This album is one of a series of new cassettes
from Times Music containing classic performances by such jazz greats
as Charlie Parker, Duke Ellington and Miles Davis. Much of the
material is very good, but some is of poor recording quality. On the
debit side, there is no documentation apart from the names of the
tracks and a brief biographical sketch of the leading musician, and
at least two of the cassettes have serious mistakes in each of these
departments. Times Music needs to pull up its socks on its slipshod
documentation.
Luckily, this album doesn't carry
such blunders and, since its title indicates it's taken from a
single concert tour, I was able to infer the names of the supporting
musicians from a compilation album containing two other numbers
performed in Japan in 1963. The recording quality too is better than
on the other albums. So let me get down to commenting on the music
played by Monk on piano, Charlie Rouse on tenor sax, Butch Warren on
bass, and Frankie Dunlop on drums.
That is pretty good. Monk had at
this point in his career ironed out some of the most obvious
angularities that had made his music somewhat difficult for
non-diehard jazz fans to absorb. With its deliberately irregular
timing and unusual note sequences, it was more inaccessible than
most of be-bop and seldom offered the exciting tempos that be-bop
generally did. Those who listened attentively, were rewarded by his
dramatic and strong technique, sense of harmony, strikingly original
compositions and the vigour with which he put them
across.
It's fair to say that the regular
presence of Charlie Rouse during this mature phase of his career
went a long way towards alleviating the angularity of Monk's earlier
work. It also helped him to realise some of the ideas he shared with
Duke Ellington about blending different sound textures in his work,
lacking in his solo and trio performances. The quartet performs
several of his famous compositions here, including Blue Monk. On this opening
number, like on most of the others, the whole quartet take turns to
make solo contributions. On this one Rouse solos first, followed by
Monk. On Bolivar Blues
and Evidence, solo
piano intros precede the theme before, once again, Rouse's sax
rousingly takes a long first solo.
Two short numbers close the album.
Just a Gigolo is an
entirely solo piano performance, its rhythmlessness accentuating the
reflective mood of the album. The closing number, Epistrophy, like Blue Monk starts off with
Rouse leading on the theme and then taking the first solo. With just
five pieces the album just avoids being disappointingly short. And
of course the quality goes some way further towards alleviating any
residual disappointment at the length.
Jazzebel