Caribé Review
by Richard S. Ginell
This record is the equivalent of throwing a stick of dynamite into a sedate, well-ordered dinner party, having the dynamite go off with a bang, and somehow leaving everything in its place. Such is the volatile Eric Dolphy, a serious wailer on the alto sax and even more idiosyncratic and radical on the bass clarinet, who barges into the lair of Juan Amalbert's Latin Jazz Quintet and doesn't perturb them in the least. The title track is sheer schizophrenia, the LJQ ambling along in a conga-accented blues walk while Dolphy fires all over the place on alto sax. Even the more animated "Mambo Ricci" has the same kind of group dynamic; Dolphy on fire, Gene Casey calm and deliberate on piano. Only on "Spring Is Here," where Dolphy switches to a contemplative-toned flute, do we find a balanced meeting ground, though his flute solo on "Sunday Go Meetin'" goes back out on a limb. Not an ideal match, then, but fascinating without a doubt.
All compositions by Gene Casey except where noted
- "Caribé" – 10:05
- "Blues in 6/8" (Juan Amalbert, Jose Ricci) – 5:46
- "First Bass Line" – 4:04
- "Mambo Ricci" (Amalbert, Jose Ricci) – 6:54
- "Spring Is Here" (Richard Rodgers, Lorenz Hart) – 5:00
- "Sunday Go Meetin'" – 5:48
- Eric Dolphy – alto saxophone, flute, bass clarinet
- Juan Amalbert – congas
- Gene Casey – piano
- Charlie Simons – vibraphone
- Bill Ellington – bass
- Manny Ramos - drums, timbales
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário