A Blowin' Session

A Blowin' Session Artist: Johnny Griffin
Label: Blue Note Records
Category: Music



Average customer rating: 4.5 out of 5 stars
Format: Original recording reissued
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 724349900929
EAN: 0724349900929
ASIN: B00000IWW8


Release Date: 1999-05-18

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Listmania:

  1. 25 Exceptional Jazz CDs
  2. Locking Horns: Great Tenor Tandems
  3. Johnny Griffin: Little Titan of the Tenor
  4. 10 Excellent Jazz Records
  5. I Think These Are Great Hard-Bop Albums
  6. My Favorite Blue Note CDs (chronological order)
  7. Art Blakey Without the Jazz Messengers
  8. Great Jazz Groups - Part I
  9. The Shape of Jazz that Was: From Bop to Free (1945-65)
  10. essential recordings by saxophone masters

Tracks:

  1. The Way You Look Tonight
  2. Ball Bearing
  3. All The Things You Are
  4. Smoke Stack
  5. Smoke Stack (Alternate Take)

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Customer Reviews:

3 out of 5 stars Overrated, IMHO..........2006-03-14

Though this CD gets 5 stars from most of your reviewers, and appears on a number of "best ever" lists, I'd like to offer an emphatic dissent.First the good things. The rhythm section is excellent,(even if Art Blakey is typically a bit overpowering), both generally and in its limited solo space. And Lee Morgan's playing is excellent. I've never heard him play less than well; he had it all--ideas,tone,technique,fire,taste.Mobley and Coltrane play well, though nothing here will startle or excite anyone familiar with their work around this time.
As for the Johnny Griffin of the 50's:sure,he's one of the fastest horns in the West,but as a musician his talent ended at the wrists.Endless cockroach-on-the-keys scrambling up and down his horn,very little in the way of ideas,a harsh and at times plain out-of-tune upper register that sometimes sounded like somebody had stepped on a poodle. If you want to hear the difference between a real improvising musician and a cram-everything-in speed demon, compare the Monk-Sonny Rollins version of "Misterioso" with the Monk-Griffin version (each recorded right around this time). But JG is the dominant force/voice on this album,unfortunately. Sheer technical virtuosity has always played a role in jazz, but in the best jazz there's always a lot else besides. That's not the case here.

3 out of 5 stars Heated session, overly hot mic.......2005-12-11

Few occasions can produce as much musical excitement as a gladiatoral meeting of tough tenors. An all too rare event these days, if you came of age in Chicago in the '60's and '70's you had bountiful opportunities both on the South Side (McKee's Show Lounge) and North (Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase) to hear the strongest and most personal voices on the instrument--Stitt, Jug, Dex, Moody, Jaws, Cohn, Sims, Turrentine, Ira, and Griff-- taking after each other in pairs, threes, and sometimes in fours. No recording can do justice to capturing such moments, but few, in my (apparently minority) opinion, fall as short as "Blowin' Session."

Some of the blame lies with the programming. There's no shortage of Griffin to be heard, but the presence of Lee Morgan simply deprives both Mobley and Trane of comparable blowing time. But the real downer on this session is the quality of the audio. Who would have ever thought it possible to practically "homogenize" voices as distinctive as those of Griffin, Mobley, and Coltrane? The sonic canvas is depthless and dimensionless, the horns miked so closely that each is constantly on the verge of breaking up. Griffin's sound, in fact, is distorted throughout much of the program, a relentlessly grating roughness that makes it difficult to appreciate his normally crisp articulations and fluent melodic lines. Mobley and Coltrane, though artificially boosted in the sonic mix, come off better, thanks to Hank's less aggressive approach and to Trane's characteristically unforced use of the altissimo register. Overall, Coltrane's playing is surprisingly conservative on this session and his role quite limited. Of the three players, the real surprise, for some listeners, may be Mobley, who eschews charging ahead like a locomotive in favor of some thoughtful, "reactive" musical ideas. (Dig, especially, his masterfully constructed solo on the "Alternate Take" of ""Smoke Stack," which also features the best Coltrane on the date.) Unfortunately, Blakey's drums take their place in the foreground with the horns on Van Gelder's flat aural canvas, overshadowing both Paul Chambers' bass and Wynton Kelly's piano except for the solos.

If you really want to compare the different and utterly unique sounds of Coltrane and Mobley, pick up "Someday My Prince Will Come," the Miles Davis session on Columbia that features both tenor players. If you want to hear the undistorted, "natural" sound of Johnny Griffin, go to his work on Riverside with Monk or on Jazzland with Lockjaw Davis or on Delmark with Ira Sullivan.

Unless I simply received a bad pressing (from BMG), "Blowin' Session," especially after all the hype that it's received, is one of the most overblown recordings I've ever come across.

5 out of 5 stars Blowin Session will Blow you Away.......2005-08-16

Starting off with a feiry version of "The Way You Look Tonight" Griffin cooks like mad running up and down scales and arpeggios not only showing off his harmonic sense but using his ability to play at very fast tempos. Lee Morgan somewhat equals Griffin on their quest to what seems like Out-blow each other yet that wasn't the case as Griffin quotes in liner notes "Everybody wins here". Coltrane was put as the only other tenor player who could match Griffins speed which is not true because you must not forget Sonny Rollins. Just think if Mobley had been replaced by Rollins then it really would be a battle!!! Actually, though, Mobely adds nice contrast to the setting; while not able to handle the fast tempos as well as the others, Hank is full of fluid and lyrical playing. The monster Rhythmn section is one to die for! Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers and Art "buhaina" Blakey himself.

The atmosphere is pure Jam Session. It's easy to tell that everyone is having a good time, despite the fact the any number of them could have been on dope. The tunes are made up of two standards ["The Way You Look Tonight", "All The Things You Are"] and two Griffin originals ["Ball Barings", "Smoke Stack"]
This a true Blowin Session!

5 out of 5 stars Great intro to Johnny Griffin!.......2004-01-18

This album is a great first choice for those looking to get into Johnny Griffin's work. The RVG sound is pristine. The band members enjoy each other's company. Griffin gets enough space to show his lightning fast chops in a casual setting that highlights his virtues against some of the top players Blue Note has to offer. The choice of material and the tempos indicate that Griffin is in charge of the proceedings; he's pretty much a pure tenor giant, not as much a composer or arranger of ensembles and standards are his thing. But in Mobley, Lee Morgan, and John Coltrane he has the type of bandmembers that challenge him to put his avalanche of ideas into a concise space. Griffin always plays for the crowd and you get his speed and it's always fun to see which tunes he's quoting in his solos. As an added plus, you get a rare sighting of Coltrane in the Blue Note Studios blowing some magesterial solos. [Sonny's Crib by Sonny Clark is another overlooked Trane as blue note side note session.] But everybody here can wail.

I'd strongly recommend this album to young tenor saxophonists. They're playing standards that you'd typically see at jam sessions. Besides that, you get exposure to three of the giants of the instrument in one place. This is the type of album that can help those new to jazz learn how players have a particular style and approach to changes and a definitive tone. Trane's water dancing to Mobley's molasses to Griffin's avalanche gives you so much of the history of the saxophone with just a single performance.

This kind of session is what Griffin is all about; lightning fast playing on standards and positive hard bop stuff. I particularly enjoy "All the Things You Are" and "Just the Way You Look Tonight."

Those who dig Griffin's playing would be wise to check out his live work with Monk "Thelonious in Action" and "Misterioso".

I could go on and on about this album but I'll cut things off here. Just buy it!

5 stars!

5 out of 5 stars A Blowin' Session if there ever was one.......2003-06-06

There could not have been a better name for this album. The line-up includes some of the very best saxophonists to ever play jazz. Not only that but you have one of the most talented trumpeters and one of the most well established drummers known for leading the Jazz Messengers. And of course how could you go wrong with Mr. P.C. If you are not familiar with any of the tunes, which by the way are some of the most fast paced swingin' version of these tunes I have ever heard, then the line up should convince you to buy it. Lee Morgan, Johnny Griffin, Hank Mobley, John Coltrane, Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers, and Art Blakey all truly define this Blowin' Session. This is an essential for any jazz lover.

Music CD:

  1. The Jazz Chamber Trio ~ Paquito D'Rivera
  2. Illuminations ~ McCoy Tyner
  3. The Best of Smooth Jazz, Vol. 3 ~ Various Artists
  4. My American Songbook, Vol. 1 ~ Nelson Rangell
  5. The Romantic Approach/Sophisticated Approach ~ Stan Kenton
  6. Relentless ~ Danny Gatton, Joey DeFrancesco
  7. Akoustic Band ~ Chick Corea's Akoustic Band
  8. Live from Los Angeles ~ Oliver Nelson
  9. Cool Struttin' ~ Sonny Clark
  10. The Antidote ~ Ronny Jordan

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