Showing posts with label Freddie Hubbard. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Freddie Hubbard. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 2, 2025

Milt Jackson - Sunflower (1972) [vinyl]

Recorded over two days in December of 1972 at Rudy Van Gelder's Englewood, New Jersey home studio, vibraphonist Milt Jackson's Sunflower is the first -- and best -- of his three albums for Creed Taylor's CTI imprint. (And one of the finest offerings on the label.) With a core band consisting of Herbie Hancock (playing electric and acoustic piano), bassist Ron Carter, drummer Billy Cobham, trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, drummer/percussionist Ralph McDonald, and guitarist Jay Berliner. A chamber orchestra exquisitely arranged and conducted by Don Sebesky adorns the session as well. Jackson's "For Someone I Love," opens the five-tune set, with Berliner playing solo flamenco guitar before the vibes, trumpet, and elements from the chamber orchestra delicately, impressionistically color the background. It gradually moves into a languid, bluesy ballad that slowly gains in both texture and dynamic until the strings trill tensely. Hubbard and Hancock engage them in solos that gently swing out the tune. The reading of Michel Legrand's "What Are You Doing for the Rest of Your Life" is a gorgeous showcase for Jackson; his solo dominates the arrangement. Carter gets downright funky on his upright to introduce Thom Bell's "People Make the World Go Round," and Hancock follows him on Rhodes. Jackson takes the melody, striking a layered contrast as Hubbard slips around all three playing an extension of the melody with requisite taste, fluidity, and taut phrasing. Hancock gets funky to the bone in his brief solo, as the vibes soar around and through his phrases. The title track is a Hubbard composition that floats and hovers with a Latin backbeat before shifting tempos as the solos begin. The expanded harmonic palette of trumpet with the reeds, woodwinds, and strings on the melody add an exotic textural palette for his solo. While Sunflower sometimes feels more like a group session rather than a Jackson-led one, that's part of its exquisite beauty. ~ Thom Jurek, AMG.

CTI Records, CTI 6024, 1973
Recorded 12th & 13th December, 1972 at Van Gelder Studios, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Musicians:
Milt Jackson - Vibraphone
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Herbie Hancock - Piano
Jay Berliner - Guitar
Ron Carter - Bass
Bill Cobham - Drums
Ralph MacDonald - Percussion

Plus Reeds & Strings:
George Marge - Clarinet, Bass Clarinet, Alto Flute, English Horn
Romeo Penque - Alto Flute, Oboe, English Horn
Phil Bodner - Flute, Alto Flute, Piccolo Flute, English Horn
Alan Shulman, Charles McCracken, George Ricci - Cello
Margaret Ross - Harp
Charles Libove, David Nadien, Elliot Rosoff, Emanuel Green, Gene Orloff,
Irving Spice, Joe Malin, Max Ellen, Paul Gershman - Violin

Tracks:
A1. For Someone I Love {Milt Jackson} (10:21)
A2. What Are You Doing The Rest Of Your Life? {Michel Legrand, Alan & Marilyn Bergman} (6:57)
B1. People Make The World Go Round {Thomas Bell, Linda Creed} (8:29)
B2. Sunflower {Freddie Hubbard} (11:01)

Credits:
Producer - Creed Taylor
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Arranger & Conductor - Don Sebesky
Album Photograph - Pete Turner
Liner Photograph - K. Abe
Album Design - Bob Ciano

Thursday, January 5, 2023

Booker Ervin - Booker 'n' Brass

I believe I left us on such a solemn note this morning that it would be quite difficult for any of my blogmates to dare break the mood so I will do it by offering that first recording that Ron sent me long ago (at least I think this was it, roll with me, okay?). This was at the time the only Booker Ervin recording that I did not possess and when Jazzman posted it at his blog and dedicated it to me, I was deeply flattered. This was made from Ron's own CD.

Booker Ervin - Booker 'n' Brass
Pacific Jazz, 1967

  "East Dallas Special" (Booker Ervin) - 4:37
    "Salt Lake City" (Johnny Lange, Leon René) - 4:22
    "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?" (Louis Alter, Edgar DeLange) - 4:28
    "L.A. After Dark" [Master - Take 6] (Teddy Edwards) - 5:03
    "Kansas City" (Jerry Lieber, Mike Stoller) - 3:00
    "Baltimore Oriole" (Hoagy Carmichael, Paul Francis Webster) - 4:42
    "Harlem Nocturne" (Earle Hagen, Dick Rogers) - 4:18
    "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" (George Cory, Douglass Cross) - 4:13
    "St. Louis Blues" (W. C. Handy) - 4:11
    "L.A. After Dark" [Alternate Take 3] (Edwards) - 5:08 Bonus track on CD reissue
    "L.A. After Dark" [Alternate Take 7] (Edwards) - 5:05 Bonus track on CD reissue

        Recorded at Webster Hall in New York City on September 12 (tracks 4, 6 & 9-11), September 13 (tracks 1, 2 & 5), and September 14 (tracks 3, 7 & 8), 1967.

"To hear Booker Ervin as the leading solo voice on a recording with a larger ensemble is a treat, not only for his fans, but for those interested in modern big-band sounds grown from the bop era that are flavored with urban blues. A trio of different sessions done at Webster Hall in New York City features groups ranging from ten to eleven pieces, with personnel switched up, and no supplemental saxophonists. Freddie Hubbard is the only other soloist besides Ervin, the trombone section features top-rate players Bennie Green, Britt Woodman, and Garnett Brown, and the rhythm section of pianist Kenny Barron, bassist Reggie Johnson, and drummer Lenny McBrowne is as solid as can be. The session is based entirely on themes dedicated to major cities in the U.S.

Three versions of "L.A. After Dark," featuring different solos from Hubbard, are included on the CD version, written by the arranger of the date Teddy Edwards, a quintessential uptown homage to his adopted home. Ervin's "East Dallas Special" - a mix of "Night Train" and "Sister Sadie" - and the short, tuneful Jerry Lieber-Mike Stoller penned hit of Wilbert Harrison's "Kansas City," and the energetic 12-bar "St. Louis Blues" all shuffle along, powered by the soulful McBrowne. Four typical standards are included, with Ervin's tart-sweet post-John Coltrane saxophone sound undeniably leading the way. "Do You Know What It Means to Miss New Orleans?" is a slow spare horn chart accented by the booming bass of Johnson, while "I Left My Heart in San Francisco" is a polite and heartfelt treatment of this all-time favorite. "Harlem Nocturne" is quite dissimilar from the Joe Harnell hit version of the era, this one approximating tango proportions. Closest to true big-band regalia, "Salt Lake City" depicts a not very jazzy or bluesy city with a sophistication that suggests the best progressive charts of Duke Ellington, and especially Oliver Nelson, with two-note horn shout-outs. While the charts of Edwards and the emphasis on brass instruments holds interest, the overall sounds are only somewhat arresting. Ervin is the straw that stirs this tasteful martini, but he is heard to better effect on his numerous small ensemble recordings, and especially his work with Charles Mingus." AMG

Certainly one the most unique Ervin sessions, it reminds me a bit of Kirk in front of the Quincy Jones Orchestra. Thanks Ron.

Wednesday, January 31, 2018

Stanley Turrentine - The Baddest Turrentine (1974)

A 4-track "best of compilation" from Stanley Turrentine’s hit years at CTI! If you know the man's tone, you know that he found a perfect home at CTI - where arrangements by the likes of Bob James or Eumir Deodato provided Stanley with a perfect foil for his warm exploratory blowing. The set list features Stan's great funky reading of Marvin Gaye's "Don’t Mess With Mr T", plus his classic reading of "Sugar" and the tracks "Speedball" and "Salt Song".

CTI Records, CTI 6048 S1, 1974
Recorded November, 1970 (#A1); July 1971 (#A2); May 1972 (#B1)
& June, 1973 (#B2) At Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Personnel:
Stanley Turrentine, Randy Brecker, Joe Farrell, Pepper Adams, Bob James, Eric Gale, Ron Carter, Idris Muhammad, Milt Jackson, Cornell Dupree, Billy Cobham, Eumir Deodato, Freddie Hubbard, Lonnie Smith, George Benson ...

Tracks:
A1. Sugar {Stanley Turrentine} (10:03)
Released on: Sugar [CTI 6005]

A2. Salt Song {Milton Nascimento} (7:12)
Released on: Salt Song [CTI 6010]

B1. Speedball {Lee Morgan} (6:37)
Released on: Cherry [CTI 6017]

B2. Don't Mess With Mister T. {Marvin Gaye} (9:49)
Released on: Don't Mess With Mister T. [CTI 6030]

Credits:
Producer - Creed Taylor
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Artwork - Bob Ciano
Photography - Alen MacWeeney

Saturday, September 16, 2017

Eric Dolphy - Here And There (1961) + BONUS

Sort of a "house cleaning" album, one in which Prestige collected together a number of unissued Dolphy tracks after his death - but still a strong one, and in a way, the record features music that's even a bit more far-reaching than some of the studio albums on Prestige. Dolphy plays a solo bass clarinet version of "God Bless The Child"; he plays with Booker Little and Mal Waldron on "Status Seeking"; he's on flute in a quartet with Jaki Byard on "April Fool"; and he plays with a pickup Danish rhythm section on an alternate take of "Don't Blame Me". © Dusty Groove, Inc.

Prestige Records, PR 7382, 1966
Recorded 16th July, 1961 (#A1,A2) At The Five Spot Café, New York City;
1st April, 1960 (#B1) At Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs and
6th September, 1961 (#B2) in Berlingske Has, Copenhagen, Denmark

Musicians:
Eric Dolphy - Alto Sax (#A1), Bass Clarinet (#A2), Flute (#B1,B2)
Booker Little - Trumpet (#A1)
Mal Waldron - Piano (#A1)
Jaki Byard - Piano (#B1)
Bent Axen - Piano (#B2)
Richard Davis - Bass (#A1)
George Tucker - Bass (#B1)
Erik Moseholm - Bass (#B2)
Eddie Blackwell - Drums (#A1)
Ed Blackwell - Drums (#A1)
Roy Haynes - Drums (#B1)
Jorn Elniff - Drums (#B2)

Tracks:
A1. Status Seeking {Mal Waldron} (13:13)
A2. God Bless The Child {Arthur Herzog, Jr., Billie Holiday} (5:18)
B1. April Fool {Eric Dolphy} (4:05)
B2. Don't Blame Me [Take 2] {Dorothy Fields, Jimmy McHugh} (12:59)

Credits:
Producer - Esmond Edwards
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Design - Don Schlitten
Liner Notes - Mack Thomas (Dec. 1965)

Note:
Bonus Track included on CD [OJC Records - OJCCD-673-2, 1991]
G.W. [Take 1] {Eric Dolphy} (12:09)
Taken from 'Outward Bound' session
===========================
Eric Dolphy - Alto Saxophone
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet
Jaki Byard - Piano
George Tucker - Bass
Roy Haynes - Drums
Recorded 1st April, 1960 at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Monday, April 11, 2016

Ornette Coleman - Twins (1959-1961) [vinyl>flac]

Ornette Coleman's Twins has been looked at as an afterthought in many respects. A collection of sessions from 1959, 1960, and 1961 with different bands, they are allegedly takes from vinyl LP sessions commercially limited at that time to 40 minutes on vinyl, and not initially released until many years later. Connoisseurs consider this one of his better recordings in that it offers an overview of what Coleman was thinking in those pivotal years of the free bop movement rather than the concentrated efforts of The Art of the Improvisers, Change of the Century, The Shape of Jazz to Come, This Is Our Music, and of course the pivotal Free Jazz. There are three most definitive selections that define Coleman's sound and concept. "Monk & the Nun" is angular like Thelonious Monk, soulful as spiritualism, and golden with the rhythm team of bassist Charlie Haden and drummer Billy Higgins driving the sweet and sour alto sax of Coleman and piquant trumpeting of Don Cherry. "Check Up" is a wild roller coaster ride, mixing meters, tempos, and dynamics in a blender in an unforgettable display of sheer virtuosity, and featuring bassist Scott LaFaro. "Joy of a Toy" displays the playful Ornette Coleman in interval leaps, complicated bungee jumps, in many ways whimsical but not undecipherable. It is one of the most intriguing of all of Coleman's compositions. Less essential, "First Take" showcases his double quartet in a churning composition left off the original release This Is Our Music, loaded with interplay as a showcase for a precocious young trumpeter named Freddie Hubbard, the ribald bass clarinet of Eric Dolphy, and the first appearance with Coleman's groups for New Orleans drummer Ed Blackwell. "Little Symphony" has a great written line with room for solos in a joyful hard bop center with the quartet of Coleman, Cherry, Haden, and Blackwell. All in all an excellent outing for Coleman from a hodgepodge of recordings that gives a broader view of his vision and the music that would come later in the '60s. ~ by Michael G. Nastos, AMG.

Atlantic Records, SD 1588, 1971
"First Take" 21st December, 1960 at A&R Studios, New York City
"Little Symphony" 19th July, 1960, at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York City
"Monk And The Nun" 22nd May, 1959, at Radio Recorders, Hollywood, California
"Check Up" 31st January, 1961, at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York City
"Joy Of A Toy" 26th July, 1960, at Atlantic Recording Studios, New York City

Personnel:
Ornette Coleman - Alto Saxophone (#A1-B3)
Don Cherry - Pocket Trumpet (#A1,B2), Cornet (#B1), Trumpet (#A2,B3)
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet (#A1)
Eric Dolphy - Bass Clarinet (#A1)
Scott LaFaro - Bass (#A1,B2)
Charlie Haden - Bass (#A1-B1,B3)
Ed Blackwell - Drums (#A1,A2,B2,B3)
Billy Higgins - Drums (#A1,B1)

Track Listing:
A1. First Take (16:56)
A2. Little Symphony (5:13)
B1. Monk And The Nun (5:52)
B2. Check Up (10:07)
B3. Joy Of A Toy (4:55)

Credits:
Producer - Nesuhi Ertegun
Recording Engineer - Tom Dowd (#A1,A2,B2,B3), Phil Iehle (#A2), Bones Howe (#B1)
Mastering Engineer - George Piros
Mixing [Re-Mix Engineer] - Geoffrey Haslam
Cover Design - Haig Adishian
Cover Photo - Omar Kharem
Liner Notes - Martin Williams

Saturday, January 2, 2016

George Benson - The Other Side of Abbey Road (1969) [vinyl>flac,24b/48k]

A wonderfully wicked album – one that sold so many copies that it's sometimes hard to remember how great it is! George takes on all of Abbey Road – or just about all of it – as he runs through some of the most beautiful tracks The Beatles ever wrote, like "Golden Slumbers", "I Want You (She's So Heavy)", "The End", "Because", and "You Never Give Me Your Money". The whole thing's set to some great baroque jazzy arrangements by Don Sebesky, and George digs the whole thing so much that he even sings a bit – vocalizing in a cool chromatic way that really works well with his guitar playing, and which would soon transform into a very popular style on his records of the 70s. Keyboards are by Bob James and Herbie Hancock – and there's plenty of other great jazz players in the mix! © Dusty Groove, Inc.

A&M Records, SP-3028, 1970
Recorded 22nd,23rd October and 4th,5th November, 1969
at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Personnel:
George Benson - Guitar
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet
Bernie Glow, Marvin Stamm, Mel Davis - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
Wayne Andre - Trombone, Euphonium
Sonny Fortune - Alto Saxophone
Jerome Richardson - Tenor Saxophone, Clarinet, Flute
Don Ashworth - Baritone Saxophone
Hubert Laws - Flute
Phil Bodner - Flute, Oboe
Don Ashworth - Bass Clarinet
Bob James, Ernie Hayes, Herbie Hancock - Piano, Organ, Harpsichord
Jerry Jemmott, Ron Carter - Bass
George Ricci - Cello
Ed Shaughnessy, Idris Muhammad - Drums
Andy Gonzalez, Ray Barretto - Percussion
Max Pollikoff, Raoul Poliakin - Violin
Emanuel Vardi - Viola

Track Listing:
A1-A2. Golden Slumbers {Lennon, McCartney}/
You Never Give Me Your Money {Lennon, McCartney} (4:47)
A2. Because/Come Together {Lennon, McCartney} (7:27)
A4. Oh, Darling {Lennon, McCartney} (4:01)
B1-B2. Here Comes The Sun {George Harrison}/
I Want You [She So Heavy] {Lennon, McCartney} (9:04)
B3. Something {George Harrison}/
Octopus's Garden {Richard Starkey} (4:31)
B4. The End {Lennon, McCartney} (1:57)

Credits:
Producer - Creed Taylor
Recording Engineer - Rudy van Gelder
Arranger - Don Sebesky
Design [Album] - Sam Antupit
Photography - Eric Meola

Sunday, April 26, 2015

Art Blakey & The All Star Messengers (1982/83) [vinyl]

Re-up as requested, new links in comments.

Review by Scott Yanow:
Drummer Art Blakey could have formed quite a few all-star groups drawn exclusively from the alumni of his Jazz Messengers. One of his few one-shot bands of that nature sounds fine on this LP featuring trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, trombonist Curtis Fuller, Benny Golson's tenor, pianist Cedar Walton and bassist Buster Williams. In addition to newer Golson tunes, this unit clearly enjoys themselves playing such classics as "Moanin," "Blues March," "A Night in Tunisia" and "I Remember Clifford." Few surprises occur, but the music should satisfy Blakey's many fans.

Art Blakey And The All Star Jazz Messengers (RCA (F) PL 45365)
Freddie Hubbard (tp, flh) Curtis Fuller (tb) Benny Golson (ts) Cedar Walton (p) Buster Williams (b) Art Blakey (d)
NYC, April 11, 1982
Moanin'
City Bound
Blues March
A Night In Tunisia
I Remember Clifford
Briell Samba

Art Blakey The All Star Jazz Messengers - Caravan (Baystate (J) RJL 8071)
Freddie Hubbard (tp, flh) Curtis Fuller (tb) Benny Golson (ts) Walter Davis Jr. (p) Buster Williams (b) Art Blakey (d)
NYC, April 13 & 14, 1983
Dana's Dance
A La Mode
Stella By Starlight
Caravan
Just By Myself
Uranus

Saturday, March 28, 2015

Freddie Hubbard - High Energy (1974) [vinyl>flac]

One of Freddie Hubbard's few decent efforts during his very commercial period with Columbia, this LP found his quintet (with tenor-saxophonist Junior Cook and keyboardist George Cables) joined by a small orchestra and a string section on a set of potentially dismal material. Fortunately these six performances (particularly "Crisis," "Ebony Moonbeams" and Stevie Wonder's "Too High") are given fairly creative treatment. The leader/trumpeter is in good form and there is solo space given to Ernie Watts (on bass flute, soprano and flute) and tenorman Pete Christlieb in addition to the quintet members. ~ Scott Yanow, All Music Guide.

Columbia Records, KC 33048, 1974
Recorded 29th April-2nd May, 1974 Live at Sunset Sound Recorders, Hollywood, California

Personnel:
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet, Flugelhorn
George Bohanon - Trombone
Dick Hyde - Trombone (#B1)
Ernie Watts - Tenor Sax, Bass Flute (#A1), Soprano Sax (#B2), Flute (#B3)
Junior Cook - Tenor Saxophone (#B3), Flute
Pete Christleib - Bass Clarinet (#B2), Tenor Sax (#B3)
George Cables - Electric Piano
Ian Underwood - Synthesizer [Arp]
Joe Sample - Clavinet, Organ
Dean Parks - Guitar
Kent Brinkley - Bass
Ralph Penland - Drums
Harvey Mason - Drums (#A2,B1)
Victor Feldman - Percussion
Carmello Garcia - Timbales
King Errisson - Congas
Jules Chaikin - Contractor [Strings]

Track Listing:
A1. Camel Rise {George Cables} (6:22)
A2. Black Maybe {Stevie Wonder} (4:54)
A3. Baraka Sasa {Freddie Hubbard} (10:26)
B1. Crisis {Freddie Hubbard} (5:42)
B2. Ebony Moonbeams {George Cables} (6:59)
B3. Too High {Stevie Wonder} (6:36)

Credits:
Producer - Paul A. Rothchild
Producer [Assistant] - Mike Levy
Engineer [Recording and Mixing] - Jack Haeny
Engineer [Assistant] - Kent Nebergall
Conductor, Arranger - Dale Oehler
Artwork [Hand-Lettering] - Andy Engel
Design [Cover] - Anne Garner, Ron Coro
Photography - Fred Valentine

Saturday, March 22, 2014

Freddie Hubbard (w Art Pepper) - Mistral (1980) [vinyl>flac]

New link in comments.

Review at Sound Insights:
Recorded for the Japanese label East World (and later issued in the US by Liberty, an EMI label hardly known for issuing jazz), there is a slick West Coast feeling to this album that's as endearing as it is enjoyable. Perhaps it is the addition of legendary West Coast alto saxist Art Pepper into a mix that finds pianist George Cables, bassist Stanley Clarke and drummer Peter Erskine in the rhythm section. All the tunes have a relaxed, laid-back feeling (what Scott Yanow snidely refers to as "no one sounds like they're sweating"), even on the up-tempo "Bring It Back Home." While there is a casual air of familiarity in the program, all involved sound as if they are enjoying themselves and each other's company.
Hubbard has never sounded better. His playing is confident, definitive, nearly poetic, and his engagements aren't limited merely to Pepper, who seems to be just another guy in the band here. Hubbard is musically caressed by the pianist, his old comrade George Cables, but is more notably poked, prodded and provoked by bassist Stanley Clarke, who is simply outstanding here, doing things throughout that are worth paying attention to.

1. Sunshine Lady - 7:18
2. Eclipse - 7:08
3. Blue Nights - 7:17
4. Now I've Found Love - 6:53
5. I Love You - 7:27
6. Bring It Back Home - 7:55

Freddie Hubbard (t,flh) Phil Ranelin (tb) Art Pepper (as) George Cables (p,el-p) Peter Wolf (synth) Roland Bautista (g) Stanley Clarke (b,el-b) Peter Erskine (d) Paulinho da Costa (pc)
Ocean Way Recording, Hollywood, CA. September 15, 17, 18 and 19, 1980

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Freddie Hubbard - Polar AC (1975) [vinyl>flac]

Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard's sixth and final CTI studio recording has its moments although it is not on the same level as his first three. Hubbard, backed on four of the five songs by a string section arranged by either Don Sebesky or Bob James, is assisted on songs such as "People Make the World Go Round" and "Betcha By Golly, Wow" by flutist Hubert Laws and guitarist George Benson. "Son of Sky Dive" showcases his trumpet with a sextet including Laws and tenor-saxophonist Junior Cook. The music is enjoyable but not essential and this LP has yet to appear on CD. ~ by Scott Yanow, AMG.

Released in 1975, this was Hubbard's final release for Creed Taylor's CTI Records. It's a luxuriant, strongly orchestrated, but very accessible piece of jazz. Don Sebesky and Bob James alternate the orchestrations and arrangements. Hubbard's playing is outstanding, at the same time much solo space is allocated to flautist Hubert Laws; added to the mix is guitarist George Benson and George Cables on the Rhodes. A genuine highlight is "People Make the World Go Round" arranged by Bob James. It begins with Airto performing some unusual animal noises and percussion sounds contrasted with flourishes on the Rhodes by Cables. On the title track "Polar AC", Ron Carter throws in some vivacious bass playing whilst Jack DeJohnette is heard working the snares and cymbals against the rich the orchestral arrangements of Don Sebesky; which Hubbard weaves in and around with some amazing solos. There is a lot of pleasure to be found on this LP with further spins. Well Recommended.

CTI Records, CTI 6056, 1975
Recorded at Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey

Personnel:
Freddie Hubbard - Trumpet
Hubert Laws - Flute
George Benson - Guitar (#A1-B1)
Junior Cook - Tenor Saxophone (#B2)
George Cables - Piano (#A2,B2)
Ron Carter - Bass
Alan Rubin, Garnett Brown, Marvin Stamm, Paul Faulise,
Tony Price, Wayne Andre - Brass (#B1)
George Marge, Phil Bodner, Romeo Penque, Wally Kane - Woodwind (#B1)
Billy Cobham - Drums (#B1)
Jack DeJohnette - Drums (#A1)
Lenny White - Drums (#A2, B2)
Airto - Percussion (#A2, A3)

Strings:
Al Brown, Charles McCracken, Harold Kohon, Irving Spice, Matthew Raimondi, Tosha Samaroff (#A1)
David Nadien, Emanuel Green, Manny Vardi, George Ricci, Joe Malin, Paul Gershman (#A1-A3)
Tony Sophos, Charles Libove, Gene Orloff, Harry Lookofsky, Max Ellen, Theodore Israel (#A2,A3)

Track Listing:
A1. Polar AC {Cedar Walton} (6:52)
A2. People Make The World Go Round {Linda Creed, Thomas Bell} (5:48)
A3. Betcha By Golly, Wow {Linda Creed, Thomas Bell} (8:10)
B1. Naturally {Nat Adderley} (5:53)
B2. Son Of Sky Dive {Freddie Hubbard} (13:17)

Credits:
Producer - Creed Taylor
Recording Engineer - Rudy Van Gelder
Arranger - Bob James (#A2,A3), Don Sebesky (#A1, B1)

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

Freddie Hubbard - Sweet Return (1983) [vinyl]

I haven't seen a CD reissue of this outside of Japan?

Review by Richard Palmer, Jazz Journal, July 1984:

The title is apt. It commemorates not only Freddie's return to Atlantic after an absence of 12 years, but also a reunion with the kind of material and approach that originally established him as a major jazz talent.
Just a glance at the personnel tells you most of what you need to know about the music on the date, which is predictably wonderful, and also richly varied in its challenges. Gomez is simply awesome — at home in every context, his vast sound propelling everything and everyone, and his solos are models of imagination and structure. Brackeen contributes the date's most ambitious composition, Heidi-B, and I find her rollicking work on the joyous Calypso particularly noteworthy. Tabackin is equally convincing on both tenor and flute, and it is especially nice to hear his talents spread so richly in a smaller ensemble. And as for Haynes ... he just seems to get better and better, a master of controlled and sympathetic aggression, and still one of the greatest practitioners of brushes. Freddie himself is in absolute top form here. Whether it be his happy bubbling on Calypso, his darkly romantic reading of Misty, or his richly creative excursions on both tracks on the second side, this date proves with every note that he is indisputably one of jazz's true heavyweights. By no means miss this one.

1. Sweet Return
2. Misty
3. Whistling Away The Dark
4. Calypso Fred
5. Heidi-B
6. The Night Has A Thousand Eyes

Freddie Hubbard (t); Lew Tabackin (ts/fl); Joanne Brackeen (p); Eddie Gomez (b}; Roy Haynes (d); Hector Manuel Andrade (perc).
NYC, June 13 & 14, 1983.