Eddie Harris - The Tender Storm (1966)

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 

Eddie Harris - The Tender Storm (1966)

Image could not be displayed. Check browser for compatibility.


A1 	When A Man Loves A Woman 	6:10
A2 	My Funny Valentine 	6:50
A3 	The Tender Storm 	5:30
B1 	On A Clear Day (You Can See Forever) 	7:15
B2 	A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square 	4:25
B3 	If Ever I Would Leave You 	7:57

Bass – Ron Carter
Drums – Billy Higgins (tracks: B2), Bobby Thomas
Piano – Cedar Walton
Saxophone [Amplified Sax] – Eddie Harris
Tenor Saxophone – Eddie Harris (tracks: A2)

 

In a sense, this LP was really the calm before the storm, the album where Eddie Harris unveiled some new wrinkles in his act that would explode on the very next album Electrifying, while hewing tightly to a standard acoustic quartet format. Here he starts to use the Varitone amplified saxophone, albeit very discreetly, as he sticks mostly to the doubled octave effects for a suave tone that allows for some slippery swinging. While Harris' soon-to-be-distinctive funk mode is in full bloom on the opening track, "When a Man Loves a Woman," his lovely ballad form from the VeeJay days remains intact on "Berkeley Square." The support couldn't be more professional -- Cedar Walton (piano), Ron Carter (bass), Billy Higgins or Bobby Thomas (drums) -- nor the selections more conventional (contemporary and past standards, plus Harris' title track), which ought to make this a candidate for reissue in our conservative jazz climate. ---Richard S. Ginell, AllMusic Review

download (mp3 @ kbs):

yandex mediafire ulozto gett bayfiles

 

back