Late Posted 19 hours ago Report Posted 19 hours ago There's a thread here dedicated to Nelson's work on Prestige, but I couldn't find one that discussed this album. I've had this on compact disc since it was first reissued in the early 90's. I always go hot and cold on it, but yesterday it really clicked for me. Nelson plays soprano throughout, and his intonation is near-perfect, which in a way isn't surprising given Nelson's meticulousness. His solo on "The Shadow of Your Smile" is really something else. Longer than most Nelson solos, and not openly reliant on his "patterns for jazz" as much as other solos of his from the period. It's really inventive. And his sound is so flute-like in the upper register—I wonder what Steve Lacy or Coltrane thought. (Is Nelson playing an Otto Link? I think so.) What do you think of this record? Both the orchestra side and the quartet side. Does the rhythm section (Steve Kuhn, Ron Carter, Grady Tate) gel? Quote
clifford_thornton Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago I have never heard this record, though I've seen it around. Might give it a try one day. Quote
jlhoots Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago Haven't listened in a good while. Mixed feelings when I did listen to it. Quote
JSngry Posted 16 hours ago Report Posted 16 hours ago I like it a very lot, especially the quartet side. Top-shelf imo. That mouthpiece? Maybe a metal Selmer? Quote
colinmce Posted 14 hours ago Report Posted 14 hours ago Haven't heard it in just about a couple decades, I would gladly grab a copy next time I see it around. But I too remember having mixed feelings. Quote
JSngry Posted 14 hours ago Report Posted 14 hours ago Mixed feelings about the orchestra side, I get that. But that quartet side is something else again! Quote
Late Posted 9 hours ago Author Report Posted 9 hours ago Even if you (one) doesn't care for the orchestra side—though how could you not like "Flute Salad"??—there's no disputing that the charts are played flawlessly. Especially that opening bass clarinet line. You never hear a breath or a split note. I only wish Nelson had stepped a little closer to the mike. The quartet sides are badass, especially with the addition of "Straight No Chaser" and "Example 78" as bonus tracks. Ron Carter sounds great on "Elegy for A Duck." That's one hip bass vamp. And notice how the tune is a clever nod to "Take Five." I wonder what made Nelson decide to pick up the soprano for this album. He plays it so well...it's not simply a "double" for him. Quote
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