The Roy Haynes Trio Roy Haynes

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CD

  • Release Date: 04/18/2000
  • Sales Rank: 74,663
  • Label: POLYGRAM RECORDS
  • UPC: 731454353427
 
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About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Roy Haynes has sat in some of the most prestigious drum chairs in jazz over the last 50 years, from Charlie Parker's and Sarah Vaughan's to those of Stan Getz and Pat Metheney. Anyone who has heard him pilot the swinging 1963 version of "My Favorite Things" with John Coltrane has to be impressed with his light, quick, busy style and propulsive rhythms. And that style is amazingly intact on ROY HAYNES TRIO, the 74-year-old's tribute to several of his former colleagues. Along with John Patitucci on bass and Monk-o-phile Danilo Perez on piano, Haynes modernizes a collection of jazz standards, near standards and should-be standards that are heard far too infrequently. Roy recorded Bud Powell's "Wail" in 1949 as an up-tempo workout with Powell, a young Sonny Rollins, and Fats Navarro. Here it's slowed down just enough to let the melody shine through. In contrast to the near-frantic playing of Powell, Perez takes a quirkier approach, always behind the beat and leaving plenty of space between the notes -- every one of which Haynes seems to fill in, giving the trio a dense, tightly woven sound that enlivens the entire disc. Though there is only one flat-out Latin number (Chick Corea's "Folk Song") and two Monk tunes ("Bright Mississippi" and "Green Chimneys"), much of the album can be colored "Thelonious," with occasional south-of-the-border hues. Most drummer-led trio recordings find the leader buried behind the band's frontline "voices." But as good as Danilo Perez is here, ROY HAYNES TRIO is always just that -- a trio record. Haynes is up front with the others throughout, not soloing so much as playing "lead" drums, reacting to, underscoring, and inspiring everything Perez and Patitucci play. Sal D'Agostino, Barnes & Noble



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