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Artist:
Tony Coe
Label: Hot House Category: Music Average customer rating: Media: Audio CD EAN: 5018320100527 ASIN: B00004UYXE Release Date: 2000-07-10 |
Tracks:
Customer Reviews:
Magical music from an underappreciated English saxophonist.......2004-02-06
The glorious music on Canterbury Song represents one of those straight-ahead sessions that manages to rise far above the typical post-bop outing and soar into regions of breathtaking enchantment. The disc opens with the magnificent title cut, a Coe composition written expressly to be played for the evening that celebrated his reception of the honorary doctorate. Featuring a very attractive melody that cleverly combines a gentle Latin flow with an English folksong sensibility, it's a clarion statement that the proceedings will be operating at the very highest level. Everyone perfectly catches the vibe, and Coe knocks off a magnificently architectural solo. The rest of the music, a combination of more Coe originals and some very carefully chosen standards (Monk, Evans, Styne-Khan) matches the relaxed intensity and highest-level playing of the opener. Coe has an uncanny ability to immediately lock into the particular feeling each selection articulates even while he completely makes it his own.
There's a companion session also on Hot House recorded a day earlier (unfortunately, not carried by Amazon), featuring the exact same musicians (the great Horace Parlan, piano; Benny Bailey, a huge but relatively unsung player, on trumpet; Jimmy Woode, bass; and the inimitable Idris Muhammad, drums), this time led by Bailey, that is also very much worth picking up--if you can find it. These Coe/Bailey discs remind me a lot of two great recordings featuring Bobby Watson and John Hicks, Love Remains (Bobby's gig) and Naima's Love Song (John's gig). All were recorded in the late eighties, all feature veteran musicians at the top of their game, and all are really, really special. And if I had to choose a favorite, it just might be Canterbury Song. Do give it a listen.
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