
KANSAS CITY
The Eldar Djangirov Trio. 8 p.m. Folly Theater, 300 W. 12th St., Kansas City, MO 64105.
Now catch them on tour:
6/12 - Austin, TX @ Emo's
6/13 - Hot Springs, AR @ Maxine's
6/14 - St. Louis, MO @ The Firebird
6/15 - Chicago, IL @ Ronny's Bar
6/16 - WOXY radio early session.
6/16 - Cleveland, OH @ Now That's Class
6/17 - Rochester, NY @ The Bug Jar w/ The Strange Boys
6/18 - Toronto, ON NXNE Festival @ Neutral Lounge
6/19 - Toronto, ON - La Blogotheque early session
6/19 - Jamestown, NY @ Mojo's
6/20 - Brooklyn, NY @ Glasslands Gallery (early show 7:30-10:00)
6/21 - Philadelphia, PA @ Danger Danger Gallery
6/22 - Richmond, VA @ The Camel
6/23 - Chapel Hill, NC @ Fuse
6/24 - Durham, NC @ The Pinhook
6/25 - Asheville, NC - Emerald Lounge
6/26 - ATHFEST @ Go Bar, Athens, GA
6/27 - Wilmington, NC @ Soapbox w/ Polvo
Wow. That will be your reaction on hearing the lead-off title track. And that's at first listen to Freddie Hubbard's rich, round tone as he riffs on his hard-bop roots. Then Roland Hanna enters with a glittering piano solo. Hubbard was the leader of a touring quartet, including bassist Ron Carter and drummer Louis Hayes, that, perhaps for its roadworthiness, shows a turn-on-a-dime telepathy. Take note of "A Night in Tunisia." This album shows Hubbard at the height of his powers, crossing a bridge of styles. For instance, Hubbard's "Space Track" starts at breakneck speed, then goes to a seemingly free-floating tempo, yet the quartet knows where it is at all times. If anything, Without a Song highlights Hubbard's career, which floundered during the jazz-lite days of the '70s when many acts were self-consciously seeking success. This album shows why the late trumpeter — he died in December at the age of 70 — has his own niche in the jazz pantheon.
This CD, one of four June 2 releases from the Essential Jazz Classics label, presents what the liner notes call "a true landmark in recorded jazz history … the original Art Tatum-Ben Webster Quartet album in its entirety." Tatum's piano and Webster's tenor sax are backed by Red Callender's bass and Bill Douglass' drums. And, yes, Callender and Douglass complete this evocative portrait, but make no mistake, it is Tatum and Webster who are the luminaries. But at the time of this session, Sept. 11, 1956, Tatum's elegant rhythmic and harmonic stylings were being overtaken by modernists such as Bud Powell and Thelonious Monk. Producer Norman Granz saw this and gave Tatum, an inspirational figure for many pianists, the chance to put many sessions to tape. The pairing of Tatum and Webster is the zenith of those recordings. Webster's breathy romancing of the saxophone is such a perfect pairing with Tatum's classicism as to be evocative and wrap around the heart. The last five tracks on this CD are Art Tatum solos.
What can you say? Saxophone Colossus is an undisputed masterpiece. For one thing, it leads off with a classic all its own: the infectious calypso melody of the tenor man's "St. Thomas." Those who are new to this album will appreciate Rollins' brilliant consistency through uptempos and ballads and will brighten upon hearing "Moritat," also known as "Mack the Knife." With jazz poet Tommy Flanagan on piano, Doug Watkins on bass and Max Roach on drums, this session was recorded on June 22, 1956, four days before the end of the Clifford Brown-Max Roach Quintet, of which Rollins had been a member for half a year. Brown and the quintet's pianist, Richie Powell, would die in the same car accident, changing a lot of things. But what doesn't change is the colossal nature of this album.
As with other current Essential Jazz Classics releases, this one has a bonus album, Work Time, an earlier album Rollins recorded with pianist Ray Bryant, bassist George Morrow and Roach. It shows the promise of things to come.
Besides the three jazz greats named above, this quintet is completed by Richie Powell on drums and George Morrow on bass. And, as with Essential Jazz Classics' Red Garland CD, the sessions on Complete Studio Recordings are from 1956. Before rock had its short-lived supergroups, jazz had this one. Tenor saxman Sonny Rollins was the last personnel change to complete this lineup for trumpeter Brown and drummer Roach's five-piece. Fortunately, this lineup had the chance to record three studio sessions between January and March of '56. The result: Clifford Brown and Max Roach at Basin Street (a studio recording, despite its title) and Sonny Rollins Plus Four, the master takes of both dynamic albums being heard here. You can hear and feel a delicious tension throughout, the tension of musicians who know they're creating change.
This release compiles all of the trio studio recordings made by pianist Red Garland in 1956 with Paul Chambers on bass and Art Taylor on drums. The complete A Garland of Red album is here, as well as tracks from the Dec. 14 session that yielded two more albums, Groovy and Red Garland’s Piano, represented here by two tracks each. Garland’s gracefulness is certainly a hallmark of these sessions, and, as time has shown, Chambers’ stand-up foundations and Taylor’s stick- and brushwork are the perfect complement to the pianist’s every tempo. After 12 tracks with Taylor on drums, there’s a lucky 13th: "Ahmad’s Blues" features drummer Philly Joe Jones, recorded during Miles Davis’ final sessions for Prestige.
3 out of 5 subway cars for The Taking of Pelham 123, coming out June 12. Denzel Washington is the ordinary-guy dispatcher taking on John Travolta as the mastermind subway hijacker.
Director Tony Scott's slick remake — usually called an "updating" these days — will not improve on the 1974 version, The Taking of Pelham One Two Three, which had Walter Matthau's ordinary-guy dispatcher matching wits with Robert Shaw as the mastermind behind the hijacking of Pelham 123. The gritty '74 version has tension with a humorous ending. Slick 2009 loses out to gritty 1974. Oh well.
From the reedy psychedlic intro, "The Radio's On Again," to the brassy retro-pollinated pop of the closer, "Birds and the Bees," Spain Colored Orange's album does live up to its title. It is sneaky. And it works its way into your ears with catchy vocal melodies and layers of instruments that are played so guilelessly, you're not aware that you're hearing some sophisticated arrangements that must have been as fun to work out as they are to play. And hear.
German-born Hammond B-3 keyboardist Jermaine Landsberger starts the jazz fire warmly on his stateside debut. "Sno' Peas" starts the catalytic action in waltz time and shows the chemistry of Landsberger, respected drummer Harvey Mason, bassist James Genus, saxophonist Gary Meek and renowned guitarist Pat Martino. Swedish guitarist Andreas Öberg gets his turn to burn with Martino on Django Reinhardt's "Babik," by which time the chemical reaction is shining brightly. A "St. Thomas" quote here, a "Days of Wine and Roses" quote there, make this jazz lover’s album complete.