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

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Freddie HUBBARD - Straight Life 1970

Freddie HUBBARD - Straight Life 1970
SR 3311, CTI 6007

Jazz

This is a remarkable and often overlooked album by one of the finest and most innovative trumpet players of the '60s and '70s. Steeped deeply in funk, Hubbard brings his bright tone and evocative, mercurial playing to the post-BITCHES BREW soundscape of electrified instruments, Latin percussion, complex polyrhythms, and "free" blowing focused on texture and atmosphere. STRAIGHT LIFE charts waters different from Davis' masterpiece, however. Whereas BITCHES BREW is a dark, ominous journey into a jungle of rhythm clusters and tonal coloring, Hubbard's work is sparer, cleaner, and characterized by catchy, almost pop-like themes.

STRAIGHT LIFE is much more than a mere groove-fest, though, as the top-notch players (including Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Ron Carter, and a young George Benson on guitar) unfurl formidable chops and vibrant backing throughout. The first two tracks, Hubbard's title track and Weldon Irvine's "Mr. Clean," are lengthy, soulful workouts whose propulsive qualities and buoyancy are contrasted by the third track, the artist's delicate and gorgeous flugelhorn treatment of "Here's That Rainy Day." Taken together, the cuts on STRAIGHT LIFE are musically sophisticated, stirring, and eminently groovy, making this "soul-jazz" of the highest order.
**
Bass- Ron Carter
Drums- Jack DeJohnette
Guitar- George Benson
Percussion- Richard "Pablo" Landrum*
Piano- Herbie Hancock
Tenor Sax- Joe Henderson
Tambourine, Tabla- Weldon Irvine
Trumpet, Flugelhorn- Freddie Hubbard
**
A1. Straight Life  17:40
    Composed By - F. Hubbard
B1. Mr. Clean  13:38
    Composed By - W. Irvine
B2. Here's That Rainy Day  5:18
    Composed By - J. V. Heusen , J. Burke
**

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Sunday, April 11, 2010

Freddie HUBBARD - The Artistry of Freddie Hubbard 1962

Freddie HUBBARD - The Artistry of Freddie Hubbard 1962
JAS 71, A 27
1963 Repress Issue

Jazz

This 1962 effort was Freddie Hubbard's first recording under his own name for Impulse (MCA). Fellow Jazz Messenger Curtis Fuller and newcomer John Gilmore color the proceedings with adds trombone and tenor saxophone, respectively. These rock-solid, post-bop horn players are backed by the formidable rhythm section of Tommy Flanagan on piano, Art Davis on bass, and Louis Hayes on drums. Hubbard's shimmering style and clear tone show a clear debt to the late Clifford Brown and a nod to the bold sonic curiosity of John Coltrane. These are some hot young players pushing a classic format forward.

The opening track is Duke Ellington's intoxicating "Caravan." The horns play the theme loosely above the dark undercurrent of Davis's and Hayes' playing. The piece explodes into a Hubbard solo that shows why he was the most talked-about young trumpeter of that era. The exceptional quality of his tone and range are amply displayed in his Latin-tinged version of the tender Gershwin standard "Summertime." On the closing track, "The 7th Day," Hubbard and his sextet ride a sultry cool jazz groove for all it's worth and build patiently to some bold exchanges, bowing out with a slow fade.
**
Trumpeter Freddie Hubbard leads a particularly talented sextet (with trombonist Curtis Fuller, a rare outing away from Sun Ra for tenor saxophonist John Gilmore, pianist Tommy Flanagan, bassist Art Davis, and drummer Louis Hayes) on three of his originals and strong versions of "Summertime" and "Caravan." This advanced hard bop music was reissued on CD in 1996 with 20-bit mastering.
By Scott Yanow, All Music Guide.
**
Bass- Art Davis
Drums- Louis Hayes
Piano- Tommy Flanagan
Tenor Sax- John Gilmore
Trombone- Curtis Fuller
Trumpet- Freddie Hubbard
**
A1. Caravan  7:26 
A2. Bob's Place  10:04 
A3. Happy Times  4:28 
B1. Summertime  9:45 
B2. The 7th Day  10:40 
**

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Saturday, January 23, 2010

Freddie HUBBARD - Red Clay 1970


Freddie HUBBARD - Red Clay 1970
CTI 6001

Jazz

Red Clay starts off like being woken from a bad dream.  Freddie's trumpet blaring like a car alarm, Jon Henderson's sax setting off the rest of the cars down the block, and Lenny White's scattered drumming falling down like heavy rain.  Then it all dies down and you're glad to be awake--it was a bad dream, after all.

You can say the same things about Freddie Hubbard that you can say about all the legendary jazz musicians of his time.  He started out as a familiar face on many a revered jazz album (Out to Lunch, Speak No Evil), reinvented himself as he embraced more atonal structures on his own outings, and had a long, boring career of forgotten studio albums after the mid-70s.  Whether Red Clay is his best is, of course, debatable and unknown to me at this point in time, but it certainly stands as a defining moment of his career and a bold reinvention of himself at the outset of a new decade.

The title track, after its disorienting prelude, transitions into a moody, relaxed song that progresses through Hubbard's restrained trumpet that leads into Herbie Hancock unbelievable Fender Rhodes solo.  The way the trumpet and keyboard compliment each other and progress will be familiar with any pop fan, and it makes "Red Clay" a very accessible and memorable track for jazz and non-jazz fans alike.  You rarely get such a great sense of space paired with memorable melodies in this genre.  It might have been a great leap toward commercialization that had fans disowning Hubbard years later, but for the time being it lent itself to a bold, quality piece of music filled with the spirit and mood that defines great jazz.

"Delphia" leaves behind the one chord grooves of the previous track and offers a more lethargic tone and pace.  The keyboard sound Hancock gets out of his Rhodes holds an especially dear place in anyone's heart that grew up on Simcity--that much cited reference amongst jazz fanatics (...)  Henderson's flute and White's drumming that bridges the song's opposing sections help it give it a gentle heart that will soon explode in the wake of Red Clay's 2nd half.

OK, that's not completely true.  "Suite Sioux" begins amicably enough until it explodes into a dirty mess of fusion.  More than any other track on the album, it finds Hubbard and co. finding a happy medium between post-bop and r&b.  In comparison to "The Intrepid Fox", it's relatively harmless.  Ron Carter's bass opens up the track paving the way for Hubbard's raucous trumpet playing expands to madness but somehow manages to quiet down occasionally to highlight Hancock's uniformly excellent playing.

"Suite Sioux" and "The Intrepid Fox" are the sort of pedestrian, if not impeccably performed, jazz songs that keep non-jazz fans just that, but the opening two tracks of Red Clay deserve a listen from a wider audience than the one the it has been exposed to.  I've never heard a jazz song coincide so well with DJ Shadow as "Red Clay", and "Delphia" is a film noir bed dream piss-soaked in ecstasy.  Like most jazz of its year, Red Clay was trying to establish an identity for jazz after having lost one in the wake of Miles' experimentation.  It won't put you to sleep, but its an awfully nice album to wake up to.  Just let the storm settle first.
**
Before Freddie Hubbard signed with CTI Records in 1970, he was already considered one of the most brilliant jazz trumpeters in the world. RED CLAY, his debut album on the label, is an exceptional set of plugged-in hard bop fused with funk - and reportedly the album he considers his best. Joining him on five of the six cuts, is a crack quintet featuring longtime colleagues Joe Henderson and Herbie Hancock, on tenor saxophone and keyboards respectively. The final number, a previously unissued, extended live jam on the title tune, finds Hubbard fronting an all-star septet that includes such fellow CTI stars as George Benson and Stanley Turrentine.
**
This may be Freddie Hubbard's finest moment as a leader, in that it embodies and utilizes all of his strengths as a composer, soloist, and frontman. On Red Clay, Hubbard combines hard bop's glorious blues-out past with the soulful innovations of mainstream jazz in the 1960s, and reads them through the chunky groove innovations of 1970s jazz fusion. This session places the trumpeter in the company of giants such as tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, pianist Herbie Hancock, bassist Ron Carter, and drummer Lenny White. Hubbard's five compositions all come from deep inside blues territory; these shaded notions are grafted onto funky hard bop melodies worthy of Horace Silver's finest tunes, and are layered inside the smoothed-over cadences of shimmering, steaming soul. The 12-minute-plus title track features a 44 modal opening and a spare electric piano solo woven through the twin horns of Hubbard and Henderson. It is a fine example of snaky groove music. Henderson even takes his solo outside a bit without ever moving out of the rhythmnatist's pocket. Delightful begins as a ballad with slow, clipped trumpet lines against a major key background, and opens onto a mid-tempo groover, then winds back into the dark, steamy heart of bluesy melodicism. The hands-down favorite here, though, is The Intrepid Fox, with its Miles-like opening of knotty changes and shifting modes, that are all rooted in bop's muscular architecture. It's White and Hancock who shift the track from underneath with large sevenths and triple-timed drums that land deeply inside the clamoring, ever-present riff. Where Hubbard and Henderson are playing against, as well as with one another, the rhythm section, lifted buoyantly by Carter's bridge-building bassline, carries the melody over until Hancock plays an uncharacteristically angular solo before splitting the groove in two and doubling back with a series of striking arpeggiatics. This is a classic, hands down. --- By Thom Jurek. AMG.
**
Ron Carter- Bass
Drums - Lenny White- Drums
Herbie Hancock- Piano
Joe Henderson- Sax
Freddie Hubbard- Trumpet
**
A1. Red Clay  12:12
A2. Delphia  7:23
B1. Suite Sioux  8:38
B2. The Intrepid Fox  10:45
**
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Friday, December 11, 2009

Freddie HUBBARD - Backlash 1966


Freddie HUBBARD - Backlash 1966

Jazz

Released in 1967, BACKLASH shows a young Freddie Hubbard beginning his explorations outside the confines of straight-ahead jazz. The tunes here have a rock-soul flavor and show Hubbard absorbing all that was in the air at that moment. The title track, penned by Donald Picket, easily rolls over the seductive groove laid down by drummer Otis Ray Appleton and showcases Hubbard's shining tone and the fine playing of his old friend, alto saxophonist James Spaulding.

As always, the influence of Clifford Brown is evident in Hubbard's playing, but there is also the echo of Lee Morgan's trumpet work on the classic '60s recording SIDEWINDER. On several cuts, including "Backlash" and, most notably, "Little Sunflower," the subtle percussion of Ray Barretto adds polish to the sweet Latin sheen. That latter track also benefits from Spaulding's delicate flute work. Pianist Albert Daily and bassist Bob Cunningham round out the rhythm section.
**
To jazz fans under the age of 30, the name Freddie Hubbard probably won't signify a superstar. From the 1960s to the late 1980s, however, he was the third-best trumpeter in the music (behind Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis). Illness triggered a decline in the 1990s, but, thankfully, there are still numerous reissues that recall his greatness. Backlash, from 1966, finds the former member of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers in a jazz-R&B hybrid mood with pianist Albert Dailey, drummer Otis Ray Appleton, saxophonist/flutist James Spaulding, and percussionist Ray Barretto. Technically, Hubbard's robust Clifford Brown-influenced chops are in full effect. "On the Que Tee," "Up Jumped Spring," and the title track all reflect the soulful spell of Lee Morgan's hit "Sidewinder." But this date is best remembered for giving the world the first version of Hubbard's lovely jazz standard "Little Sunflower." With the lilting Latin tinges provided by Barretto, Hubbard floats above those rhythms with lyrical ease, reminding us of the majesty of his music.
By Eugene Holley Jr.
**
Freddie Hubbard- (Trumpet and Flugelhorn)
James Spaulding- (Flute and Alto Saxophone)
Albert Dailey- (Piano)
Bob Cunningham- (Bass)
Otis Ray Appleton- (Drums)
Ray Barretto- (Percussion)
**
A1. Backlash 4:10
A2. The Return Of The Prodigal Son 5:37
A3. Little Sunflower 7:50
B1. On The Que-Tee 5:43
B2. Up Jumped Spring 6:39
B3. Echoes Of Blue
**
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Saturday, November 14, 2009

Freddie HUBBARD - Open Sesame 1960


Freddie HUBBARD - Open Sesame 1960

Jazz

Seminal work from Freddie Hubbard -- an early hardbop session that features some great work by Tina Brooks on tenor, piano by McCoy Tyner, and rhythm by Sam Jones & Clifford Jarvis. Brooks' tone is amazing -- right up there with the style he used on his own rare few Blue Note sides -- and together with Hubbard, he helps craft a tight little set that's one of Hubbard's best-ever straight sides from the 60s. Titles include "But Beautiful", "One Mint Julep", "Hub's Nub", "Open Sesame", and "Gypsy Blue".
From Dusty Groove.
**
Freddie Hubbard- Trumpet
Tina Brooks- Tenor saxophone
McCoy Tyner- Piano
Sam Jones- Bass
Clifford Jarvis- Drums
**
01. Open Sesame (Brooks)  7:11
02. But Beautiful (Burke, Van Heusen)  6:26
03. Gypsy Blue (Brooks)  6:28
04. All or Nothing at All (Altman, Lawrence)  5:36
05. One Mint Julep (Toombs)  6:04
06. Hub's Nub (Hubbard)  6:51
**
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Friday, October 30, 2009

Freddie HUBBARD - Blue Spirits 1965


Freddie HUBBARD - Blue Spirits 1965

Jazz

This excellent 1966 set features a diverse range of ensembles, all lead by trumpeter Freddie Hubbard. The first is an octet, featuring congas and a euphonium; the second, a seven-member group, including the great McCoy Tyner on piano; the third ...    Full Descriptionis a sextet that boasts drummer Elvin Jones and Herbie Hancock (who doubles on piano and celeste). James Spaulding lends his alto sax and flute to two of the groups, and Joe Henderson is in two as well (his melodic, yet adventurous, tenor sax playing is especially notable). Also featured are tenor player Hank Mobley, bassist Reggie Workman, pianist Harold Mabern, and drummer Pete La Roca.

The fare on BLUE SPIRITS is in keeping with the hard bop of the era. A heavy soul-jazz influence is heard on the opening "Soul Surge" and the Latin-tinged "Cunga Black," but Hubbard's work is always challenging (the driving "Jodo") and often impressionistic (the moody, spectral title track). The revolving cast of players keeps thing interesting (especially for jazz fans familiar with the respective styles of the musicians), and the tonal variation created by the different instrumentation intrigues. This reissue of the original LP includes two bonus tracks (from a session that took place the following year), increasing the stock of this fine bop outing.
From Cd Universe.
**
Freddie Hubbard- (Trumpet);
Hosea Taylor- (Bassoon);
James Spaulding- (Alto saxophone);
Hank Mobley, Joe Henderson- (Tenor saxophone);
Kiane Zavadi- (Euphonium);
Herbie Hancock- (Piano, celesta);
Harold Mabern, McCoy Tyner- (Piano);
Larry Ridley, Reggie Workman- (Bass instrument);
Clifford Jarvis, Elvin Jones, Pete La Roca- (Drums);
Big Black- (Congas).
**
01. Soul Surge
02. Blue Spirits
03. Outer Forces
04. Cunga Black
05. Jodo
06. Melting Pot [Bonus]
07. True Colors [Bonus]
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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Freddie HUBBARD - Ready For Freddie 1961


Freddie HUBBARD - Ready For Freddie 1961
Label: Blue Note
Audio CD: (March 9, 2004)

Jazz    

I have written several glowing reviews of trumpeter Freddie Hubbard's Blue Note recordings -- "Open Sesame," "Goin' Up," "Hub Cap," and "Hub-Tones" -- but "Ready for Freddie" is his finest album for the label. Originally released on CD in the limited edition Connoisseur series, it makes a permanent return to the catalog now in the RVG series. Recorded on August 21, 1961, this session features Wayne Shorter on tenor sax, Bernard McKinney on euphonium (!), McCoy Tyner on piano, Art Davis on bass and Elvin Jones on drums. What primarily distinguishes this set from earlier efforts is the maturity of Hubbard's original statements, both in terms of his playing style and his compositions. His already overflowing talent was even further developed during this period in his career, as he concurrently played and recorded on his own and with Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. In fact, this album's closing track "Crisis" was reprised on the Messengers' classic LP "Mosaic" just six weeks later. The other defining elements for me are the contributions and propulsive play of McCoy and Elvin, who were already thoroughly ensconced in the their classic period with John Coltrane, and the unique sound of Bernard McKinney's euphonium, which adds a deep, melodious baritone to the proceedings. In all, get "Ready" to purchase Freddie Hubbard's best disc.
By  Michael B. Richman.
**
Everyone who knows Hubbard, Shorter, Tyner, Jones and Art Davis knows that whenever these guys met - great music was sure to follow. Still, this specific set from November 30th, 1962 has an added spark, an energy that is even higher than expected. The rhythm section is John Coltrane's (Art David played with Trane before Jimmy Garrison) and Shorter is from the great Miles Davis group. In my opinion - the combination of musicians from those two very different groups always produces spectacular results (see Speak No Evil - Shorter-Carter + Tyner-Jones ! and Hubbard too).
Hubbard himself was definitely one of the leading trumpet man of the Sixties - participating in Out To Lunch, Empyrean Isles, as well as his own Open Sesame, Breaking Point, Hub Tones).
On this session every second COOKS ! It may have been the Euphonium of Bernard McKinney who pushed everyone to give something extra, or just a great feeling they all had entering the studio together, taking refuge from the outside world which, in 1962, was not an easy place for these great people.
Just the cd to get - if you are looking for great energy, beautiful compositions, and solos by Shorter and Hubbard who are at their peak !
By  Nadav Haber.
**
Freddie Hubbard- Trompeta
Bernard McKinney- Eufonio, Trompa
Wayne Shorter- Saxo Tenor
McCoy Tyner- Piano
Art Davis- Bajo
Elvin Jones- BaterĂ­a
**
01. Arietis (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1961 Digital Remaster) 6:41 $0.99 
02. Weaver Of Dreams (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1961 Digital Remaster) 6:35 $0.99 
03. Marie Antoinette (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1961 Digital Remaster) 6:38 $0.99 
04. Birdlike (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (2004 Digital Remaster) 10:15 $1.99 
05. Crisis (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1961 Digital Remaster) 11:33 $1.99 
06. Arietis (Alternate Take) (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1961 Digital Remaster) 5:51 $0.99 
07. Marie Antoinette (Alternate Take) (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1961 Digital Remaster) 6:13
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