the joe henderson / kenny dorham quintets

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (15 of them)

Kenny Dorham was a multi-gifted man, and Page One—the 1963 debut by Joe Henderson—displays several of his gifts. His eloquence on the trumpet, which has finally received some of the respect it deserved in recent years, can be heard on each of the six tracks. Dorham was also a brilliant composer as well as one of the very best at orchestrating melodies for a small group, and helped write the book for modern combo arranging as an original Jazz Messenger. His music writing is represented on Page One by the immortal “Blue Bossa” and the haunting short-form ballad “La Mesha.” As a prose writer, Dorham reviewed records briefly for DownBeat, which also published an excerpt from his unfinished autobiography. The original liner notes for Page One are Dorham’s, and they add to our feeling for his warmth, wit and intelligence.

Then there is Kenny Dorham the talent scout, who encouraged and championed an untold number of young musicians in his three decades on the jazz scene. He introduced Butch Warren to New York audiences, and could make the same claim for two of the bassist’s mates in the 1960 Dorham quintet, Charles Davis and Steve Kuhn. Herbie Hancock and Tony Williams partnered up on a Dorham recording session, Una Mas from April 1963, several weeks before their more fateful union in the Miles Davis quintet.

And no musician benefitted more clearly or deservedly from Dorham’s coat-pulling efforts than Henderson, who made his Blue Note debut on Una Mas, then found himself back at Rudy Van Gelder’s studio with Alfred Lion in the booth for Grant Green’s Am I Blue? in May before cutting Page One, Henderson’s own bow as a leader. The results Henderson achieved here were so impressive, and the resulting need to highlight this then-unknown tenor saxophonist so compelling, that Page One was issued prior to Dorham’s date. So, it was actually the second of what would ultimately be five classic Henderson/Dorham quintet albums, recorded for Blue Note over a 17-month period and issued under one or the other’s name. (The pair were also part of the Andrew Hill sextet that cut the equally classic Point of Departure in March 1964)

One aspect of the Dorham/Henderson discography that is especially fascinating is the way in which they assembled distinctive rhythm sections for each album. While no two of the five dates features the identical supporting cast, four musicians (the three heard here plus Richard Davis) appear twice. Warren was also on Una Mas, La Roca returned for Henderson’s Our Thing, and Tyner made the Henderson date In ‘N Out. These players were not so much interchangeable as extremely compatible, creating a distinctive foundation for the music determined by the collective sound and sense of time generated by each specific trio.

The unit on Page One sounds especially relaxed and offers a warm and more intimate slant on innovations that Tyner was busy uncovering as a member of the John Coltrane quartet. After appearing on three Freddie Hubbard Blue Note albums in 1960 and ’61, Tyner had signed a contract with Impulse! (Coltrane’s label), which explains the listing of four musicians and “Etc.” on the front cover. This first reappearance of Blue Note was the start of a slow but sure move back into the Lion orbit that led Tyner to more important sideman work with Henderson, Wayne Shorter and several others, and ultimately to his own recording contract and the similarly timeless The Real McCoy (with Henderson on tenor) in 1967.

my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 23:11 (eleven months ago) link

they also collaborated on andrew hill's landmark point of departure session, but as sidemen so i'm not counting it. it would probably take the easy win if i had included it.

(it's also a sextet, so y'know)

anyway, these albums are about as strong an argument as can be made for the awesomeness of early 60s blue note. i think page one is probably the obvious favorite, mostly on account of "blue bossa"--

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EUxv3AAaK_Y

one of the biggest tunes in the canon imo. however do not sleep on our thing, as it features andrew hill in a very much soul jazz sideman appearance mode. una mas also a very worthy contender with 17 year old tony williams and herbie hancock pre-miles, both absolutely on fire.

tough choice!

my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 23:29 (eleven months ago) link

oh yeah-- in 'n out has mccoy tyner on it, taking some time away from the coltrane quartet. one of those times when he got the shaft with the "etc." credit on the album cover lol.

my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 23:33 (eleven months ago) link

my bad- page one also has tyner and the "etc." credit!

my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Tuesday, 23 May 2023 23:37 (eleven months ago) link

just marathoned all of them and this is indeed a tough choice. i had forgotten how good trompeta toccata is! second half of the album really gets going with the boogaloo shuffle of "mamacita" into more typically intense hard bop on a run through of "the fox." four long tracks, all killers.

my beard exists more than i do. (Austin), Wednesday, 24 May 2023 04:53 (eleven months ago) link

one month passes...

Automatic thread bump. This poll is closing tomorrow.

System, Thursday, 29 June 2023 00:01 (nine months ago) link

i did not end up having the time to listen to all these.

so, almost voted for "una mas" because it has the best cover art, but i voted for "in 'n out" instead because i feel like eating a cheeseburger tonight.

budo jeru, Thursday, 29 June 2023 00:27 (nine months ago) link

my bad- page one also has tyner and the "etc." credit!

they both do!

budo jeru, Thursday, 29 June 2023 00:29 (nine months ago) link

oh, you said "also" -- never mind.

budo jeru, Thursday, 29 June 2023 00:29 (nine months ago) link

Tough choice, five of my favorite albums! Should marathon them some time as well.

Liquid Plejades, Thursday, 29 June 2023 01:24 (nine months ago) link

I don't know all of these, but I'm voting Una Mas because I love the way the sidelong title track ebbs and flows.

enochroot, Thursday, 29 June 2023 02:50 (nine months ago) link

went back to these a couple weeks after posting and came to the conclusion that there's no wrong answer.

meg white's superior technique. (Austin), Thursday, 29 June 2023 20:39 (nine months ago) link

Automatic thread bump. This poll's results are now in.

System, Friday, 30 June 2023 00:01 (nine months ago) link

awesomely appropriate results -- thanks everyone for voting!

meg white's superior technique. (Austin), Friday, 30 June 2023 00:12 (nine months ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.