This Lone Hill Jazz offering contains ten cuts from two different sessions featuring the late great
Sonny Criss -- one of a pair of great altoists of the hard bop era. Placed in reverse chronological order, the first five cuts here feature
Criss in the company of pianist
Kenny Drew, trombonist
Ole Hansen, bassist
Phil Leshin, and drummer
Buddy Rich. The sound is not terribly fine, but the music itself is a step above the recording quality in terms of burning soulful hard bop.
Criss' solo on
Miles Davis' "Four" sets the pace for the rest of this brief set. Other tunes include
Frank Loesser's "If I Were a Bell," also closely associated with
the Miles Davis Quintet, and a pair of fine cuts by
Drew, "In a Prescribed Manner" and his strident "The Cinch." The second session comes from 1951 at Los Angeles' Shrine Auditorium, with a larger group that includes tenor great
Eddie "Lockjaw" Davis, trumpeter
Joe Newman, trombonist
Bennie Green, drummer
Kenny "Klook" Clarke, and bassist
Tommy Potter. The tunes here are of much higher caliber in terms of speed, coming as they did straight from bebop, including a beautiful "Perdido,"
Eddie Greene's "High Jump," and a strange but smoking read of "How High the Moon" that begins with slapped bass and an intro that is boogie-woogie done in fine bebop style, with tight and blasting solos by
Criss and
Newman. Again, the sound quality isn't the greatest but it is more than satisfactory, and these tunes should not be missed by
Criss collectors.
–
Thom Jurek, Rovi