrell's ringing, single-note lines. The ear likes what it hears. The session's song choices also are perfect in every way. The track list features Travelin' Light, Solar, Nice 'n' Easy, They Call It Stormy Monday, Baby It's Cold Out There and The Kerry Dance. What's interesting is how Scott plays behind Burrrell. Fully aware of the guitar's sonic limitations, she offers huge support to fill the space - offering both texture and a frame for Burrell. Scott and Burrell played well together. For me, the title tune, Solar and Nice 'n' Easy say it all - a glorious pace, groovy ideas and earthy camaraderie. ~ Marc Myers, jazzwax.com.

Prestige Records, PRST 7328, 1964
Recorded 17th February, 1964 at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
         
Musicians:
Shirley Scott - Organ
Kenny Burrell - Guitar
Eddie Khan - Bass
Otis Finch - Drums

Tracks:
A1. Travelin' Light {Trummy Young, Johnny Mercer, Jimmy Mundy} (4:41)
A2. Solar {Miles Davis} (6:03)
A3. Nice 'N' Easy {Marilyn Keith, Alan Bergman, Lew Spence} (4:34)
B1. They Call It Stormy Monday {Aaron Walker} (11:08)
B2. Baby It's Cold Outside {Frank Loesser} (3:49)
B3. The Kerry Dance {Traditional} (3:04)

Credits:
Producer - Ozzie Cadena
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Design, Photo - Don Schlitten
Liner Notes - R. D. Harlan (May 1964) WNCN, New York City

13 comments:

  1. Thanks for the upload,

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  2. Just played this one. Shirly S at her very, very best - which, you have to agree, is pretty damn good. Gorgeous. Thanks so much.

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  3. Very nice Chris! Thanks for this old Prestige. Wonder if Stan got jealous?

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  4. This looks great -- I think prefer Scott albums without a horn. Really looking forward to checking this out! Thank you!

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  5. Thanks for another great vinyl of Ms. Scott!! (with the underrated and unsung Otis "Candy" Finch on drums!)

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  6. Another great session totally unknown to me, as many of the posts here on the Crypt...Thank you Chris!

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  7. Shirley Scott & Kenny Burrell - Travelin' Light {FLAC} (1964)
    [214.23MB]
    https://1fichier.com/?1thjsw92kh1vwfpicguu

    Shirley Scott & Kenny Burrell - Travelin' Light {FLAC} (1964) Side A
    [101.07MB]
    http://www.mediafire.com/file/k0v4k7ao5h4rj9x/SS+KB-T%27L-SA.rar

    Shirley Scott & Kenny Burrell - Travelin' Light {FLAC} (1964) Side B
    [113.16MB]
    http://www.mediafire.com/file/3jvakz59cvmsuyb/SS+KB-T%27L-SB.rar

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  8. Many thanks.

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  9. Gorgeous stuff, a team made in heaven: each one spousin' other's feeling. If you need a proof why Kenny was the Duke's favorite guitar player, you don't need to go further. Huge thks, Chris! And thks too for your marvelous rips!

    zardoz1984

    ReplyDelete