Tuesday 1 September 2009

Yusef Lateef ”Hush ‘N’ Thunder”

Yusef Lateef

Hush ‘N’ Thunder
( LP Atlantic Records, 1973 )
Catalog # SD 1635 VG

Tracklisting:
Side 1
1. Come Sunday – By Duke Ellington
2. The Hump – By Kenny Barron
3. Opus Pt. 1, Opus Pt. 2 – By Kenny Barron
4. This Old Building – By C. Robinson
Side 2
1. Prayer – By Kenny Barron
2. Sunset – By Kenny Barron
3. His Eye is on the Sparrow – Traditional
4. Destination Paradise – By Yusef Lateef

Personnel & Credits:
Producer – Joel Dorn
Kermit Moore – cello
Yusef Lateef – tenor saxophone, flute, shannai
Albert “Tootie” Heath – drums
Keith Loving – guitar
Bill Salter – acoustic & electric basses
Bob Cunningham
Al White – organ
Gordine Edwards – acoustic bass
Also: David Spinozza, Cornell Dupree, Kenny Barron,
Ray Bryant, Jimmy Owens


Review:
Recorded four years after Detroit, Yusef Lateef's Hush 'N' Thunder is a restless, wildly varied set, focusing on two aspects of his composing and playing methodology that have usually been showcased separately -- at least on his records. One is his R&B background, which comes off with a serious, down-home relativism that echoes both the Deep South of his upbringing and the mores trident big city versions of Chicago, Detroit, and New York. The other aspect of Lateef's musical character this album explores is his complex gift for melodic and chromatic arrangement. Lateef's penchant for compelling and unusual modal and melodic schematics as a composer is well-documented on his Prestige and Impulse sides, but has never been realized in setting where he played other people's music (he composed only one track here). Here, with the help of musicians as diverse as Ray Bryant, Kenny Barron, Bill Salter, Albert "Tootie" Heath, Kermit Moore, and Cornell Dupree, just to name a few, Lateef takes both bulls by the horns and alternates and combines them in new and unusual ways. Kenny Barron is the album's primary composer, and it is on his "The Hump" and R&B strutter that you get the first taste of Lateef's movement toward combinatory science: The front line consists of Lateef and Jimmy Owens on flügelhorn, with Barron, bassist Bob Cunnigham, and Heath on drums. What begins in standard cut time in I-IV-V progression begins to groove toward other dimensions in time sequencing in the solos. Shades of beat shifting and chameleon-like tempo are everywhere, even as the groove builds in intensity. Barron's "Prayer," a long, improvised cadenza that is as pastoral as a Vaughan Williams symphony, eventually mutates seamlessly into a blues groove driven by both Barron and Ray Bryant on piano and Salter's deeply funky bass groove. Lateef's solos on the pneumatic flute and Shennai are distorted, moaning, played from the heart of a different series of tonalities. The album closes with the meditative, slowly evolving "Destination Paradise," where Lateef's flute encounters three guitarists all engaging different modalities and playing a slow, subtle counterpoint as the rhythm section establishes a line that neither builds or dispels the tension. This album showcases Dr. Lateef heading for new musical frontiers as an interpreter and arranger and a deeply lyrical series of meditations on rhythm and melody.
By Thom Jurek (AMG)

By Pier

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