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The Quest (Remastered 2024) Mal Waldron, Eric Dolphy, Booker Ervin

Album info

Album-Release:
1962

HRA-Release:
27.09.2024

Album including Album cover

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  • 1 Status Seeking (Remastered 2024) 08:52
  • 2 Duquility (Remastered 2024) 04:09
  • 3 Thirteen (Remastered 2024) 04:45
  • 4 We Diddit (Remastered 2024) 04:26
  • 5 Warm Canto (Remastered 2024) 05:37
  • 6 Warp And Woof (Remastered 2024) 05:40
  • 7 Fire Waltz (Remastered 2024) 07:58
  • Total Runtime 41:27

Info for The Quest (Remastered 2024)

Bereits 1962 schrieb Billboard, dass dieses Album von Waldron, einem von Billie Holidays bevorzugten Pianisten, "zwei Zutaten enthält, die sein tief verwurzeltes Talent zeigen: Melodie und Swing". Das Sextett ist eine verlockende Mischung aus Avantgarde und Hard Bop und bietet mit Eric Dolphy (Altsaxophon), Booker Ervin (Tenorsaxophon), Ron Carter (Cello), Joe Benjamin (Kontrabass) und Charlie Persip (Schlagzeug) eine gut abgerundete Talentprobe.

Auch nach Jahrzehnten sind Waldrons Kompositionen wie das sentimentale "Duquility" und das eskapistische "Warm Canto" in ihrer bereitwilligen Überwindung von Genre und Erwartungen unerreicht. Derweil ist "Fire Waltz" ein heller, zerebraler Pop-Genuss.

Mal Waldron, Klavier
Eric Dolphy, Altsaxophon, Klarinette, Bassklarinetten
Booker Ervin, Tenorsaxophon
Ron Carter, Cello
Joe Benjamin, Kontrabass
Charlie Persip, Schlagzeug

Aufgenommen am 27. Juni 1961 im Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey
Produziert von Esmond Edwards

Digital remastered

Zur Info: wir bieten dieses Album in der nativen Abtastrate von 96 kHz, 24-Bit an. Die uns zur Verfügung gestellte 192 kHz-Version wurde hochgerechnet und bietet keinen hörbaren Mehrwert!




Mal Waldron
studied classical piano as a child but picked up the alto sax to play jazz. His piano teacher admonished him for improvising on classical works, calling it “illegal.” Waldron found his niche in jazz, where he said it was “illegal” to reproduce the same notes time after time. In 1947, after service in the Army, he concentrated on jazz piano and graduated from Queens College. He wrote music for dance companies, played with R&B groups, recorded with Ike Quebec, and joined Charles Mingus’ Jazz Composers Workshop in 1954 where he was able to explore new avenues for jazz. He became the “house” pianist for Prestige Records and in 1957 made several recordings with Jackie McLean and with John Coltrane, who recorded Waldron’s “Soul Eyes.” In 1957 he became Billie Holiday’s accompanist until her death in 1959, and together they wrote “Left Alone.”

Waldron was an early admirer of Thelonious Monk and was especially interested in Monk’s use of space. Waldron’s style, noted for its unusual voicings, defies convention and falls somewhere between hard bop and free jazz. In 1958 he and soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy recorded the first album of all Monk compositions by anyone other than the composer. In the early ‘60s Waldron joined Abbey Lincoln and Max Roach in recording original music expressing black pride and anger at the conditions of black Americans. In 1961 he recorded a series of albums at the Five Spot with multiple reed genius Eric Dolphy, who introduced Waldron’s composition “Fire Waltz,” making it a staple of his repertoire. In The Quest, recorded that same year, they explored new musical forms in a series of Waldron compositions.

In 1963 Waldron suffered a nervous breakdown and subsequent to his recovery emigrated to Europe in 1965, settling in Munich in 1967 and moving to Brussels 20 years later. In Europe and Asia Waldron enjoyed the status of a jazz guru. A dignified and intelligent man who spoke four languages, he traveled the world as a performer. He recorded extensively throughout the ‘70s, ‘80s, and ‘90s with European and Japanese jazz artists and made several solo recordings and duos with his old friend Lacy, who was living in Paris, and with American bassist David Friesen. Waldron continued to perform despite failing health, recording his final album with vocalist Judi Silvano in 2002 and receiving a rave review for his performance that year at the Chicago jazz festival.

Waldron scored several films: The Cool World, Sweet Love Bitter, Trois Chambres aManhattan (French), and Tokyo Blues (Japanese). (Sandra Burlingame)



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