Showing posts with label Sonny CLARK. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sonny CLARK. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 29, 2009

Sonny CLARK - Cool Struttin' 1958


Sonny CLARK - Cool Struttin' 1958
2005 Issue BN-1588

Jazz

Sonny Clark's classic COOL STRUTTIN' is a session that epitomizes the Blue Note golden era. A celebrated cast that includes Clark, Art Farmer, Jackie McLean, Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones in their prime swings and struts its way through Clark's originals and some choice standards.

Bluesy swingers like Clark's smoky title cut and scorching burners like Miles Davis's "Sippin' at Bells" offer swinging grooves at opposing extremes that serve as vehicles for stellar solo spots by all. Intricate tunes like Clark's energetic "Blue Minor" and a blistering read of Rodgers and Hart's "Lover" are held in tight check by the consummate rhythm team of Chambers and Jones. The tracks also provide excellent breathing room for Farmer, McLean, and Clark to strut their stuff. The lone trio cut is the swinging "Deep Night," which showcases Clark's sharp technique and tasteful touch. In all, this is an essential disc for connoisseurs of the classic hard-bop period, a period that continues to inspire future generations.

Recorded in 1958, this legendary date with the still-undersung Sonny Clark in the leader's chair also featured a young Jackie McLean on alto (playing with a smoother tone than he had before or ever did again), trumpeter Art Farmer, and the legendary rhythm section of bassist Paul Chambers and drummer Philly Joe Jones, both from the Miles Davis band. The set begins with one of the preeminent "swinging medium blues" pieces in jazz history: the title track with its leveraged fours and eights shoved smoothly up against the walking bass of Chambers and the backbeat shuffle of Jones. Clark's solo, with its grouped fifths and sevenths, is a wonder of both understatement and groove, while Chambers' arco solo turns the blues in on itself. While there isn't a weak note on this record, there are some other tracks that stand out, most notably Miles' "Sippin' at Bells," with its loping Latin rhythm. When McLean takes his solo against a handful of Clark's shaded minor chords, he sounds as if he may blow it -- he comes out a little quick -- but he recovers nicely and reaches for a handful of Broadway show tunes to counter the minor mood of the piece. He shifts to both Ben Webster and Lester Young before moving through Bird, and finally to McLean himself, riding the margin of the changes to slip just outside enough to add some depth in the middle register. The LP closes with Henderson and Vallée's "Deep Night," the only number in the batch not rooted in the blues. It's a classic hard bop jamming tune and features wonderful solos by Farmer, who plays weird flatted notes all over the horn against the changes, and McLean, who thinks he's playing a kind of snake charmer blues in swing tune. This set deserves its reputation for its soul appeal alone.
By Thom Jurek. AMG.
**
Sonny Clark- Piano 
Paul Chambers- Bass 
Jackie McLean- Alto Sax
Art Farmer- Trumpet 
"Philly" Joe Jones- Drums
**
A1. Cool Struttin'   9:24
A2. Blue Minor   10:19
B1. Sippin' at Bells   8:19
B2. Deep Night   9:34
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Sunday, October 18, 2009

Sonny CLARK Trio 1957


Sonny CLARK Trio 1957
Label: Blue Note
Remastered by RVG, 1998

Jazz

This album from 1957 excellently captures what was definitive of jazz at that time, and in so doing became one of the best jazz albums of all time. Sonny Clark never had as big a name as other prominent pianists of the day, but he deserves to be prominently remembered. His style on this album obviously echoes with the style of Bud Powell but (like the great Dave McKenna on his trio recordings from this same time period) his playing also brings with it a smooth lyricism that is new. Sonny Clark's playing on this album has the sound of beautiful perfection, and (along with the great work of Paul Chambers on bass and Philly Joe Jones on drums) the playing really swings. The tunes are all ones recorded many times by many others, but these renditions really set the standard for how these "standards" sound. "I Didn't Know What Time It Was" is particularly strong. This is a great album to introduce jazz to someone, and also is an essential study album for anyone seriously interested in the art form.
**
Sonny Clark- (Piano)
Paul Chambers- (Double Bass)
Philly Joe Jones- (Drums)
**
01. Be-Bop (Dizzy Gillespie) 9:55
02. I Didn't Know What Time It Was (Lorenz Hart/Richard Rodgers) 4:24
03. Two Bass Hit (Dizzy Gillespie/John Lewis) 3:45
04. Tadd's Delight (Tadd Dameron) 6:02
05. Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise (Oscar Hammerstein II/Sigmund Romberg) 6:35
06. I'll Remember April (Gene DePaul/Patricia Johnston/Don Raye) 4:54
07. I Didn't Know What Time It Was [alternate take] Hart, Rodgers 4:20
08. Two Bass Hit [alternate take] Gillespie, Lewis 4:01
09. Tadd's Delight [alternate take] Dameron 5:01
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Monday, October 12, 2009

Sonny CLARK - Dial "S" For Sonny 1957


Sonny CLARK - Dial "S" For Sonny 1957
Label: Blue Note
Audio CD: (March 1, 2005)

Jazz

Pianist Sonny Clark's "Dial 'S' For Sonny" was first issued on CD in 1997 as part of Blue Note's limited edition Connoisseur Series, but went out-of-print shortly after its initial release. Now with this reissue in the RVG Edition, it makes a permanent return to the catalog. This 1957 session features a sextet lineup of Art Farmer on trumpet, Curtis Fuller on trombone, Hank Mobley on tenor sax, Wilbur Ware on bass and Louis Hayes on drums tackling four Clark originals (with one alternate take) and two standards. This is very solid hard bop session that falls just short of Sonny's best Blue Notes, "Leapin' and Lopin'" and "Sonny's Crib," in my opinion. In any event, fans of the pianist who missed this title the first time around, will be delighted that "Dial 'S' For Sonny" has been re-dialed.
By  Michael B. Richman.
**
Dial "S" for Sonny, Sonny Clark's first session for Blue Note Records and his first session as a leader, is a terrific set of laidback bop, highlighted by Clark's liquid, swinging solos. Clark leads a first-rate group — Art Farmer (trumpet), Curtis Fuller (trombone), Hank Mobley (tenor sax), Wilbur Ware (bass), Louis Hayes (drums) — through four originals and two standards, balancing the selections between swinging bop and reflective ballads. There are traces of Bud Powell in Clark's style, but he's beginning to come into his own, developing a style that's alternately edgy and charmingly relaxed. Mobley, Farmer and Fuller have their moments, but Clark steals the show in this set of fine, straight-ahead bop.
By Stephen Thomas Erlewine.
**
Sonny Clark- Piano
Art Farmer- Trumpet
Curtis Fuller- Trombone
Hank Mobley- Tenor Sax
Wilbur Ware- Bass
Louis Hayes- Drums
**
01. Dial S For Sonny 7.27
02. Bootin' It (stereo Take) 5.17
03. It Could Happen To You 6.59
04. Sonny's Mood  8.38
05. Shoutin' On A Riff 6.45
06. Love Walked In  5.51
07. Bootin' It (mono take) 5.15
**
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