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Malachi Thompson - Rising Daystar (1999) [Hard Bop, Post-Bop]; FLAC (tracks)

Hard Bop, Post-Bop, Neo-Bop
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Mike1985
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Malachi Thompson - Rising Daystar (1999) [Hard Bop, Post-Bop]; FLAC (tracks)

Unread postby Mike1985 » 11 May 2024, 14:52


Artist: Malachi Thompson with special guest Gary Bartz
Album: Rising Daystar
Genre: Hard Bop, Post-Bop
Label: Delmark Records
Released: 1999
Quality: FLAC (tracks)
Tracklist:
  1. Rising Daystar (Thompson) - 8:04
  2. Mansa (Thompson) - 10:50
  3. Busy Little Fingers (Thompson) - 4:21
  4. Nefertiti (Shorter) - 7:55
  5. Surrender Your Love (Thompson) - 4:52
  6. Fanfare for Trane (Thompson) - 12:29
  7. Song for Morgan (Thompson) - 10:20
  8. Circles in the Air (Thompson) - 5:36

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    Personnel:
  • Malachi Thompson - trumpet
  • Gary Bartz (#1-7) - alto saxophone, soprano saxophone
  • Sonny Seals - tenor saxophone (#5)
  • Steve Berry - trombone (#2,5-7)
  • Kirk Brown - piano (#1-7)
  • Harrison Bankhead (#1,3-5), John Whitfield (#2,6,7), James Cammack (#5), Fred Hopkins (#8) - bass
  • Nasar Abadey (#1-4,6,7), Dana Hall (#5,8) - drums
  • Tony Carpenter - percussion (#2,5-7)
  • Dee Alexander - vocals (#5)

When Malachi Thompson calls his music "free bop," it isn't empty rhetoric; he really does take a free, open-minded approach to bop, and he savors "the tradition" without being enslaved by it. Recorded at three separate sessions in 1997, 1998, and 1999, Rising Daystar is primarily a hard bop/post-bop CD -- Malachi originals like "Mansa," "Song for Morgan" (an ode to Lee Morgan, one of the trumpeter's main influences) and the title song would have fit in easily on an album by Jazz Messengers, Lee Morgan, or Freddie Hubbard in the early 1960s. But while Rising Daystar is more inside than outside and often underscores Thompson's appreciation of Morgan and Hubbard's classic Blue Note output, the Chicagoan isn't limited to that approach. Thompson also has AACM credentials, and on "Fanfare for Trane" (Trane as in John Coltrane) and "Circles in the Air," he detours into the avant garde and savors the pleasures of dissonant outside improvisation. Thompson doesn't play trumpet at all on "Circles in the Air"; joined by drummer Dana Hall and the late bassist Fred Hopkins (1948-1999), he gets into some very eccentric, stream-of-consciousness scat singing and spoken word. Alto and soprano saxman Gary Bartz and tenor saxman Sonny Seals are among Thompson's other noteworthy guests on this appealing CD.
Review by Alex Henderson

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