In many ways, Blues Walk marked the culmination of Lou Donaldson’s prime period as a hard-driving, straight-ahead bop saxophonist. Until that point, he had been turning out intense, furious bop workouts — afterward, as its successor Light Foot shows, he began to slow down a bit. With Light Foot,…
The Time Is Right is an album by jazz saxophonist Lou Donaldson recorded for the Blue Note label and performed by Donaldson with Blue Mitchell, Horace Parlan, Laymon Jackson,Dave Bailey, and Ray Barretto with Sam Jones and Al Harewood replacing Jackson and Bailey on one track. The album was awarded 3 stars in an Allmusic review.
Recorded in July of 1960, Midnight Sun sat unissued in Blue Note’s vaults until the early ’80s, when it was issued as part of their LT series. Like many of the previously unreleased albums in the series, it’s clear that the only reason this remained in the vaults was…
Since Quartet/Quintet/Sextet is Lou Donaldson’s first full-length album, it’s not surprising that it captures the alto saxophonist at the height of his Charlie Parker influence. Throughout the album — on CD, the collection features all the music on the 12″ LP, music from its 10″ incarnation, and three alternate…
Following a series of concert dates in Tokyo late in 1961 with his quintet, Horace Silver returned to the U.S. with his head full of the Japanese melodies he had heard during his visit, and using those as a springboard, he wrote four new pieces, which he then recorded…
One of the final Horace Silver Quintet Blue Note albums, this somewhat forgotten LP, dedicated to “the Brotherhood of Men,” is an instrumental set that introduced six new compositions by the pianist/leader (none of which caught on as standards) along with Bennie Maupin’s “Lovely’s Daughter.” Maupin (on tenor and…
This live set (recorded at the Village Gate) finds pianist/composer Horace Silver and his most acclaimed quintet (the one with trumpeter Blue Mitchell, tenor saxophonist Junior Cook, bassist Gene Taylor and drummer Roy Brooks) stretching out on four selections, including his new song “Filthy McNasty.” Two shorter performances were added to the CD version of this…
This quintet date by guitarist Grant Green was one of the last of his Blue Note albums to be reissued on CD, and it is somewhat clear why. The musicians (Green, trumpeter Johnny Coles, tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson, organist John Patton, and drummer Ben Dixon) play well enough, but…
On the heels of Matador and Solid, two of his most advanced albums, Grant Green decided to continue the more modal direction he’d begun pursuing with the help of members of Coltrane’s quartet. Accordingly, he hooked up with organist Larry Young, who was just beginning to come into his…
This languid, seductive gem may well be Grant Green’s greatest moment on record. Right from the opening bars of the classic title cut, Idle Moments is immediately ingratiating and accessible, featuring some of Green’s most stylish straight jazz playing. Whether he’s running warm (pianist Duke Pearson’s “Idle Moments”), cool…

