Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • mikeweil changed the title to Art Blakey: Strasbourg ‘82
Posted

The advance files that I received to review labeled “Old Folks” as “I Didn’t Know What Time It Was.” I informed the label, which hadn’t printed the sleeve yet. Unfortunately, the liner notes mention the incorrect title, so I am unsure if a song was substituted late or the writer didn’t recognize the mislabeled song.

Posted

By the 80s, I think Blakey couldn't hide his decline as a drummer, but the repertoire had grown to include more modern tunes that I found enjoyable. On this album, for example, tracks like “Little Man” or “Fuller Love” (aka “In Case You Missed It”).

Posted
On 12/12/2025 at 3:11 AM, mhatta said:

By the 80s, I think Blakey couldn't hide his decline as a drummer, but the repertoire had grown to include more modern tunes that I found enjoyable. On this album, for example, tracks like “Little Man” or “Fuller Love” (aka “In Case You Missed It”).

I don´t know nothing about a decline. Saw him the last time in 1989 and it was fantastic, and I really could HEAR him. I don´t know that album. I saw Blakey very often from the late 70´s to 1990 with different bands, the first was with Valery Ponomarev, Dave Schnitter and Bobby Watson, I think James Williams and aaah .....a bass player.

Later with maybe Donald Harrison and Terenche Blanchard maybe Mulgrew Miller and Lonnie Plaxico, and later maybe with that young white cat on piano Benny Green and other very good young musicians. Maybe that was the last occasion I saw him. 

Posted
51 minutes ago, Gheorghe said:

I don´t know nothing about a decline. Saw him the last time in 1989 and it was fantastic, and I really could HEAR him. I don´t know that album. I saw Blakey very often from the late 70´s to 1990 with different bands, the first was with Valery Ponomarev, Dave Schnitter and Bobby Watson, I think James Williams and aaah .....a bass player.

Later with maybe Donald Harrison and Terenche Blanchard maybe Mulgrew Miller and Lonnie Plaxico, and later maybe with that young white cat on piano Benny Green and other very good young musicians. Maybe that was the last occasion I saw him. 

I only saw him for two consecutive nights in 1985 (Blanchard/Toussaint/Harrison/Miller/Plaxico). I didn't note any decline. In point of fact, I recall that at one point each evening Blakey's drumming became so intense it was almost physically overwhelming. The only other time I experienced something similar was with Max Roach.

Posted

I saw him twice in the later years.  Once with Philip Harper/Toussaint/Benny Green and a bass player, and that was great.  And near the end of his life with Brian Lynch/Steve Davis/two tenors - Dale Barlow and Javon Jackson/Geoff Keezer/Essiett Essiett, and you could tell some decline at that point.  And Jackson and Keezer were weak, though Lynch was fantastic.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...