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1. | Aggression
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2. | Like Someone In Love
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Jazz / Avant-Garde Jazz; Post-Bop
Recorded: July 16, 1961, The Five Spot, New York, New York Remastered edition
Eric Dolphy - flute, bass clarinet Booker Little - trumpet Mal Waldron - piano Richard Davis - bass Ed Blackwell - drums
Digitally remastered using K2 bit technology, this is a Japanese reissue of the great jazz musician's 1961 album for the Prestige label in a miniaturized LP sleeve limited to the initial pressing only. Dolphy, known for his playing of the flute, clarinet.
Japanese Version Featuring Digital K2 20Bit Mastering.
One night in 1961, July 16 to be exact, Prestige recorded a quintet that was playing a two-week engagement at the Five Spot on Cooper Square in lower Manhattan. There was no way of knowing that within three years, Eric Dolphy and Booker Little, two young budding giants of their time, would be dead. The seven numbers taped that night suddenly took on greater importance. With the hornmen is a rhythm section comprised of three powerful individuals - Mal Waldron, Richard Davis, and Ed Blackwell - who were able to blend their talents in a highly kinetic way that was most complementary to Eric and Booker. The latter's trumpet and Eric's bass clarinet and flute are heard in two elongated performances, Little's "Aggression" and the standard "Like Someone in Love."
* Don Schlitten - Design, Photography * Esmond Edwards - Producer, Supervisor * Phil DeLancie - Digital Remastering, Remastering * Robert Levin - Liner Notes * Rudy Van Gelder - Engineer
The second of three CDs that document the Eric DolphyBooker Little quintet's playing at the Five Spot (the third volume is titled Memorial Album) and features the group (with pianist Mal Waldron, bassist Richard Davis and drummer Ed Blackwell) really stretching out during long versions of Little's "Aggression" and the standard "Like Someone in Love." Dolphy's playing (whether on alto, bass clarinet or flute) always defied categorization while Little (who passed away less than three months later) was the first new voice on the trumpet to emerge after Clifford Brown's death in 1956. An excellent set although at just 36 minutes, one wishes that it had been combined with one of the other two volumes. --- Scott Yanow, All Music Guide
Eric Dolphy
Active Decades: '50s and '60s Born: Jun 20, 1928 in Los Angeles, CA Died: Jun 29, 1964 in Berlin, Germany Genre: Jazz Styles: Avant-Garde Jazz, Early Creative, Free Jazz, Post-Bop
Eric Dolphy was a true original with his own distinctive styles on alto, flute, and bass clarinet. His music fell into the "avant-garde" category yet he did not discard chordal improvisation altogether (although the relationship of his notes to the chords was often pretty abstract). While most of the other "free jazz" players sounded very serious in their playing, Dolphy's solos often came across as ecstatic and exuberant. His improvisations utilized very wide intervals, a variety of nonmusical speechlike sounds, and its own logic. Although the alto was his main axe, Dolphy was the first flutist to move beyond bop (influencing James Newton) and he largely introduced the bass clarinet to jazz as a solo instrument. He was also one of the first (after Coleman Hawkins) to record unaccompanied horn solos, preceding Anthony Braxton by five years. Eric Dolphy first recorded while with Roy Porter & His Orchestra (1948-1950) in Los Angeles, he was in the Army for two years, and he then played in obscurity in L.A. until he joined the Chico Hamilton Quintet in 1958. In 1959 he settled in New York and was soon a member of the Charles Mingus Quartet. By 1960 Dolphy was recording regularly as a leader for Prestige and gaining attention for his work with Mingus, but throughout his short career he had difficulty gaining steady work due to his very advanced style. Dolphy recorded quite a bit during 1960-1961, including three albums cut at the Five Spot while with trumpeter Booker Little, Free Jazz with Ornette Coleman, sessions with Max Roach, and some European dates. Late in 1961 Dolphy was part of the John Coltrane Quintet; their engagement at the Village Vanguard caused conservative critics to try to smear them as playing "anti-jazz" due to the lengthy and very free solos. During 1962-1963 Dolphy played third stream music with Gunther Schuller and Orchestra U.S.A., and gigged all too rarely with his own group. In 1964 he recorded his classic Out to Lunch for Blue Note and traveled to Europe with the Charles Mingus Sextet (which was arguably the bassist's most exciting band, as shown on The Great Concert of Charles Mingus). After he chose to stay in Europe, Dolphy had a few gigs but then died suddenly from a diabetic coma at the age of 36, a major loss. Virtually all of Eric Dolphy's recordings are in print, including a nine-CD box set of all of his Prestige sessions. In addition, Dolphy can be seen on film with John Coltrane (included on The Coltrane Legacy) and with Mingus from 1964 on a video released by Shanachie. ---Scott Yanow, All Music Guide |
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