KENNY DORHAM, trumpet;
JULIAN CANNONBALL ADDERLEY, alto
sax;
CECIL PAYNE, baritone sax;
DAVID AMRAM, French horn;
CEDAR WALTON, piano;
PAUL CHAMBERS, bass;
JIMMY COBB, or PHILLY JOE JONES (on
Side 2 #2 and #3 only), drums.
New York; January 20 and
February 18, 1959.
SIDE 1
1. Blue Spring (6:08) (Kenny Dorham)
2. It Might as Well Be Spring (7:36) (Rodgers
& Hammerstein)
3. Poetic (6:43) (Kenny Dorham)
SIDE 2
1. Spring Is Here (6:32) (Kenny Dorham)*
2. Spring Cannon (4:48) (Kenny Dorhan)
3. Passion Spring (8:27) (Rodgers & Hart)
*Spring is here , a Rodgers and Hart composition, has been listed by mistake on the cover with Kenny Dorham as composer.
Spring is more than just a season
of the year. It is really a state of mind, a symbol of youth, joy
and vitality -as poets, lovers, and other such disciples of
fundamental truths know quite well. In this album, this spirit of
Spring is being properly celebrated in jazz terms by KENNY
DORHAM, with the aid of CANNONBALL ADDERLEY and several other
qualified experts on the subject of musical beauty and truth.
Since Spring is above all a time in which
things come into bloom, it is quite fitting that this LP offers
probably the most complete recorded view to date of the
considerable and varied jazz talents of Kenny Dorham. It is, of
course, no secret at all that Kenny is among the finest of modern
trumpets; he has been recognized for more than a decade as a
consistently exciting and imaginative horn, one of the very few
who can sensibly be mentioned in the same breath with the likes
of Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis. What is not nearly so well
known is that Kenny is a fresh and highly imaginative jazz
composer and arranger (although Miles and Max Roach, among
others, have long been outspoken enthusiasts on the subject of
Dorham's writing) - This is actually the first time that Kenny
has been able to take on complete responsibility for the
preparation and execution of an album: not only is he the leader
and a featured soloist, but the unusual instrumentation here is
also Kenny's idea, four of the six compositions are written and
arranged by him, and the scorings of the two standards are also
Dorham products. The result is an LP that clearly bears the stamp
of Kenny's fertile musical personality, firmly and impressively
expressing both his strength and his lyricism.
The "Spring" emphasis is no arbitrary
device. It reflects the fact that a feeling of life and lightness
runs through the album, maintaining itself through a range of
moods-from the earthiness of Blue Spring to the
tight-knit, surging Passion Spring. The four-horn lineup
helps greatly in the creation of this feeling, both because of
the nature of the instruments and because of the qualities of the
men Kenny has chosen to play them. Dorham himself is in notably
fleet and agile form here; Cannon ball commands a particularly
soaring alto style. Cecil Payne plays unusually fluent baritone,
with what must surely be the least 'heavy' sound of anyone
currently playing that instrument; and Dave Amram provides
buoyant and mellow French horn support throughout.
KENNY DORHAM has been an important and
influential part of the Eastern jazz scene since the mid-1940s,
which means that he was barely twenty when he began his long and
close association with Gillespie, Charlie Parker and other top
stars. During the mid-'50s, Dorham worked alongside Sonny Rollins
in Max Roach's quintet. More recently, he has been leading his
own groups in the New York area.
JULIAN "CANNONBALL" ADDERLEY, who has
since early 1958 been featured with the Miles Davis Sextet, is a
formidable improvisor and a thoroughly schooled musician. On this
LP he demonstrates once again why many consider him the alto star
of the day. He is spotlighted in particular on Spring Cannon (which,
Dorham notes, started out to be a canon-but he changed his mind
while writing it, and by altering its form and the spelling of
the title, turned it into a piece dedicated to Adderley!).
Cecil Payne has a well-earned reputation as
both a swinger and a solid ensemble anchor-man. Dave Amram, in
addition to his performing skills, has written highly- praised
background scores for several recent Broadway and off-Broadway
plays. The smooth-swinging rhythm support here includes the very
promising young pianist, Cedar Walton, who has worked with J. J.
Johnson and Gigi Gryce; and the outstanding young bass star, Paul
Chambers-who contributes a couple of notable solos, on Blue
Spring and Spring Is Here. Jimmy Cobb and the
remarkable Philly Joe Jones, both of whom have also gained much
attention by their work in Miles Davis groups, share the
drumming.
|