Roy Haynes - Quiet Fire (2004)

  • 07 Aug, 18:54
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Artist:
Title: Quiet Fire
Year Of Release: 2004
Label: Galaxy
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks) | Mp3 / 320kbps
Total Time: 77:48
Total Size: 464 MB | 178 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist
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01 Thank You Thank You 6:55
02 Bullfight 11:13
03 Quiet Fire 8:13
04 Processional 5:22
05 Sweet Song 6:21
06 Vistalite 5:55
07 More Pain Than Purpose 5:43
08 Wonderin 4:06
09 Venus Eyes 4:41
10 Rok out 6:30
11 Water Children 6:44
12 Invitation 6:05

A Roy Haynes CD that incorporates funk, soul, rock, and pop elements and includes electric keyboards and electric bass? In the generally conservative jazz climate of the 21st century -- a time when Wynton Marsalis and his equally rigid associates enjoy way too much influence -- the assumption is that a CD by someone of Haynes' caliber shouldn't be anything less than 100 percent purist in its outlook. But Haynes, truth be told, has long been versatile -- his resumé includes everyone from Pat Metheny to Lester "The Pres" Young -- and Quiet Fire reflects the veteran drummer's admirable diversity. Quiet Fire reissues two Galaxy LPs (1977's Thank You Thank You and 1978's Vistalite) back to back on a 77-minute CD. Haynes was in his early fifties when the albums were recorded, and he was obviously open to trying a variety of things. Parts of Quiet Fire are essentially straight-ahead post-bop, including Stanley Cowell's reflective "Sweet Song" and a hard-swinging version of Bronislaw Kaper's "Invitation." But a poppier, more R&B-influenced Haynes asserts himself on funky offerings like "Venus Eyes" and "Water Children" -- a Haynes who gives the impression that he's hip to Grover Washington, Jr., the Crusaders, Tom Scott, Charles Earland, Ronnie Laws, and other jazz-funksters of the '70s. At their best, all of those artists exemplified tasteful commercialism back then -- and Haynes brings a similar mentality to the more commercial parts of Quiet Fire. Haynes was definitely reaching out to soul, rock, and pop audiences at the time, but he did it with integrity; he never stooped to playing the sort of abysmal, mind-numbing elevator music that dominates today's NAC/smooth jazz formats. This CD is mildly uneven -- some of the tunes are more memorable than others -- but all things considered, Quiet Fire paints an attractive picture of Haynes in 1977 and 1978.~AllMusic Review by Alex Henderson


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