Thursday, October 08, 2009

The Body & The Soul

At age 25, Freddie Hubbard made inroads into modern jazz most trumpeters could not imagine, much less come through with. As a soloist, one of Hubbard's crowning achievements in his early period was this recording on which he teamed with Wayne Shorter, marginally as a performer but prominent in the role of arranger/conductor for his first time ever. Utilizing a septet, 16-piece big band, and orchestra plus stings to play concise, tight tunes, Shorter provides the backdrop to employ Hubbard's bold toned trumpet and all of its devices in a full display of his powerful melodic talents. Yeoman Reggie Workman plays bass on all selections, with drummer Louis Hayes in the seven-piece combo, and great work from Philly Joe Jones in the larger bands. Interestingly enough, the three tracks with the smaller ensemble are the most interesting, due to the presence of Eric Dolphy, Curtis Fuller, Cedar Walton, and Shorter on the front line. "Clarence's Place" is a post-bop jewel with spiky brass accents and Dolphy's ribald and outre alto sax solo contrasting Shorter's relatively reserved tenor, "Dedicated to You" is a wisp of a tune, while "Body & Soul," an atypical choice for the opening selection, is a straight read of the classic ballad with a chart that sounds larger than the small horn section, and a wavering flute via Dolphy. The big band does an unusual soul-jazz treatment of the Brazilian number "Manha de Carnaval" flavored by Robert Northern's French horn, while "Aries" is a hard bop show stopper with two-note accents buoying Hubbard's great lyrical lines, and goes further into hard bop with "Thermo" as the horns demand attention with the trumpeter as an afterthought. The string section, ten pieces strong, joins the big band on the film noir type Duke Ellington piece "Chocolate Shake," the stock "I Got It Bad," and "Skylark," with its soft clarion intro bubbling underneath with the violins, violas, and cellos. The manner in which this recording is programmed is thoughtful in that it lends to the diversity of the project, but is seamless from track to track. Dan Morgenstern's hefty liner notes also explain the concept behind this ambitious project, one which did not compare to any of Hubbard's other recordings in his career. Therefore it stands alone as one of the most unique productions in his substantive discography, and a quite credible initial go-round for Shorter as an orchestrator. Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide

~ Michael G. Nastos, All Music Guide


Artist: Freddie Hubbard
Album: The Body & The Soul
Year: March 8, 11 and May 2, 1963
Label: Impulse

Personnel on # 1, 4, 5
Freddie Hubbard: Trumpet
Curtis Fuller: Trombone
Eric Dolphy: Alto Saxophone, Flute
Wayne Shorter: Tenor Saxophone
Cedar Walton: Piano
Reggie Workman: Bass
Louis Hayes: Drums

Personnel on # 2, 6, 9
Freddie Hubbard, Al DeRisi, Ernie Royal, Clark Terry: Trumpets
Melba Liston, Curtis Fuller: Trombones
Bob Northern: French Horn
Robert Powell: Tuba
Eric Dolphy: Alto Saxophone, Flute
Seldon Powell, Jerome Richardson: Tenor Saxophones
Charles Davis: Baritone Saxophone
Cedar Walton: Piano
Reggie Workman: Bass
Philly Joe Jones: Drums
Wayne Shorter: Arranger, Conductor

Personnel on # 3, 7, 8
Freddie Hubbard, Ed Armour, Richard Williams: Trumpets
Melba Liston, Curtis Fuller: Trombones
Bob Northern, Julius Watkins: French Horns
Eric Dolphy: Alto Saxophone, Flute
Jerome Richardson: Baritone Saxophone
Cedar Walton: Piano
Reggie Workman: Bass
Philly Joe Jones: Drums
Harry Cykman, Morris Stonzek, Arnold Eidus, Sol Shapiro, Charles McCracken, Harry Katzman, Harry Lookofsky, Gene Orloff, Julius Held, Raoul Poliakin: Strings
Wayne Shorter: Arranger Conductor

Track List:

  1. Body And Soul

  2. Carnival (Manha De Carnaval)

  3. Chocolate Shake

  4. Dedicated To You

  5. Clarence's Place

  6. Aries

  7. Skylark

  8. I Got It Bad (And That Ain't Good)

  9. Thermo


Low quality sample






mp3@320

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