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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
an incredible moment with incredible players!,
By A Customer
This review is from: A Blowin' Session (Audio CD)
as the liner notes inform us, this album happened by accident. griffin and hank mobley were scheduled for a dual sax date, when on the way to van gelder's studio, they ran into john coltrane setting up an impromptu sax summit. and what a meeting it was! this album cooks from start to finish with the three tenors (jazz style), pushing and reaching for higher and higher moments. it is a lot of fun to go along for the ride. in one sense, its too bad because the rest of the musicians here are also outstanding (wynton kelly on piano and lee morgan on trumpet, for example) and they don't have a lot of room to solo with these three giants going at it. oh, well... maybe some day they'll unearth lost masters of this session with 30 or 40 minute workouts! this album is a good introduction to griffin, who has spent much of his career as an expatriate musician in europe. he took a full-bodied, r&b approach to music, but with a subtle and deep touch. a great re-release!
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Blue Note Brilliance,
By G B (Connecticut) - See all my reviews
This review is from: A Blowin' Session (Audio CD)
This is a great album for lots of reasons. It features three of the most distinct stylists on tenor saxophone, as well as an up-and-coming star on trumpet; the tunes (two standards and two Griffin tunes) bring out the best in the first-rate musicians; and the jam-session nature of the recording gives it a relaxed, spontaneous feeling. Johnny Griffin, the least known of the saxophonists, is unbelievable -- you won't believe your ears as he rockets through several choruses of the warp-speed "The Way You Look Tonight" but nevers loses sight of the blues. Hank Mobley's mellow, lyrical playing provides a great foil to his more aggressive counterparts. John Coltrane, then in his layoff from the Miles Davis group and beginning his tenure with Thelonious Monk, shows his rapidly evolving, harmonically challenging style. Lee Morgan is really inspired on this recording, and the rhythm section is incredible: Wynton Kelly, Paul Chambers, and Art Blakey. Blakey is on fire here, by the way; just listen to him trading choruses with Griffin! This is essential listening for anyone who likes 50s hard bop.
14 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Heated session, overly hot mic,
By Samuel Chell (Kenosha,, WI United States) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: A Blowin' Session (Audio CD)
Few occasions can produce as much musical excitement as a gladiatoral meeting of tough tenors. An all too rare event these days, if you came of age in Chicago in the '60's and '70's you had bountiful opportunities both on the South Side (McKee's Show Lounge) and North (Joe Segal's Jazz Showcase) to hear the strongest and most personal voices on the instrument--Stitt, Jug, Dex, Moody, Jaws, Cohn, Sims, Turrentine, Ira, and Griff-- taking after each other in pairs, threes, and sometimes in fours. No recording can do justice to capturing such moments, but few, in my (apparently minority) opinion, fall as short as "Blowin' Session."Some of the blame lies with the programming. There's no shortage of Griffin to be heard, but the presence of Lee Morgan simply deprives both Mobley and Trane of comparable blowing time. But the real downer on this session is the quality of the audio. Who would have ever thought it possible to practically "homogenize" voices as distinctive as those of Griffin, Mobley, and Coltrane? The sonic canvas is depthless and dimensionless, the horns miked so closely that each is constantly on the verge of breaking up. Griffin's sound, in fact, is distorted throughout much of the program, a relentlessly grating roughness that makes it difficult to appreciate his normally crisp articulations and fluent melodic lines. Mobley and Coltrane, though artificially boosted in the sonic mix, come off better, thanks to Hank's less aggressive approach and to Trane's characteristically unforced use of the altissimo register. Overall, Coltrane's playing is surprisingly conservative on this session and his role quite limited. Of the three players, the real surprise, for some listeners, may be Mobley, who eschews charging ahead like a locomotive in favor of some thoughtful, "reactive" musical ideas. (Dig, especially, his masterfully constructed solo on the "Alternate Take" of ""Smoke Stack," which also features the best Coltrane on the date.) Unfortunately, Blakey's drums take their place in the foreground with the horns on Van Gelder's flat aural canvas, overshadowing both Paul Chambers' bass and Wynton Kelly's piano except for the solos. If you really want to compare the different and utterly unique sounds of Coltrane and Mobley, pick up "Someday My Prince Will Come," the Miles Davis session on Columbia that features both tenor players. If you want to hear the undistorted, "natural" sound of Johnny Griffin, go to his work on Riverside with Monk or on Jazzland with Lockjaw Davis or on Delmark with Ira Sullivan. If you're a musician and wish to hear and transcribe note for note (as I did several of the solos) some marvelous playing by Coltrane, Mobley, Al Cohn, and Zoot Sims, pick up "Tenor Conclave" on Prestige (it's still Van Gelder, but at Prestige Miles and the musicians were more in control of the sound than the engineer). Mobley opens the session on "Rhythm" changes and closes it (following Coltrane's solo!) with a knock-out solo and cadenza on "How Deep Is the Ocean." A recording with lots of notes, but all equally beautiful to those who have the ear for it. Unless I simply received a bad pressing (from BMG), "Blowin' Session," especially after all the hype that it's received, is one of the most overblown recordings I've ever come across.
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