Midnight Blue is a 1963 album by Jazz guitarist Kenny Burrell featuring Stanley Turrentine on tenor saxophone, Major Holley on double bass, Bill English on drums and Ray Barretto on conga, and is one of Burrell's best-known works for Blue Note. Jazz Improv Magazine
lists the album among its top five recommended recordings for Burrell,
indicating that "[i]f you need to know 'the Blue Note sound', here it
is". In 2005, NPR included the album in its "Basic Jazz Library", describing it as "one of the great jazzy blues records". The album has been re-issued by Blue Note and the French label Classics.
This album is one of guitarist Kenny Burrell's best-known sessions for the Blue Note label. Burrell is matched with tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, bassist Major Holley, drummer Bill English, and Ray Barretto
on conga for a blues-oriented date highlighted by "Chitlins Con Carne,"
"Midnight Blue," "Saturday Night Blues," and the lone standard "Gee
Baby Ain't I Good to You."
I have been searching for beautiful jazz guitar albums, and this is
about as close to perfection as I have found. For an album recorded in
1963, it still sounds remarkably fresh today. Beautiful playing never
goes out of style. How smooth can Jazz guitar get? Right here is the answer. Every song on
this album is first rate and has some of the best guitar I've ever heard
when it comes to Jazz. Five stars really isn't enough when it comes to
this album. It should be the first stop when considering listening to
Kenny Burrell.
In an era dominated by the glossy veneer of "Facebook blue," Kenny Burrell's Midnight Blue
sets the mood for a brief return to a bygone era when the deep indigo
of the Yves Klein version was more common. Darker hues ruled the night,
and the pale moonlight of a lovelorn skyline meant it was past last call
and all that remained of the day was an overwhelming air of what could
only be called the blues. "The blues," Duke Ellington
wrote, "the blues ain't nothin' but a cold gray day, and all night long
it stays that way…the blues is a one-way ticket from your love to
nowhere; the blues ain't nothin' but a black crepe veil, ready to wear."
Leonard Feather begins his liner notes for Burrell's
seminal album with this quote, invoking one of the consummate jazz
guitarist's greatest influences, and one of his greatest champions. Now
81, Burrell even teaches a course on Ellington at UCLA. Part Lawrence Lucie, part Charlie Christian,
he has a steely, cool-under-pressure sound on the guitar that
dovetailed perfectly with Blue Note’s prevailing blues-infused
character.
Few albums capture the aesthetic of Blue Note's golden era better than Midnight Blue—a
consistent set of original minor grooves meant to be experienced in its
entirety, rather than padding for one standout track—and it justifiably
occupies a place in the jazz canon, a common entry on countless
essential listening lists. Recorded 50 years ago at Van Gelder studio in
Englewood Cliffs with Burrell's pianoless quintet, the album still
holds up to critical scrutiny, or to a pairing with a half-empty bottle
of Scotch. Undoubtedly, 1963 was a high-water mark for jazz, in New
Jersey and elsewhere.
One of Burrell's most enduring achievements, the album plumbs the
depths of the blues for its harmonic subtleties and lyricism in a manner
that can be readily accessible on its face yet challenging enough to
reward repeated visits. As always with Burrell, though, never mistake
brevity for simplicity; the fathomless 12-bar mantra has no two
identical choruses, and Burrell doesn't rely on reflexive facility, the
blues equivalent of fool's gold.
A true master, Burrell has internalized the form, giving him the
sense of repose and restraint that is the cornerstone of any bluesman
worth his salt. On this outing, he is joined by like-minded players who
create the illusion of a loose blowing session within a tight framework:
tenor saxophonist Stanley Turrentine, bassist Major Holley, drummer Billy Gene English, and conguero Ray Barretto, a highly regarded bandleader in his own right who injects a dash of Latin flavor into the mix.
Burrell got his start as a Detroit rhythm guitarist; as a result, his
time is unerring and right in the pocket, he always spells out the
chords and forecasts where he's going, but like a great bus driver, he
doesn't draw attention to the underlying mechanics. The effect is a
listener-friendly album with a tonally nuanced atmosphere easily shared
between the jazz aficionado and the neophyte who just heard Kind of Blue for the first time; regardless of background, a smooth ride allows passengers to take in the scenic vistas.
The album opens with Burrell's classic minor blues, "Chitlins con Carne." Often covered by artists ranging from Horace Silver to Stevie Ray Vaughan,
this is the low-key original that set the standard for this now
standard Latin-tinged blues. The eight-bar intro lays down a pulsing
Latin clave, with Holley pedaling the bass as Barretto takes liberties
on the congas. Turrentine's matter-of-fact statement of the melody
establishes his by turns lugubrious and diaphanous sound.
Burrell's sparse comping sets the album's precedent for succinctness,
one of his hallmarks. His deceptively clean guitar solo walks a
tightrope between endless space and airtight rhythmic motifs; a
devil-may-care attitude in the face of death that comes from having been
down and out and having lived to tell about it. Turrentine plays foil,
Captain Kirk to Burrell's Spock, singing the blues right out of the
gate, but the two show their psychic connection when seamlessly trading
not fours, but ones, until the blistering out chorus.
"Mule" recalls Howlin' Wolf sideman Hubert Sumlin's
feel and precision, a slow-marinating, soft blues that the band works
over like a bomb squad that has seen it all. Unlike other jazz
subgenres, the key to the blues is to never let the bomb go off, and the
five demonstrate an unwavering focus, keenly aware of this urgent fact.
Punctuated by Holley's downward bass slide riff and English's ambling
hi-hat, Turrentine and Burrell stretch out on this quintessential slow
jam.
Burrell keeps it mellow on the crepuscular "Soul Lament," a solo
minor groove that departs from the blues form but nevertheless retains
its spirit. Though under three minutes, this represents some of
Burrell's most sensitive playing, replete with embellishments, a
rhythmic elasticity, and complex inversions. The pace picks up abruptly
on the title track, which reintroduces the rhythm section, but not
Turrentine. Taking another departure from the 12-bar blues, Burrell
shows his prodigious bebop chops here, cutting loose on some extended
lines juxtaposed with subtler rhythm guitar, employing technique that
carries his characteristic fullness despite its comparatively fewer
notes.
Turrentine returns on "Wavy Gravy," a smoldering mid-tempo blues
waltz that brings the minor groove to a new tension point. Holley
establishes the groove with a well-articulated bass line, which Burrell
glides over sparsely, until the saxophonist comes in to state the head
in unison with the guitar. Turrentine’s and Burrell's solos are the
epitome of cool, a relaxed but structured call-and-response that
typifies the album's eponymous color.
"Gee Baby, Ain't I Good to You," the album's sole non-original, is a
lazy, schmaltz-free meditation on love. Burrell uses it as a springboard
for his effortless, behind-the-beat bebop phrasing, playing off
English's sultry brushwork. Burrell closes the album with "Saturday
Night Blues," a driving nightcap to a bottomless evening that shifts the
blues from minor to major. Turrentine simply wails; his style contrasts
perfectly with Burrell's cavalier detachment. The two continue riffing
over each other until it all starts to fade out—the blues are never
finished, merely abandoned at dawn—as Saturday night palpably fades into
Sunday morning.
Track listing
Except where otherwise noted, all songs composed by Kenny Burrell.
"Chitlins con Carne" – 5:30
"Mule" (Burrell, Major Holley, Jr.) – 6:56
"Soul Lament" – 2:43
"Midnight Blue" – 4:02
"Wavy Gravy" – 5:47
"Gee, Baby, Ain't I Good to You" (Andy Razaf, Don Redman) – 4:25
"Saturday Night Blues" – 6:16
"Kenny's Sound" (reissue bonus track) – 4:43
"K Twist" (reissue bonus track)– 3:36
Personnel:
Kenny Burrell – guitar
Stanley Turrentine – tenor saxophone
Major Holley – bass
Billy Gene English – drums
Ray Barretto – conga
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ReplyDeleteHi Thanks for new workupload link much appreciated! however Track 8 is missing from the rar ?
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ReplyDeleteThank You for the Chitlins Con Carne!
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