By the time of this,
Art Pepper's tenth recording as a leader, he was making his individual voice on the alto saxophone leave the cozy confines of his heroes
Charlie Parker and
Lee Konitz. Joining the
Miles Davis rhythm section of pianist
Red Garland, bassist
Paul Chambers, and drummer
Philly Joe Jones made the transformation all that more illuminating. It's a classic East meets West, cool plus hot (but never lukewarm) combination that provides many bright moments for the quartet during this exceptional date from that great year in music, 1957. A bit of a flip, loosened, but precise interpretation of the melody on "You'd Be So Nice to Come Home To" gets the ball rolling, followed by a "Bags Groove" parallel with "Red Pepper Blues" and a delicate, atypical treatment of "Imagination." A compositional collaboration of
Pepper and
Chambers on the quick "Waltz Me Blues" and a hard-edged, running-as-fast-as-he-can take of "Straight Life" really set the gears whirring.
Philly Joe Jones is a great bop drummer, no doubt, one of the all-time greats with
Kenny Clarke and
Max Roach. His crisp Latin-to-swing pace for "Tin Tin Deo" deserves notice, masterful in its creation and seamlessness.
Pepper makes a typical "Star Eyes" brighter, and he goes into a lower octave tone, more like a tenor, for "Birks Works" and the bonus track "The Man I Love." It's clear he has heard his share of
Stan Getz in this era. Though
Art Pepper played with many a potent trio, this one inspires him to the maximum, and certainly makes for one of his most substantive recordings after his initial incarcerations and before his second major slip into the deep abyss of drug addiction. [A bonus track version was reissued in 2010.] ~ Michael G. Nastos