Hamiet Bluiett - The Clarinet Family (1987)

  • 02 Dec, 13:50
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: The Clarinet Family (Live)
Year Of Release: 1987
Label: Black Saint
Genre: Jazz
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 1:03:16
Total Size: 356 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

1. Sub-Jump (09:44)
2. For Macho - Dedicated To Machito (09:53)
3. Nioka (03:07)
4. Paper Works (07:49)
5. Run Away (05:22)
6. To Be There - In Memory Of Duke Ellington (15:48)
7. Solo Bass Improvisation No. 1 (03:10)
8. River Niger (04:59)
9. Song For Mama (02:54)

Personnel:

Buddy Collette ( Flute )
Don Byron ( Bass Clarinet )
Dwight Andrews ( Clarinet Soprano )
John Purcell ( Flute, Saxophone, Clarinet )
Kidd Jordan ( E Flat Clarinet )
Ronnie Burrage ( Drums )
J. D. Parran ( Clarinet )
Eugene Ghee ( Saxophone, Clarinet )
Hamiet Bluiett ( Sax, Clarinet )
Fred Hopkins ( Bass )

The most prominent baritone saxophonist of his generation, Hamiet Bluiett combined a blunt, modestly inflected attack with a fleet, aggressive technique, and (maybe most importantly) a uniform hugeness of sound that extended from his horn's lowest reaches to far beyond what is usually its highest register. Probably no other baritonist played so high, with so much control; Bluiett's range traveled upward into an area usually reserved for the soprano or even sopranino. His technical mastery aside, Bluiett's solo voice was unlikely to be confused with any other. Enamored with the blues, brusque and awkwardly swinging, in his high-energy playing Bluiett made a virtue out of tactlessness; on ballads he assumed a considerably more lush, romantic guise. Like his longtime collaborator, tenor saxophonist David Murray, Bluiett incorporated a great deal of conventional bebop into his free playing. In truth, Bluiett's music was not free jazz at all, but rather a plain-spoken extension of the mainstream tradition.