One of Payne's best albums. The review compares with Nick Brignola's LA Bound.
Chris Sheridan, Jazz Journal October 1980:
“The ability of groups with identical instrumentation to produce music
of widely differing character is one of the constant joys of jazz. It is
also a constant threat to the already fragile business of comparison,
so this review intends, instead, to celebrate the positive differences
between these two fine albums.
In general terms, there is the curious aspect that it is the older men
who explore the more contemporary music (Equinox, Roland Kirk's Bright
Moments). Brignola's album, then, is marginally the more conservative —
but it is his best yet, just as Payne's is his best for a considerable
time. Another point of difference is tonal. Payne, once the possessor of
the hugest of baritone timbres has mellowed enormously, playing with
almost no vibrato and an airy breathiness. Brignola plays his instrument
fiercely, and with much of the rasping bite that characterised the
younger Payne.
His programme is the more immediately infectious, with an emphasis on
compelling up-tempo blowing (Quicksilver, Groovin' et al), balanced by
pungency (Smada) and the sunny Latin approach (Bossa). There is only one
ballad, and it is played with muscular tenderness. Payne's session,
with a ballad medley succeeded by a slow, rocking modal performance,
injects pace only for the boppish blues, Disorder, and Speak Low. Its
depth is likely to be taken for granted, but both horns play with
profundity, feeling and melodic grace. Nor does the relative immediacy
of Brignola's LP debar such virtues — it possesses a conviction and
inspiration which create lasting music.
Some individual honours: the warm sensitive entwining of lines in the
Brignola-Dickerson duet, Spring Is Here; Watrous's incredible technique
being at last geared to meaningful self-expression
(Quicksilver, Mellow Tone); Green's slippery bass, its dynamics and
time; Pyne's logic and Payne's bustling lyricism; Fuller's balladic
warmth (Lover Man) and up-tempo bite (Disorder). All in all, two
excellent celebrations of honest music.”
01 - Ballad Medley
02 - Equinox
03 - Disorder At The Border
04 - Bright Moments
05 - Solar
06 - Speak Low
Curtis Fuller (tb) Cecil Payne (fl,bs)Mick Pyne (p) Dave Green (b) Alan Jackson (d)
London, July 19 & 20, 1979