HANK MOBLEY:
Blue Note Reissues, Part II
Another Workout, Dippin', and Hi Voltage
<<Hank
Mobley: Blue Note Reissues, Part I
The re-emergence of Blue Note Records in the
mid-1980s has had a profound impact on the way the work
of any number of jazz musicians is viewed by fans and historians
alike. Ike Quebec, Jackie McLean, and Hank Mobley are some
who spring quickly to mind, but there are many others as
well. Many of Mobley’s sessions for the label were
never released in any form until after 1985, when it was
re-launched. The ongoing CD reissues of the famous Rudy
Van Gelder series provide more and more of Mobley’s
work, providing additional insight into the tenor saxophonist’s
true place in the history of recorded jazz. In the first
part of this Mobley reissue roundup we looked at three of
Hank’s late-career recordings: The Flip, Roll
Call, and Thinking of Home. Here we’ll
turn our attention to three Mobley reissues that span his
career with Blue Note: Another Workout, recorded
in 1961, Dippin’, recorded in 1965, and Hi
Voltage, recorded in 1967.
Another Workout was recorded in December
of 1961, the successor to Workout, recorded in
March of ’61. Workout featured Mobley and guitarist
Grant Green along with the rhythm section of Wynton Kelly,
Paul Chambers, and Philly Joe Jones. The material for Another
Workout is performed without Green, leaving the basic
tenor with rhythm section quartet that is heard here. In
the spring of ’61, Mobley played with Miles Davis,
and can be heard on the recently released Miles Davis
In Person Friday & Saturday Night at the Blackhawk.
Another Workout isn’t quite
as good as its predecessor, in part due to Green’s
absence, but Mobley is at his best here, playing the Dexter-ish
bop of the opening “Out of Joe’s Bag”
with energy to spare. Kelly, Chambers, and Jones are in
great form also, demonstrating why they are one of the great
jazz rhythm sections of all time. Many, including Michael
Cuscuna in his original 1985 liner notes, believe this period
of 1960-61, when Mobley recorded four albums for Blue Note
(Soul Station, Roll Call, Workout, and Another
Workout) to be his best. After Another Workout
Mobley was absent from recording for over a year. When he
returned he released a string of great albums from 1963
to 1970, including the classic No Room For Squares.
However, he had begun to be influenced by his time with
Miles Davis and by the increasingly large shadow of John
Coltrane, and had begun to simplify his playing into simpler,
more declarative lines, concentrating on rhythm at least
as much as melody.
“Getting’ and Jettin’”
and “Hank’s Other Soul” are Mobley originals
that sound great here, though Mobley revisited both compositions,
rearranging and retitling them for later albums. While Kelly
is a swinging pianist who is capable of backing a variety
of artists, he doesn’t provide Mobley with the drive
and spark he sometimes exhibited on later recordings. Still,
Mobley sounds terrific on these performances, and Jones
provides all the drive that’s needed, dropping bombs
all over the place. Though it occupies a special place as
the last of Mobley’s 1960-61 Blue Note sessions, it
is not one of the essential Mobley recordings. Still, it’s
impossible to say that it is in any way bad or less listenable
than many of Hank’s other recordings.
After re-emerging in 1963, Mobley endured
a narcotics conviction in 1964, including some prison time.
When he emerged in ’65, he began to record the stream
of sessions that comprised the final stylistic period of
his career. He now played with a more masculine, declarative
edge, and his work, like that of Coltrane, was less defined
by harmonic complexity and more by a groove and static harmonic
construction. Dippin’ is one of the finest
Mobley recordings from the mid-60s. It features trumpeter
Lee Morgan, who proves an excellent choice of musician to
accompany Mobley on the front line. Pianist Harold Mabern,
a Memphis musician whose work retains major elements of
the blues regardless of the tune he is playing, is essential
in driving Mobley forward, while bassist Larry Ridley and
drummer Billy Higgins make the rhythm section sound effortless.
Higgins is particularly good here, providing all kinds of
shading and touches that make this performance a special
one in Mobley’s discography.
Mobley’s take on the classic “Ricado
Bossa Nova” is sharp and precise, and sounds like
a definitive performance, so completely does the tune merge
with Mobley’s tenor sound and style. Overall, Dippin’
is a very upbeat program of tunes, with only one ballad
presented, the Schwartz/Dietz classic “I See Your
Face Before Me.” Mobley acquits himself well, as does
Morgan, playing a muted solo a la Miles that nonetheless
highlights Morgan’s brighter tone and more restless
improvisational style. The remaining tracks, “The
Break Through,” “The Vamp,” and “Ballin’”
are all Mobley originals, mostly variations on a blues progression,
with twists thrown in to keep the musicians interested.
There’s plenty of solid solo work from Mobley, Morgan,
and Mabern to keep any listener satisfied with this recording.
Hi Voltage was recorded in 1967,
and features Mobley playing with a larger group than on
either of the previously discussed recordings. Blue Mitchell
occupies the trumpet chair while Jackie McLean lends his
bright, modern alto work to the mix. While this results
in less solo time for Mobley, it also provides an opportunity
for him to work up some more interesting arrangements. The
rhythm section is also in high gear, with pianist John Hicks
providing a bluesy base. Bob Crenshaw plays bass and the
drum work is handled by an enthusiastic Billy Higgins.
The title track demonstrates the funkier type
of groove that Mobley was mining at this time—virtually
all of his late-60s albums feature a tune derived from Lee
Morgan’s ‘Sidewinder.” All of the tunes
here are Mobley originals, and the urban rush hour sound
of “Two And One” shows that Mobley had made
great strides toward modernizing his style and incorporating
advances made by Coltrane and others into his work. His
solo has some Traner qualities, even though his tone is
all Mobley. On “No More Goodbyes,” the set’s
only ballad, Mobley goes back to the tried and true tenor
plus rhythm section formula—the only other soloist
on the track is pianist Hicks. “Bossa Deluxe”
also provides an opportunity for some further lyrical playing
on Mobley’s part, not to mention a lovely three-horn
arrangement on the head.
Mobley and Jackie McLean played opposite each
other previously on Lee Morgan’s album Cornbread,
and they make good bookends, Mobley with his muscular tenor
sound and McLean with the bright, Bird-like alto work that
was his trademark. Blue Mitchell proves an able collaborator
as well, a bit more subdued than Morgan had been, but a
solid match, both in tone and in ability, to the two saxophonists.
As more and more of Mobley’s work for
Blue Note becomes available, his standing in the community
of jazz fans and musicians has only grown, and there is
no reason to think it won’t continue to do so. Check
out some of his work on these reissues, and you too will
be a fan of Hank Mobley.