Jazz The best music site on the web there is where you can read about and listen to blues, jazz, classical music and much more. This is your ultimate music resource. Tons of albums can be found within. http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/6456.html Mon, 20 May 2024 01:11:20 +0000 Joomla! 1.5 - Open Source Content Management en-gb Buddy Terry - Pure Dynamite (1972) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/6456-buddy-terry/24600-buddy-terry-pure-dynamite-1972.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/6456-buddy-terry/24600-buddy-terry-pure-dynamite-1972.html Buddy Terry - Pure Dynamite (1972)

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1 	Quiet Afternoon	10:09
2 	Paranoia	10:45
3 	Baba Hengates	17:07
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4	Miscegenation	7:07

Bass – Mchezaji, Stan Clarke
Drums – Billy Hart, Lenny White
Flugelhorn, Trumpet – Eddie Henderson
Flute, Soprano Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone – Buddy Terry
Percussion – Airto Moreira
Percussion [African] – Mtume
Piano – Kenny Barron
Trumpet – Woody Shaw

 

An overlooked gem from the early 70s, Buddy Terry’s “Pure Dynamite” mixes post bop and fusion in a style somewhat similar to what Freddie Hubbard and Sonny Rollins were doing at the same time, but Terry also dips into some psychedelic sounds and ensemble freedom that pushes his music a little closer to Herbie Hancock’s excellent Sextet. The connection to the Sextet is furthered by the appearance of the Sextet’s Eddie Henderson and Billy Hart. Meanwhile, the new Return to Forever was also playing with post bop that bordered on the avant-garde on their first album, so its no big surprise to see RTF’s Lenny White, Airto and Stanley Clarke on here as well. The rest of this album’s all-star cast also includes Joanne Brackeen, Mtume, Woody Shaw and Kenny Barron, its hard to go wrong with a cast like that and there is certainly very little wrong with this album.

The album opens with “Quiet Afternoon”, which starts off like a mellow psychedelic fusion version of “All Blues”, before Stanley kicks the bass line into double time and the soloists unleash their fire. All through this album the soloists don’t necessarily go it alone as other players might add counter melodies or even occasional competing solos. This busy complicated texture is pushed further with occasional tape echo and a rich tapestry of percussion and sound effects. The early 70s was a very creative time in music and this album is very much a product of that culture. If you enjoy post bop that borders on fusion and the avant-garde, you probably will not be disappointed by this one. Buddy Terry certainly deserves way more recognition than he has received. ---js, jazzmusicarchives.com

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Buddy Terry Sun, 30 Dec 2018 15:49:45 +0000
Buddy Terry ‎– Natural Soul (1968) http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/6456-buddy-terry/26210-buddy-terry--natural-soul-1968.html http://www.theblues-thatjazz.com/en/jazz/6456-buddy-terry/26210-buddy-terry--natural-soul-1968.html Buddy Terry ‎– Natural Soul (1968)

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1	A Natural Woman 	3:30
2	Natural Soul 	6:00
3	Pedro, The One Arm Bandit 	5:37
4	Don't Be So Mean 	5:35
5	The Revealing Time 	12:35
6	Quiet Days And Lonely Nights 	7:35

Baritone Saxophone – Robbie Porter
Drums – Eddie Gladden
Electric Bass [Fender] – Jimmy Lewis
Flute – Joe Thomas
Guitar – Wally Richardson
Organ – Jiggs Chase, Larry Young
Piano – Larry Young)
Tenor Saxophone – Joe Thomas
Tenor Saxophone, Flute, Liner Notes – Buddy Terry
Trumpet, Flugelhorn – Woody Shaw
Vocals – The Terry Girls 

 

The legendary Prestige label had added soul jazz to its cutting-edge modern jazz catalogue in the early sixties. In fact, by putting numerous hi-profile advertisements of their stock in magazines like Downbeat, continuously stressing the ‘soul’ of Eddie “Lockjaw” Davis, Shirley Scott, Jimmy Forrest, Groove Holmes, Gene Ammons and many others, it was a deciding factor in the invention and popularization of soul jazz. By the late 60s, when interest in mainstream jazz dwindled, Prestige focused on funky, bluesy jazz in sync with contemporary popular music and its buying public. So you’d get the barroom organ blues of Sonny Philips or the mean, greasy tenor of Houston Person, who scored one of the last Prestige hits with Jamilah. And Prestige had signed tenor saxophonist Buddy Terry, who’d assisted organist Freddie Roach on Soul Book in 1966. Terry released his debut album as a leader, Electric Soul in 1968. You mean like, soul? In the late sixties, label boss and artists of Prestige still didn’t have to think twice about picking titles.

Buddy Terry had played in the organ groups of Rhoda Scott, Dee Dee Ford, Dayton Shelby and Larry Young and cooperated with Sonny Rollins and Johnny Coles. A couple of years were spent in the band of Lionel Hampton. For Natural Soul Natural Woman, the tough tenor with a ‘far out’ edge assembled his Newark, New Jersey pals – pleasant surprise! – Larry Young, Woody Shaw and Eddie Gladden, weathered cats like tenorist and flutist Joe Thomas, as well as the so-called Terry Girls on vocals – perhaps including the beautiful lady on the front cover? So then you get Don’t Be So Mean, a lurid boogaloo tune with a tacky twist, absolutely the album’s highlight. You get Pedro, The One Arm Bandit, obscure folk music jazzed up upliftingly, following the path Rollins famously paved.

You get Natural Woman, Aretha Franklin’s anthemic soul ballad, that features the Terry Girls and Buddy Terry hollering mercy, mercy; Quiet Days And Lonely Nights, a solid ballad. And finally, The Revealing Time, a mid-tempo blues that passes the 11-minute mark, ample opportunity to stretch out for Terry and Young. Woody Shaw only has short bits of solo space. Honestly, the brilliant, last great innovator of the trumpet’s worthwhile statements are overshadowed by rather lackluster, staccato ad-libs. Sleepy, perhaps.

Buddy Terry, on the other hand, is spry as the cow that line-dances onto the field in Spring. He’s a minister arousing the flock. And a captain of the Enterprise reaching out to the aliens around the Ring of Saturn. His dirty playing style and harmonic sophistication brings to mind Eddie Harris. Buddy Terry took matters in his own hands and also provided the liner notes to his album of raucous soul jazz. A curious mix of bio and exegesis. Terry states: “The entire album is my song of praise to God.”

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administration@theblues-thatjazz.com (bluesever) Buddy Terry Tue, 10 Dec 2019 15:36:08 +0000