Love You Madly: Live at Bubba's is an archival outing from pianist
Monty Alexander's personal collection, issued by the venerable jazz sleuths at Resonance Records. Captured in 1982 at the Miami, Florida venue via mobile unit by the late Mack Emerman (founder of Miami's legendary Criteria Recording Studios), it showcases the Jamaican-born
Alexander and his road band at a creative, hard-swinging peak. Bubba's was one of his regular touring spots. His touring rhythm section that year consisted of drummer
Duffy Jackson (who worked with the pianist regularly from 1972 to 1992), and longtime percussionist
Robert Thomas, Jr. (
Weather Report, Word of Mouth Big Band,
the Zawinul Syndicate), who has worked with Alexander for four decades. Bassist Paul Berner met the pianist in 1981, and left
Lionel Hampton's employ to join his quartet -- that week.
The 92-minute, impeccably recorded program offers undeniable proof of
Alexander's commanding stylistic range: Alongside jazz tunes, originals, and pop standards are sambas and reggae tunes offered with masterful execution. The set opener is a sprightly reading of the
Burt Bacharach/
Christopher Cross theme for the hit film
Arthur from 1981. The bubbling drum kit and hand percussion offer a hotter tempo as
Alexander harmonically redevelops the instantly recognizable melody as a platform for melodic improvisation, aided by Berner's rock-solid timekeeping.
Duke Ellington's "Love You Madly" is delivered in relaxed, open swing, with gentle, popping accents from
Jackson. The band shifts gears again on
Luiz Bonfá's magical "Samba de Orfeu."
Alexander crisscrosses bop, classical, and swing, with fleet arpeggios, crystalline ostinatos, and a driving left hand. The rhythm section enters into a deft, wildly syncopated conversation that ratchets the drama and intensity without losing sight of the carnival melody. The pianist and group offer three originals, beginning with the elegant ballad "Sweet Lady," followed by the transcendent, calypso-flavored "Eleuthra" and the bubbling, punchy "Reggae Later," which melds
Basie-esque blues to
Horace Silver-esque funk and driving Trenchtown reggae.
Milt Jackson's "Blues for Edith" is delivered as a strutting, hard bop shuffle succeeded by an uptempo, finger-popping take on
Blue Mitchell's calypso-cum-soul-jazz classic "Fungii Mama."
Alexander and company pull out all the stops on an astonishing, frenetic read of Richard Evans' "Montevideo" (it was originally recorded by
Alexander's longtime friend
Ahmad Jamal in 1962) in a meld of Latin and Caribbean styles. After an elegant, mysterious version of "Body and Soul,"
Alexander and crew return to fleet-fingered bebop on
Harold Mooney's "Swamp Fire," where the pianist quotes from
Ellington,
Sonny Rollins, and
Bud Powell. They close with
Milt Jackson's deft, punchy blues "SKJ," which includes a fine solo from Berner. This wonderfully packaged set also includes a booklet featuring artist interviews, essays, and myriad rare photos.
Love You Madly is, in a word, outstanding. Even among
Alexander's many live recordings, it is a remarkable example of his group firing on all cylinders and delivering the material with grit, taste, and obvious delight. All killer, no filler. ~ Thom Jurek