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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Blue Note gem from Kenny, September 13, 2006
By 
Bomojaz (South Central PA, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (Audio CD)
This quintet recording by Kenny Dorham from 1964 is superb from beginning to end. Everyone is in top form. Joining Kenny are Joe Henderson on tenor, Tommy Flanagan on piano, and the rhythm section of Richard Davis (b) and Albert Heath (d). The title track is a strongly punctuated piece with powerful solos by Kenny and Joe - but it goes into a whole other dimension at Flanagan's solo: it becomes almost dreamy and other-worldly. It's a great performance. In fact, Tommy might be the star of the date - his playing is magnificent and varied on every cut. Dorham takes a very fleet solo on the up-tempo blues THE FOX. Joe's best solo is on NIGHT WATCH, while Flanagan shines brilliantly again on the medium blues MAMACITA (no relation to Jelly Roll Morton's tune of the same title). There's a freshness and excitement on this album that is very attractive and sets the CD off from many others. Great stuff, definitely worth checking out.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Five stars for five stars., July 19, 2008
By 
Robert Bezimienny (Sydney, NSW Australia) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (Audio CD)
This is just a terrific recording. The interplay between all the musicians is outstanding. Richard Davis on bass is phenomenal - he threatens to grab the music and take it beyond its apparent rhythmic and melodic boundaries, and the tension he creates is enormous and exciting. Tommy Flanagan is superb, and uttery individual, almost at odds with the approach taken by Davis - introducing beauty of line, and delicate shading of dynamics, he veers towards the romantic, asking the question whether the roots of the music lie in song - he is very much in conversation with Davis for much of the album. Albert Heath on drums, whom I've rarely heard, sparkles with energy, lightening moments which otherwise threaten to dissolve into atonality. Part of that threat comes from Joe Henderson who, as on so many of his Blue Note recordings of this period, is searching and inventive - his playing is the polar opposite of complacent. In the Latin tinged Mamacita, Henderson undermines the groove, insisting that the track holds more than its surface suggests - this track has a langour, almost a laziness, that is captivating, laced as it is with irony - if this is meant to be the band's version of The Sidewinder, it's one where the groove has melted, and the emotion has fermented - for some strange reason it reminds me of some recordings by Portishead. On The Fox, and the title track Henderson partners Davis into ever wilder and gruff excursions into harmonic tension. Of course, Dorham as leader complements all his partners, his playing embodying both the bold and the romantic. All of this showcased by a superb technical recording and remastering by Rudy van Gelder - the ethereal tone of Dorham's trumpet really shines, with a great sense of space and air surrounding his instrument. Easily as good as Dorham's other Blue Notes, Trompeta Toccata is something truly special.
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6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Another solid Blue Note Release, June 11, 2000
This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (Audio CD)
Trompeta Toccata is another good collaboration from the early 1960s between trumpeter Kenny Dorham and saxophonist Joe Henderson. If you like Dorham's "Una Mas" and Henderson's "Page One", "Our Thing", and "In n Out", you will like this session.
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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Kenny's Closer, September 6, 2006
By 
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This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (Audio CD)
Leave it to the least showy, most thoughtful of all trumpet players to compose and perform a "Trompeta Toccata" (show piece) and make it work. Any new reissue of a Kenny Dorham date is welcome, guaranteed to be full of Kenny's inventive twists and surprises as a soloist as well as composer. Moreover, as Dorham's very last recording session, this one merits special consideration. The presence of Kenny's favorite frontline companion at this time, Joe Henderson, will further enhance its value to some collectors (though it's hard to argue against Henderson's predecessor, Hank Mobley, as a superior complement to Dorham's melodic logic). Coltrane's influence can be heard in the modal tunes as well as in Henderson's use of harmonics and overtones during his somewhat edgy, rough-hewn solos.

The title piece is one-of-a kind yet vintage Dorham, taking the music of the bull fight, toreador, and matador, stripping it of all the gratuitous trappings, and distilling it to its dramatic and poignant Flamencan essence. The talents of both Henderson and Richard Davis are also heard to full advantage on the number (thankfully, Davis' strong but lengthy solo stops just short of changing the character of this delicately balanced tone poem into a vehicle for bass). In many respects, the piece is a highly concentrated, orchestrally spare version of the Miles Davis/Gil Evans performance of Roderigo's famous Concierto on the "Sketches of Spain" album.

Along with this newly remastered "Trompeta Toccata," the recent RVG edition of 1959's "Quiet Kenny" deserves a close look, if only because it features Kenny as the sole horn player. And once again the pianist is Tommy Flanagan, whose exquisitely crafted melodic statements, nuanced dynamics, and thoughtful phrasing make him the ideal complement to Dorham's playing. Finally, even if you disagree with me that "Whistle Stop" and "Afro-Cuban" are slightly superior Dorham sessions to "Trompeta Toccata," it's hard to ignore the bargain price that both of the former recordings are currently going for on Amazon.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A good blast from the past., January 28, 2011
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This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (Audio CD)
First time I heard this on the radio, I was as blown away as the DJ describing the album. (Remember when they told you what you were listening to?) It's surpassed the test of time, still a standard setting night music kind of thing. My favorite Kenny Dorham album/CD.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Arigato, Toshiba-EMI!, June 7, 2006
By 
Richard B. Luhrs (Jackson Heights, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (24bt) (Audio CD)
The emotive and influential trumpeter Kenny Dorham's fifth and final studio collaboration with powerhouse tenor saxophonist Joe Henderson stands as one of the duo's very best, second only perhaps to Henderson's debut album PAGE ONE of fifteen months earlier. Four lengthy originals, loosely bound by the Latin/blues mood which at this point was very much Dorham's forte, make TROMPETA TOCCATA a solid Blue Note offering from the classic mid-sixties "freebop" era; and the interesting rhythm section - which juxtaposes famed postboppers Tommy Flanagan and Albert Heath on piano and drums with modernist bassist Richard Davis - provides crisp, mobile support and uniformly tasteful improvisations. Ridiculously, this is yet another essential Blue Note session currently unavailable in a US edition, and we can count ourselves lucky that BN's Japanese arm has seen fit to include it among its recent crop of relatively budget-priced reissues. Recommended for all fans of the artists and/or epoch represented.
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2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous!, August 9, 2003
By A Customer
This review is from: Trompeta Toccata (Audio CD)
This is a really overlooked masterpiece of Kenny's. Four highly evocative tracks! Awesome!
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Trompeta Toccata
Trompeta Toccata by Kenny Dorham (Audio CD - 2004)
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