You Can't Lose With the Blues
Savant Records
Baltimore native Lafayette Harris has become a fixture on the New York scene whose resume includes stints in Max Roach's 1990s band, vocalist Ernestine Anderson and currently with saxophonist Houston Person. Person produced this piano trio with a superb rhythm section of Peter Washington on bass and Lewis Nash drums. Underlying this recording is to "expand the language of the blues" as well as play "some standards with 'blues pride inserted in the song form.'"
With this superb trio, Harris handles a variety of songs that have been recorded by Sarah Vaughan, Bull Moose Jackson, Louis Jordan, Ray Charles, Duke Ellington, and others. The set kicks off with a brisk walking tempo swinger, "He's My Guy," where Harris develops several variations on the theme. A lovely interpretation of the Bull Moose Jackson hit ballad, "I Love You, Yes I Do," is taken at a lazy tempo. It is followed by the effervescent original, "Blues For Barry Harris," with Harris scintillating with Nash's accents helping drive this along. Nash and Washington both solo with distinction here. Harris' touch and phrasing capture the reflective quality of the Louis Jordan hit, "Don't Let the Sun Catch You Crying." A similar feeling is captured on the Cole Porter classic "Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye," an exquisite duet with Washington. An energetic rendition of the classic Mercer Ellington number, "Things Ain't What They Used To Be," follows.
Other standout selections include an imaginative rendering of Charlie Parker's "Bloomdido," that shows, like his tribute to Barry Harris, that he has learned the lessons of Bird and Bud Powell. The title track is a down-home as Harris gets, and then there is a superb solo rendition of Percy Mayfield's "Please Send Me Someone To Love. "The Juicy Blues," is a brisk, rollicking original that again showcases Lafayette Harris' superb blues exploration and caps this excellent recording.
I received my review copy from High Note/ Savant Records. Here is Lafayette Harris, Jr. from a few years back performing Charlie Parker's "Moose the Mooch."
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