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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Glancing Back, LOOKING AHEAD.,
By Michael F. Hopkins "A Deeper Groove" (Buffalo, NY USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Looking Ahead (Audio CD)
For those who think they know the ongoing saga of the
master pianist Cecil Taylor, the glories of LOOKING AHEAD may pose quite an intriguing chapter to discover, and quite the surprise. Among Taylor's earliest recordings, the late 1950s album finds the acclaimed freewheeler just as formidable in "traditional" settings as he is stretching them into the unknown. Rather than concern yourself with which Taylor is better, put aside such foolishness, and enjoy this brisk package of robust swing, abundantly fueled by other things. The quartet Taylor helms here includes bassist Buell Neidlinger and drummer Dennis Charles, familiar to anyone recalling the pianist's first recordings with soprano saxophonist Steve Lacy. Here, however, the quartet's fourth member is vibraphonist Earl Griffith, whose wonderfully-staccato style is a perfect complement to Taylor's already-whirling approach. While a listen to this album make stir some to wonder how Cecil Taylor and vibes wizard Walt Dickerson would sound together, there is no denying the particular joy of Griffith's highly personal sound. Thus, LOOKING AHEAD is a superb showcase, standing alone in the Taylor canon. Produced by acclaimed writer Nat Hentoff (whose exceptional liner notes remind us that critical analysis can be insightful and provocative in responsible hands), the pianist's only album for Contemporary Records more than makes the label live up to its name! The compositions are a delight, from the gospel shout of "Luyah! The Glorious Step" to the serenade of Griffith's "African Violets", from the head-nodding "Of What" to the strolling finger-snap of "Wallering" and the wistful travelogue of "Toil". In particular, dig the album's grand finale, Taylor's locomotive tribute to Billy Strayhorn and Duke Ellington. Written on the changes of Strayhorn's epic "Take The A Train", "Excursions On A Wobbly Rail" is bold, buoyant and breathtakingly beautiful. Singing its streamlined way across all boundaries, the merry romp and ride points ever so cunningly to broader vistas, just beyond the next bend...
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Free form at its best,
By A Customer
This review is from: Looking Ahead (Audio CD)
This is a great record, must be the finest available in the free form idiom. All four players are magnificent, not least the bassist Buell Neidlinger. This is not really difficult music to listen to either. Just listen to the opening track; this is hard swinging improvised music of rare quality. This is fascinating music. What an exciting pianist Taylor was (and still is)! The sound quality is absolutely splendid. Highly recommended!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The best of Taylor's early work.,
By
This review is from: Looking Ahead (Audio CD)
In my assessment the best example of Cecil Taylor's early material, "Looking Ahead!" finds Cecil Taylor in transition-- his rhythm section (bassist Buell Neidlinger and drummer Dennis Charles) has developed a more sympathetic ear to what he was trying to accomplish (at this point, something very different from where he'd end up) and vibraharpist Earl Griffith puts forth a fine counterpoint to Taylor's piano.
Musically, this is a unique record in Taylor's catalog, and it sits somewhere closer to the innovations of Ornette Coleman than to his later works-- the rhythm section is in an adventerous bop vein-- both occasionally leave behind their foundations for a more abstract approach, but largely maintenance of swing is essential. Taylor and Griffith are largely focused on intertwining lines-- Taylor in fact plays more single-note runs than I've heard anywhere else in his catalog to foil Griffith well. Earl Griffith is a bit of the ace in the hole for Taylor-- I have no idea where this guy went, but his playing shows an unusual sensitivity for his instrument and a fine understanding of Taylor's music. There is a space, an openness, an arythmic and polytonal approach that allows room for the musicians to work-- check Taylor's solo and the traded figures with Charles on "Excursions on a Wobbly Rail", the album's standout, to get a good feel for this. Taylor's future is laid out, but its definitely a growth rather than the full-on assault his later work would be. Also pointing closer to the future is "Of What", the densest song where, like in Taylor's later work, the quartet seems to operate as one instrument, interwining and voices rising and falling between each other. The remainder of the pieces are a bit more open, with emphasis on intersecting single-note lines between Taylor and Griffith ("Luyah! The Glorious Step"), a lyrical ballad (composed by Griffith-- "African Violets") that shows a side of Taylor we rarely see and a piece that emphasizes space and openness in opposition to the usual Taylor density ("Wallering"). Taylor would reach greater heights as his idiom came together and his musicians were more sympathetic, but this record is a superb example of his finding his way. Recommended.
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