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Jones
for Elvin - Volume 1
CD review by
Mark Corroto from AllAboutJazz.com (November 1999)
Last year, Seattle
saxophonist Steve Griggs convinced legendary drummer Elvin Jones to interrupt
his West Coast tour to record a date with an ensemble of local musicians.
Volume one of the two scheduled releases is more than a ‘gosh gee look
who’s here’ recording. Griggs, the producer/arranger and label record
label entrepreneur represents himself well on the tenor saxophone, as
does a very capable band. Petersen, Thomas, and Sparks can also be heard
on the guitarist’s excellent date Jazz Disciples (Passage Records).
Favoring an early/mid period Coltrane sound, Griggs and ensemble maintain
a beautiful sound throughout, perhaps because it was recorded the old
fashioned way: one or two takes utilizing analog tapes. Of the nine tracks,
eight are Griggs originals plus Ellington’s "In A Sentimental Mood."
But enough about this
very capable band, (I would gladly become a groupie if I lived in Seattle)
what about Elvin? Brother to Thad and Hank, son of Detroit and the force
behind the most important band in modern jazz, at age seventy-one still
can move and groove better than any drummer working today. You cannot
help following the drummer throughout this recording. His beat once powered
John Coltrane’s quartet in the sixties, now Elvin’s energy is all his
own. If you cannot catch him live, this recording is a great substitute.
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