Benny Golson's acclaim as a player and composer is widespread in the jazz community, and this collection has been issued as part of a celebration of his eightieth birthday. It bookends his career, with many large ensemble selections from 1957 and 1958 in his pre-
Jazztet days, and a few cuts from the 1980s onward with a second edition of the
Jazztet, and select small combos. Trumpeter
Art Farmer was his longtime partner in the original
Jazztet, and he is featured, as is trombonist
Curtis Fuller, the one musician who has worked with
Golson through his entire career. Surprisingly, this reissue featuring nine tracks includes only six of the dozens of songs written by
Golson, two standards, and a prototypical hard bop, stereo separated composition of
Gigi Gryce, "Reunion," with an immortal democratic sextet featuring
Max Roach,
J.J. Johnson, and
Kenny Dorham. While not a definitive "best-of" compilation, it does offer an interesting mix as to why
Benny Golson is one of the all-time great jazz artists in the second half century of the music. The late-'50s sessions are the most valuable, and include the all-time classic "Whisper Not," a light blue traipse with a nonet, the elegant bopper "Are You Real?," and the basic 12-bar tiptoe tune "Blues After Dark," all signifying the epitome of cool.
Fuller's presence is undeniable as
Golson's main foil on most of the six tracks from his early years, especially during the cover of "I Didn't Know What Time It Was," with ultimately passive voicings from the horns jolted by an occasional quick 3/4 burst, and swimming with Detroit masters
Tommy Flanagan on his ever vivacious and classy piano, and bassist
Doug Watkins for a ballad treatment of "April in Paris." The final three selections are from 1986, 1997, and 2004, including a revived and spirited
Jazztet with
Fuller and
Farmer on a live nine-and-a-half minute version of "Along Came Betty," a two-tenor infused studio version of "Five Spot After Dark" with
Ron Blake, and the all-time hit "Killer Joe" with muted trumpeter
Eddie Henderson ably abetting
Golson in a composed display of reserved watching and warning -- keep at least one eye open for that devilish "Killer Joe"! Pianist
Mike LeDonne cut his teeth with
Golson, and is a standout on the final two selections. Without the Argo/Chess and Mercury label recordings of the
Jazztet, his contributions as a member of
Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers, or many other great compositions
Golson has written, this cannot be a comprehensive greatest-hits package, but it does serve as a very good primer for those who have still not yet discovered what a grand master he truly is.