There are two ways to appreciate an album such as this one. The first is to invite a pretty woman for a late drink by your place, install the CD or vinyl, turn your hi-fi to a low volume and let Jimmy Smith weave a cool relaxing ambiance in the background helping your romantic attempt to seduce the lady. The music is secondary. This is what I call the passive way. The second way is to put your earphones on, put up the volume to a reasonable high, tune the equalizer to the appropriate settings, close your eyes and immerse yourself in the musicians work, trying to isolate and follow each instrument's part and see how they mingle together into the global result. (Note : this way doesn't forbid your feet to gently stomp the swinging beat.) This is the active way and it's rather my way.
The Incredible Jimmy Smith, as he was called, took the B-3 out of its traditional churchy gospel environment to the open as a full jazz instrument. Born in 1925 in Pennsylvania, he was already a skilled pianist since his early teens, playing in his father's entertainment show, when one day of 1955 he decided to buy a B-3 model. For a whole year, he studied the complex secrets of the instrument, practiced intensively and created his own style, before starting to perform in Philadelphia clubs in 1955 and in New York from 1956, where he was quickly remarked by famous Blue Note label bosses Alfred Lion and Francis Wolff who immediately put a contract on the table.
Considered to be the creator of a new genre, the "funk or "soul jazz", in the late 1950s-early 1960s, Smith did some forty recording sessions (!) for Blue Note between 1956 and 1963. "Back At The Chicken Shack" is from one of the 1960 sessions, actually the same one during which his album "Midnight Special" was taped.
Cool is THE word about this elegant album halfway between funky blues and jazz . Smith bubbling B-3 Hammond organ is cool, Stanley Turrentine's flamboyant tenor sax is cool, Kenny Burrell's laid-back jazz guitar is cool, and Donald "Duck" Bailey's background but essential drumming is cool.
The result, as it appears on this album, is as groovy as it is original. The five tracks on this record leave enough space for each of Smith accomplices to express himself through solo moments, starting by Turrentine.
Stanley Turrentine |
As for the discreet Bailey, the importance of his presence can be measured by imagining how the album would sound without him : it would undoubtedly lack something essential. ■
Infos & docs
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Donald Bailey |
Kenny Burrell |
The last concerts
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