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In N Out
 
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In N Out

Joe HendersonAudio CD
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)


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Product Details

  • Audio CD (June 14, 1994)
  • Original Release Date: 2000
  • Number of Discs: 1
  • Label: Blue Note Records
  • ASIN: B000005GXO
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #401,630 in Music (See Top 100 in Music)

 
1. In 'N Out
2. Punjab
3. Serenity
4. Short Story
5. Brown's Town
6. In 'N Out [Alternate Take]

 

Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:
 (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

20 of 22 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A remarkable heap of pure jazz, March 22, 2000
By 
This review is from: In N Out (Audio CD)
This fourth recording as a leader for Blue Note, dating from April 1964, chronicles the continuing emergence of Joe Henderson (tenor sax) as a major force in the paradigm of mid-sixties jazz. The session includes the accomplished Kenny Dorham (trumpet), and a wondrous rhythm section of Coltrane's school, consisting of the still-emerging McCoy Tyner (piano), Richard Davis (bass) and the incomparable Elvin Jones (drums).

Still one album shy of full maturity, Joe Henderson is nonetheless obligingly powerful and emotional during most of the session. Kenny's sound and style is quite different from that of Freddie Hubbard and Lee Morgan, the ubiquitous trumpeters on the Blue Note sessions of this era, and Kenny provides a seasoned, mature and inventive sound that is indeed a pleasure to listen to.

Whereas Joe's earlier 'Page One' left little room for extended improvisations, this session was much looser, and the extended tunes provided a much larger canvas for the soloists to explore wide regions of color and texture. The result is some really great improvisations by Joe, Kenny and McCoy, all backed by the hard-driving inspiration of Elvin and Richard.

The recording quality is fair, and suffers from low fidelity in the rhythm section.

In 'N Out - A compelling, up-tempo hard bop number of Joe's design. Kenny and Joe share the head in unison, then Joe sets the bar very high with an emotional and energetic solo effort in his increasingly unique and original style. McCoy, Richard and Elvin drive him outside with the top down. McCoy solos next, and leaves no doubt here who's pounding the keys on this session. His highly original, three-handed chromatic style is quite obvious and a joy to behold. Remarkable. Kenny, too, blows a well-balanced and well-conceived solo that really works well. Joe takes another great solo, and then head reemerges to end the work. A great collaboration with superb performances by all.

Punjab - Another Henderson original, this piece is set in a medium swing tempo. After an intriguing melody, Joe blows an introspective and revealing solo, weaving short bursts into long, fast bop lines. Kenny offers a straighter, more relaxed solo, yet it is a pleasure to behold. McCoy plays this one pretty straight as well, but is equally enjoyable. Joe blows a bit more before coming back to the top.

Serenity - A soothing, optimistic and playful work by Joe. Kenny takes honors and blows a brief and subdued solo, followed by Joe, who takes it up a notch with a bit more invention. McCoy's solo is crisp, yet straight. Richard's solo is short, but very inventive.

Short Story - A Dorham original, consisting of a straight latin feel countered by a swing follow. The solos begin with Kenny, and remaining in a swing feel, he responds favorably to the direction dictated by the rhythm section. Joe is next up, and is equally compelled by the work of McCoy, Richard and Elvin to explore the possibilities. McCoy is back in his groove again, working closely with Elvin. Elvin gets a few moments, which he fills brilliantly.

Brown's Town - Another composition by Kenny, and a great one it is. Kenny is the first to go, and he takes us to some new places he's just discovered. McCoy is up next, and starts off wonderfully, runs out of steam, then gets a quick refueling before Richard displays another inventive improvisation.

In 'N Out (alternate take) - Once again, the teamwork here is so very, very impressive. And the improvisations by all are just as inspired and emotionally charged as on the original take. This is jazz at its very best.

This is a big, wonderful heap of good jazz with nuggets of pure gold mixed in. If you dig the Blue Note sound at his deepest, but without the avant-garde, you'll cherish this album. The only reason not to buy it is because you only have enough money to buy one CD, and you don't already have his following Blue Note masterpiece, 'Inner Urge'. Also of interest to all Joe Henderson freaks are 'Page One' and 'Mode To Joe'.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Solid Jazz Improvisation, August 7, 2009
This review is from: In N Out (Audio CD)
This fine album consists of 5 fairly long songs (6-10 minutes each) that give the lead musicians plenty of space to improvise in extended solos. Joe Henderson , Kenny Dorham, and McCoy Tyner are most prominently featured and all deliver solid solos. They are nicely supported by Richard Davis on bass and Elvin Jones on drums.

This is the first Henderson album I heard, although I knew his work from albums lead by Lee Morgan, Horace Silver, and McCoy Tyner including Morgan's "The Sidewinder" and "The Rumproller", Silver's "Song for My Father" and "The Cape Verdean Blues", and Tyner's "The Real McCoy". For some reason, I did not really like this album very much the first few times I listened to it. None of the tunes really grabbed me and I found it kind of dull. I had bought it together with Henderson's "Mode for Joe", Morgan's "The Cooker", and "The Best of the Gerry Mulligan Quartet with Chet Baker". I listened to Morgan's album first, followed by this one, the Mulligan/Baker album, and "Mode for Joe" in that order. Maybe the problem was that the Morgan and Mulligan/Baker albums both featured some classic tunes that I recognized and could enjoy right away. However, I liked "Mode for Joe" right away even though it only featured new compositions that I had not previously heard. "Mode for Joe" differs from this album in that it features a septet -- the quintet of sax, trumpet and rhythm section being complemented by trombone and vibes. I do tend to like larger ensembles (especially when they include trombone) and am a bigger fan of Lee Morgan than of Kenny Dorham. I also suspect that the writing on "Mode for Joe" is better, or at least attempted to create more memorable melodies.

However, after listening to the other albums, I came back to this one expecting to have the same reaction. To my surprise, I found myself liking it much more than I originally had. I found plenty of interesting melodic fragments if not full blown melodies and appreciated the quality of the solos much more. Perhaps I had been distracted when first listening to it since I had been travelling when I bought it and the other albums. I do think that this is an album that you need to listen to fairly closely in order to fully appreciate.

I even almost gave this album 5 stars, but decided to give it 4 since a really great album should have impressed me on the very first hearing and since I wanted to save 5 stars for "Mode for Joe" which I do like more.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Masters !, June 10, 2005
This review is from: In N Out (Audio CD)
Excellent balance between Joe Henderson and Kenny Dorham and others musician. Elvin Jones are very good. Beautiful title !
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