TARTALO ·
29-Мар-15 10:47
(спустя 3 года 11 месяцев, ред. 29-Мар-15 10:47)
Tracklist:
01. Some Words About Monk (Featuring Orrin Keepnews) 03:12
02. Nutty (Thelonious Monk) 06:58
03. Ruby, My Dear (Thelonious Monk) 07:48
04. Blue Monk (Thelonious Monk) 09:15
05. In Walked Bud (Thelonious Monk) 09:30
06. Round Midnight (Thelonious Monk/Cootie Williams/Bernie Hanighen) 16:22
07. Epistrophy (Thelonious Monk/ Kenny Clarke) 11:10
Personnel:
Charlie Rouse — Tenor Saxophone
George Cables — Piano
Don Cherry — Pocket Trumpet (#6; #7)
Buddy Montgomery — Vibraphone (#5; #6; #7)
Jessica Williams — Piano (#4)
Jeff Chambers — Bass
Ralph Penland — Drums
Dedicated to the great talent and indomitable spirit of Charlie Rouse (1924 - 1988) Recorded in performnce (at Bimbo´s 365 Club, in San Francisco) on October 10, 1988 as part of the 1988 "Jazz in the City! Festival at the THelonious Monk Birthday Tribute.
Credits
• Engineer – Ron Davis
• Producer – Orrin Keepnews
Review by Scott Yanow
Although he had an extensive career, tenor saxophonist Charlie Rouse is best remembered for his decade (1960-1970) as a member of the Thelonious Monk Quartet. It is only right that the last time that he picked up his horn was for a Thelonious Monk tribute concert. This historic event, originally released by Landmark and reissued with one extra selection on a 1997 32 Jazz CD, finds Rouse in prime form despite the fact that he had just seven weeks to live (before passing on from lung cancer). The date was special from the start, with producer Orrin Keepnews getting Charlie Rouse to say a few words to the audience about his time with Thelonious Monk. There are renditions of "Nutty" and "Ruby, My Dear" that match Charlie Rouse with pianist George Cables, bassist Jeff Chambers and drummer Ralph Penland; "Blue Monk" has Jessica Williams sitting in quite effectively on piano; the "new" rendition of "In Walked Bud" showcases vibraphonist Buddy Montgomery in a quartet with George Cables, Jeff Chambers, and Ralph Penland; and, for "'Round Midnight" and "Epistrophy" (Thelonious' closing theme, which also closed the career of Charlie Rouse), the tenorman and quartet are joined by trumpeter Don Cherry. A historic occasion that resulted in near-classic music. Highly recommended.