Taken from "scraps" or "leftovers" of three different sessions,
Dig It! presents distinct sides of
Red Garland's straight-ahead jazz persona that manifests in trio, quartet, and quintet formats. One track was issued as led by drummer
Art Taylor (Taylor's Wailers), ostensibly
John Coltrane in
Garland's quartet apart from their association with
Miles Davis, and two separate recordings have trumpeter
Donald Byrd added to comprise a five-piece combo. Memphis bassist
George Joyner (aka
Jamil Nasser) is on three cuts, with
Taylor present throughout. Though the total time is shy of 34 minutes, this recording represents all of these musicians in transition from their sideman associations to the leadership roles they were in the process of wresting hold of. What have always been
Garland's strong suits -- high-class discourse and fleet and fluid bebop -- are heartily dished out with no trace of arrogance. On the swing-era standard "Crazy Rhythm," the
Garland trio with bassist
Paul Chambers and
Taylor plays a concise, hard-charging version with no wasted motion and the two-fisted chord progressions of the pianist.
Coltrane's feature during
Jimmy Heath's hard bop icon "C.T.A." is a bit tentative, as he plays only eighth notes in a reserved fashion. But the quintet take of "Billie's Bounce" has
Trane rippin' it up in a fervor that doubles the note volume, animated and fast, while also expressing a soulful side.
Byrd is fairly inconsequential, only soloing on this and the 16-minute vintage blues "Lazy Mae." It's
Garland who takes liberties on this slow, languorous, sleepy-time jam, where he evokes the classic sounds of
Teddy Wilson,
Earl "Fatha" Hines, and especially the elegant
Erroll Garner for a full eight minutes, also quoting the pop tune "Send for Me" and the rambling staircase triplet midsection of "After Hours" before
Coltrane and
Byrd settle into their own bluesy solos. Because of the lack of extra material or alternate takes, one might buy this just for the good music, but also the
Rudy Van Gelder remastering factor that allows you to hear these genius musicians cleaner and brighter. ~ Michael G. Nastos