This 1961 groove date by
Stanley Turrentine is an example of him at his fiery peak. Far from the slow groover of the CTI years,
Turrentine's early Blue Note sides were massive and bright, saturated in deep soul and blues. This set featured
Turrentine's wife, organist and composer
Shirley Scott, and a pair of alternating rhythm sections. The first is
Major Holley on bass and
Al Harewood on drums, and the second is with
Sam Jones and
Clarence Johnston. Latin Conguero
Ray Barretto appeared with the
Holley/
Harewood band. The set opens with a stomping version of
Lloyd Price's "Trouble," with
Scott taking the early solo while driving the groove.
Turrentine burns the edges of the tune and
Barretto punches up the middle with decorative flourishes and fills. This is followed by the a deeply moving read of "God Bless the Child." With
Turrentine playing in his smokiest, silkiest,
Ben Webster-inflected tone.
Scott's solo, by contrast, is pure blues. The coolest tune on the set is "Major's Minor," written by
Turrentine and
Scott. With its seeming quotations from "So What?" and "Chim Chim Cherie," in the foreground, it gives way to a completely funky blues, which is a bit of a surprise. But the easy swing and in-the-pocket saxophone soloing punctuated by fat, grooved-out chords by
Scott make it the gem it is. The alternate rhythm section of
Jones and
Johnston appear on the title track. This is one of those grand ballads where the organ acts as the testifying pulpit from which to speak, and
Turrentine not only speaks, he weeps and whispers and wails here. All the while his rhythm section layers washes of percussion and muted changes in ever-present but subtle shades of blue. It's a stunner. [This Japanese release includes bonus material.] ~ Thom Jurek