Back in the day, jazz critics used to bemoan the proliferation
of organ combo albums. I suppose they felt that this kind of stuff crowded out
more “serious” music. These days, such recordings are classic reminders of a
time when people crowded the downtown and uptown clubs, drank, listened, and
had a good time. On Basie’s Bandstand
is as good a way as any to recreate those Elysian days when jazz was fun, not “art.”
Richard “Groove” Holmes
was a popular and prolifically recorded artist in the 1960s through 1990s. He
also seems to have had a classic up-by- his-bootstraps life while remaining a
nice guy, as this obituary indicates.
On Basie’s Bandstand
was, as the title indicates, recorded live at Count Basie’s Lounge in Harlem in
1966. Some of that night’s work was released, but these tracks sat in the can
until being released on CD in 2003. Maybe it’s because most of them were jazz
standards like Bobby Timmons’s Moanin’
and This Here, and Horace Silver’s Nica’s Dream rather than more
R&B-related material.. Maybe it’s because
the whole record is short on mellow. It’s
a high-octane burner, during which Groove pulls out all of the stops, aided by
Gene Edwards on guitar and George Randall on drums. I’ll concede that some of his
solos are over-the-top flashy, but I like
over-the-top flashy. I picture myself as
they guy who keeps yelling “Oh, yeah!” at the end of This Here. So grab a beer (or two) and come on along for
the ride.
I've certainly heard the LH&R version of "This Here" more recently than Holmes's...and I'm sad to say the only album of Holmes's I've had is one of the Pickwick Quintessence LPs...but that anyone would whine about organ trio albums in the face yet another dull Davis band fusion album or the slumpingest years of Blue Note and cutbacks at the majors...ah, well.
ReplyDeleteI hadn't listened to Holmes much until now. He definitely had his own voice on the instrument. A lot of critics seem to manifest discontent unless the music in question "is moving jazz forward." I'm all for progress, but I'm even more for creativity. Given the rapid evolution of jazz from New Orleans to now, I think ther'es still some juice still left in the "older" forms, like organ combos. As for Blue Note and the majors, they're mostly played out. "Ah, well..." is all too accurate, I'm afraid.
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