|
This has long been considered one of Corea's best recordings, featuring
some of his best writing and a group (Corea, bassist Miroslav Vitous,
drummer Roy Haynes) that must be considered one of the great piano trios.
That it was out of print at one time is incomprehensible, but this, its
second reissue, is great. Not only has Blue Note preserved the track order
(tracks 1-5, with approximately 40 minutes of playing time comprise the
original LP, followed by eight bonus tracks), but the 24-bit remastering
renders the performances crystal clear.
"Steps--What Was," the first track, is nearly
14 minutes long, but the trio manages to ensure that the listener never
becomes bored. Corea starts off with some piano musings that call forth
the spirit of his hard bop mentor, Horace Silver, while still managing
the light touch of Bill Evans. Roy Haynes takes a drum solo around five
or six minutes in, much of it venturing out of time and suggesting free
jazz. This is one of the beauties of this album--it rests somewhere between
what had been done by post-bop innovators and what was being done by free
jazz artists at the time it was recorded. When the trio comes back in,
Corea explores a modal, passe-doble progression that would come up in
all of his subsequent music, be it acoustic or heavily electric. In fact,
it could be argued that the blueprint for everything Corea would choose
to explore in his lengthy career was suggested right here.
Corea had begun his career as a leader in 1966, and contributed
to recordings by Stan Getz and Donald Byrd by the time Now He Sings, Now
He Sobs was recorded. The recording was instantly recognized in the jazz
community as signalling the arrival of a major talent. "Matrix"
and "Windows" are considered to be contemporary standards, but
the other works on the album are much less fleshed out, relying on a great
deal of improvisation between the trio members. It is in this respect
that the album most resembled the freer aspects of jazz playing. In fact,
Chick went on to explore much freer playing as the new keyboardist in
Miles Davis's band (these sessions were recorded in March 1968; in August
Chick joined Miles's group, replacing Herbie Hancock). While playing with
Miles, Corea worked with bassist Dave Holland, who was also interested
in much freer playing than Miles's group allowed at the time. In 1970,
after participating in the Bitches Brew sessions, Chick and Dave
formed the trio Circle with drummer Barry Altschul. The group later became
a quartet with the addition of Anthony Braxton, and they explored free
improvisation a great deal.
The additional tracks are all very interesting and add a
lot to the album. "Samba Yantra," originally recorded on a Donald
Byrd session, is an excellent composition with plenty of rhythmic exploration,
while "Bossa" is a quiet, impressionistic piece that recalls
Bill Evans. There is also "Gemini," which is essentially a piano
improvisation followed by a bass improvisation, and a version of Thelonious
Monk's "Pannonica" that demonstrates Corea's mastery of bop
and post-bop forms while firmly establishing an individual pianistic voice.
The reissue concludes with a beautiful rendition of "My One and Only
Love" that demonstrates both the place of this trio in jazz tradition
as well as its uniqueness.
|
|