Pat Metheny & The Heath Brothers - The Move to the Groove Session (2000)

  • 26 Feb, 23:43
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Artist:
Title: The Move to the Groove Session
Year Of Release: 2000
Label: West Wind [WW 2130]
Genre: Jazz, Post Bop, Fusion
Quality: FLAC (tracks + .cue,log)
Total Time: 51:41
Total Size: 268 MB(+3%)
WebSite:

Tracklist

01. Sassy Samba (8:11)
02. Arthurdoc (4:54)
03. Guitar Improvisation (7:33)
04. All the Things You Are (11:04)
05. Is That So? (6:01)
06. I Waited for You (6:40)
07. Move to the Groove (7:18)
Pat Metheny & The Heath Brothers - The Move to the Groove Session (2000)

personnel :

#1-4,7:
Pat Metheny - electric guitar, guitar synthesizer (#1,2,4,7)
Jimmy Heath - tenor saxophone (#1,2,4,7)
Percy Heath - bass (#1,2,4,7)
Albert "Tootie" Heath - drums (#1,2,4,7)
Recorded at Palais De Congress, Cannes, France on January 28, 1983.
#5,6:
Jimmy Heath - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone
Tony Purrone - guitar
Stafford James - bass
Akira Tana - drums
Recorded at Rudy Van Gelder Studio, Englewood Cliffs, NJ on February 17-18, 1987.

Guitarist Pat Metheny and the Heath Brothers playing together? At first glance it might seem a bit illogical, but Metheny has always been a flexible player, able to play a variety of different styles. At a concert in France on January 28, 1983, he sat in with tenor saxophonist Jimmy Heath, bassist Percy Heath, and drummer Albert "Tootie" Heath on a few basic (and often blues-oriented) originals ("Sassy Samba," "Arthurdoc," and the blues "Move to the Groove"), plus "All the Things You Are." Metheny, doubling on guitar synthesizer (which dominates "Sassy Samba"), sounds quite happy performing with the swinging Heaths and the combination works quite well. In addition, Metheny has an unaccompanied and mostly melodic "Guitar Improvisation." This CD concludes with two selections from a completely unrelated concert from Seattle in 1988. Trombonist Julian Priester is prominent in a group also including altoist Denny Goodhew, guitarist Robben Ford, Ralph Towner (normally a guitarist) on synthesizer, bassist Charlie Haden, drummer Jerry Granelli, and an unidentified wordless vocalist on one number. The music is atmospheric and the unusual group somehow blends together, particularly on the blues "I Could See Forever." Worth searching for.~Scott Yanow