Tina Brooks is interesting. Of the three records I have with him on, two are "True Blue" and Hubbard's "Open Sesame" plus one - both of which reveal this to be a really complimentary pairing. I feel that Brooks was the equal of Mobley but was perhaps fortunate in that this classic and cultish album was recorded on Blue Note which ensured that it has always been held in affection of fans. When I first heard it I thought it was a revelation but the more I play it, the more bizarre an album it seems. I think it is very similar to another brilliant album, "Shades of Redd" and although Freddie Redd's record has a different line up albeit Brooks is on this one too.
I feel these records are strangely untypical of the standard Blue Note sessions and think this is down to the amount of writing on the records. Not everyone gets to solo on every piece on "True Blue" and a lot of time is given to playing the heads as opposed to soloing. Both are recordings where the writing shines even more than the brilliant playing. I'm also inclined to think that neither record sits neatly with the then current jazz scene. They are both in the Hard Bop oeuvre whilst being very different from anything else in that canon. Even "Open sesame" feels more orthodox. The fact that Brooks and Redd are such obscure figures *(there is a new Redd album out at the moment) makes them seem even more exotic.
I'm a fan of both records yet always sound of their own little world more than anything else Blue Note put out. It is as if they must have always sounded nostalgic or even slightly divorced from the then current mainstream.
I feel these records are strangely untypical of the standard Blue Note sessions and think this is down to the amount of writing on the records. Not everyone gets to solo on every piece on "True Blue" and a lot of time is given to playing the heads as opposed to soloing. Both are recordings where the writing shines even more than the brilliant playing. I'm also inclined to think that neither record sits neatly with the then current jazz scene. They are both in the Hard Bop oeuvre whilst being very different from anything else in that canon. Even "Open sesame" feels more orthodox. The fact that Brooks and Redd are such obscure figures *(there is a new Redd album out at the moment) makes them seem even more exotic.
I'm a fan of both records yet always sound of their own little world more than anything else Blue Note put out. It is as if they must have always sounded nostalgic or even slightly divorced from the then current mainstream.
Comment