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Hank Crawford - Memphis, Ray and a Touch of Moody (1997) [Hard Bop, Soul-Jazz]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

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Mike1985
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Hank Crawford - Memphis, Ray and a Touch of Moody (1997) [Hard Bop, Soul-Jazz]; FLAC (tracks+.cue)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 25 Jan 2020, 14:06


Artist: Hank Crawford
Album: Memphis, Ray and a Touch of Moody
Genre: Hard Bop, Soul-Jazz
Label: 32 Jazz
Released: 1997
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue)
Tracklist:
    CD 1:
    More Soul (1960)
  1. Boo's Tune (6:42)
  2. Angel Eyes (6:35)
  3. Four Five Six (5:09)
  4. The Story (4:43)
  5. Dat Dere (4:54)
  6. Misty (5:34)
  7. Sister Sadie (4:40)
    From the Heart (1962)
  8. Don't Cry Baby (4:23)
  9. Sweet Cakes (3:40)
  10. You've Changed (3:20)
  11. Baby Let Me Hold Your Hand (3:54)
  12. Sherri (4:40)
  13. The Peeper (3:10)
  14. But on the Other Hand (5:04)
  15. Stoney Lonesome (5:44)
  16. What Will I Tell My Heart (5:12)

    CD 2:
    Soul of the Ballad (1963)
  1. Blueberry Hill (3:25)
  2. I Left My Heart in San Francisco (2:45)
  3. Stormy Weather (3:18)
  4. Sweet Slumber (2:53)
  5. If I Didn't Care (2:47)
  6. Stardust (3:58)
  7. Any Time (2:43)
  8. Whispering Grass (2:47)
  9. Time Out for Tears (2:58)
  10. I'm Gettin' Sentimental over You (3:21)
  11. There Goes My Heart (3:16)
  12. Have a Good Time (2:56)
    Dig These Blues (1965)
  13. Dig These Blues (4:34)
  14. Don't Get Around Much Anymore (5:03)
  15. Banana Head (3:00)
  16. H.C. Blues (2:50)
  17. It's a Sin (2:37)
  18. Hollywood Blues (3:20)
  19. Baby Won't You Please Come Home (5:47)
  20. New Blues (4:25)
  21. Bluff City Blues (3:51)

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Hank Crawford, a solid baritone player and Ray Charles’s musical director from 1958-64, already had his own sound on alto sax by 1960 when he started his own Atlantic recording career (quite a feat in the wake of Bird and the dawn of Cannonball). During the next decade, he produced a consistent catalog of soulful sets for Atlantic, almost all well worth hearing.

This excellent two-disc set brings back four (!) of the best and earliest of Crawford’s long out-of-print Atlantic LPs: his debut, More Soul (1960); his third, From the Heart (1961); his fourth, Soul of the Ballad (1963); and his sixth, Dig These Blues (1964). It’s a remarkably cohesive, swinging set of first-rate soul jazz, blues and soulful ballads.

More Soul starts it all off with a straight-ahead, fun-filled set of seven solid swingers (even "Misty" swings here). Crawford’s well-constructed septet features an alto/tenor/baritone/two trumpet frontline. David "Fathead" Newman shines on tenor, Leroy Cooper grinds on baritone and the trumpeters take several nice spots. But Crawford testifies: he jumps, soars, swoops and glides, never resorting to pretense or showiness. He means what he says and it sounds good.

The same group returns for the great From the Heart , a slowed-down, low-down set of nine blues. Guitarist Sonny Green turns out on three tracks, doing Crawford’s sound up Basie style. Crawford, covering soulful standards like "Dat Dere" and "Sister Sadie" on his previous outing, explores more of his own blues here: "Sweet Cakes," "Sherri," "The Peeper" and "Stoney Lonesome."

Soul of the Ballad is a sax-and-strings affair that seems a little out of place here. Nevertheless, Crawford invests warm gusto in a set of too-familiar ballads, arranged by Marty Paich in the same country-soul style he was helping Ray Charles popularize at the time. The excellent Dig These Blues returns Crawford to more familiar ground, digging deep in on some good blues, and Crawford sitting in on piano for the noir blues of "Bluff City Blues" and "The Crazy Saloon."

Memphis, Ray and a Touch of Moody, despite its odd title (referring to Crawford’s birthplace, his musical benefactor and, presumably, the saxist’s affinity for James Moody), offers a satisfying portrait of one of jazz’s most soulful alto players and a heaping helping of delicious soul jazz at its best. Recommended.
Review by Douglas Payne

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