Trane's Delight
Concord Picante
With his first recording in seven years, Latin Jazz Legend Poncho Sanchez celebrates the life and music of John Coltrane. Included are several reimaginings of Coltrane classics, some new songs composed in his honor and several other Latin jazz pieces. Sanchez stated, "I've always loved John Coltrane ever since I was a kid and first learned about jazz. I've recorded tributes to a lot of my heroes in life — Mongo Santamaria, Tiro Puente, Cal Tjader — so I thought it was definitely time to do a tribute to the great John Coltrane."
This CD is his 20th album for Concord Picante for which he has recorded for 30 years (His relationship with Concord itself extends 37 years and now includes 27 albums). This album features the conguero's longtime band of trombonist and musical director Francisco Torres, trumpet and flugelhorn master Ron Blake, saxophonist Robert Hardt, pianist Andy Langham, bassists Rene Camacho and Ross Schodek, and percussionists Joey DeLeon and Giancarlo Anderson. It is a fabulous band whether the very original reworking of Coltrane's "Giant Steps," or the closing performance of Bobby Manrique's hot salsa, "Toro Termino," with an exquisite vocal from Norell Thompson of Los Angeles' salsa scene and some brilliant sizzling trumpet from Blake.
As to the aforementioned "Giant Steps," one has to admire how this quartet piece is orchestrated for Sanchez's larger ensemble with its harmonious setting. The melodic theme implicit in this composition becomes visible in a performance that does not focus on Trane's still startling 'sheets of sound' virtuosity." Made into a rumba, it opens with Langham's a scintillating piano solo over the heated percussion, Hardt takes a tenor solo that showcases his command of the tenor sax with attractive rhythmic accents before Sanchez, and the percussionists take the spotlight supported by a vamp laid down by Langham. There is a marvelous rendering of "Duke Ellington's "The Feeling of Jazz" with a lovely arrangement and piano Langham before Torres takes the first solo with his gritty, tailgate tone followed by Camacho's robust bass solo.
Other Coltrane compositions include "Liberia" from "Coltrane's Sound" and the track to the classic "Blue Train." This latter number is taken as a relaxed cha-cha-chá with solos Torres and Hardt on soprano saxophone before Langham vamps a bass motif for the percussionists. Sanchez and Torres contributed two originals, including the high-spirited title track with Blake's fiery trumpet. A bolero, "Si Te Decen," slows the groove down with Sanchez delivering a heartfelt vocal on a revival of Joe Cuba's 1966 recording.
This album is a welcome return to the recording world by Poncho Sanchez. "Trane's Delight" is a superb musical tribute as well as a fabulous Latin Jazz recording by one of our living masters.
I received my review copy from Concord Records. This review originally appeared in the September-October 2019 Jazz & Blues Report (Issue 386). Here is a performance by Poncho Sanchez of "The Feeling of Jazz."
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