07 Mar 2019

Norah Jones’ debut on Blue Note is a mellow, acoustic pop affair with soul and country overtones, immaculately produced by the great Arif Mardin. (It’s pretty much an open secret that the 22-year-old vocalist and pianist is the daughter of Ravi Shankar.) Jones is not quite a jazz singer,…

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07 Mar 2019

In the wake of her 2002 blockbuster debut, Norah Jones became an in-demand duet partner, popping up on albums from all manners of musicians. The 2010 compilation, …Featuring, helpfully rounds up 18 of these guest appearances, including a cut by the Jones-fronted country cabaret outfit the Little Willies, and…

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07 Mar 2019

Bobbi Humphrey scored her biggest hit with her third album Blacks and Blues, an utterly delightful jazz-funk classic that helped make her a sensation at Montreux. If it sounds a lot like Donald Byrd’s post-Black Byrd output, it’s no accident; brothers Larry and Fonce Mizell have their fingerprints all…

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07 Mar 2019

The third and final collaboration between flutist Bobbi Humphrey and Larry Mizell also marked the end of Humphrey’s five-album run with Blue Note Records. Humphrey began recording with Larry and his brother Fonce (who provides arrangements and plays clavinet and trumpet here) in the aftermath of Donald Byrd’s Black…

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07 Mar 2019

Named after Duke Ellington’s classic “Satin Doll” — which producers Fonce Mizell and Freddie Perren give a ’70s feel here — this delightful LP is further indication of Bobbi Humphrey’s God-given gifts. “Ladies Day” is syncopated and spacy; Humphrey’s flute stalks the groove like a hungry cat. Everyone seems…

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07 Mar 2019

For the second of Cecil Taylor’s two Blue Note albums (following Unit Structures), the innovative pianist utilized a sextet comprised of trumpeter Bill Dixon, altoist Jimmy Lyons, both Henry Grimes and Alan Silva on basses and drummer Andrew Cyrille. During the two lengthy pieces, Lyons’ passionate solos contrast with…

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07 Mar 2019

After several years off records, pianist Cecil Taylor finally had an opportunity to document his music of the mid-’60s on two Blue Note albums (the other one was Conquistador). Taylor’s high-energy atonalism fit in well with the free jazz of the period but he was actually leading the way…

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07 Mar 2019

Tender Feelin’s is an appropriate title for Duke Pearson’s second album for Blue Note. The record is a lovely, relaxed collection of ballads, standards, and jazz staples, with a few originals thrown in for good measure. Since Pearson sticks to the trio format, supported by bassist Gene Taylor and…

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07 Mar 2019

Duke Pearson rises to the challenge of writing for an all-star octet (with trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, trombonist Garnett Brown, altoist James Spaulding, Jerry Dodgion on alto and flute, Stanley Turrentine on tenor, bassist Gene Taylor, drummer Grady Tate, and the leader/pianist), contributing colorful frameworks and consistently challenging compositions. The…

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07 Mar 2019

Pianist/composer Duke Pearson leads an all-star group on this run-through of seven of his compositions. The musicians (trumpeter Freddie Hubbard, altoist James Spaulding, Joe Henderson on tenor, bassist Ron Carter, drummer Mickey Roker, and the pianist/leader) are actually more impressive than many of the compositions, although the swinging minor-toned…

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