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One on One
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Barnes and Noble
One on One
Current price: $11.99
Barnes and Noble
One on One
Current price: $11.99
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A Japanese recording team took down this amazingly satisfying duo session, originally released on the
Atlas
label and reissued with a brace of alternate takes almost two decades later. It's a long-delayed sequel to a duo recording that the pair made in 1954 on a 10"
Contemporary
LP, and it carries some historical poignance.
Freeman
, who wrote the liner notes, says that this was his last recording, having not played
jazz
regularly since leaving
Shelly Manne and His Men
in 1967 and reconciling himself to a life of slogging away in the Hollywood studios. It is also one of
Manne
's final recordings, for he would be dead in two years, still in his musical prime. The collection mixes
standards
like
"I'm Getting Sentimental Over You"
and
"On Green Dolphin Street"
with several attractive
originals and a long, complex, partially free-form composition,
"One on One."
Yet the ultimate sparkplug for the session's success is not so much the playing of
, as inventive a pianist as he is, as it is the extraordinary drumming of
. He thinks like an orchestrator at all times, never content to merely lay down a ceaselessly swinging beat, coming up with an unlimited quantity of sounds and ideas that all fit together even when seeming to come out of nowhere. His is truly the sound of surprise, and he keeps you involved when
sometimes seems a bit stolid in the left hand or unvarying in touch. Of the unreleased stuff, the only new title is a tongue-in-cheek ditty called
"Name That Tune"
(hint -- it's by
Johannes Brahms
). ~ Richard S. Ginell
Atlas
label and reissued with a brace of alternate takes almost two decades later. It's a long-delayed sequel to a duo recording that the pair made in 1954 on a 10"
Contemporary
LP, and it carries some historical poignance.
Freeman
, who wrote the liner notes, says that this was his last recording, having not played
jazz
regularly since leaving
Shelly Manne and His Men
in 1967 and reconciling himself to a life of slogging away in the Hollywood studios. It is also one of
Manne
's final recordings, for he would be dead in two years, still in his musical prime. The collection mixes
standards
like
"I'm Getting Sentimental Over You"
and
"On Green Dolphin Street"
with several attractive
originals and a long, complex, partially free-form composition,
"One on One."
Yet the ultimate sparkplug for the session's success is not so much the playing of
, as inventive a pianist as he is, as it is the extraordinary drumming of
. He thinks like an orchestrator at all times, never content to merely lay down a ceaselessly swinging beat, coming up with an unlimited quantity of sounds and ideas that all fit together even when seeming to come out of nowhere. His is truly the sound of surprise, and he keeps you involved when
sometimes seems a bit stolid in the left hand or unvarying in touch. Of the unreleased stuff, the only new title is a tongue-in-cheek ditty called
"Name That Tune"
(hint -- it's by
Johannes Brahms
). ~ Richard S. Ginell