4, 5 And 6 (Remastered) Jackie McLean

Cover 4, 5 And 6 (Remastered)

Album Info

Album Veröffentlichung:
1956

HRA-Veröffentlichung:
12.05.2014

Label: Concord Music Group

Genre: Jazz

Subgenre: Hard Bop

Interpret: Jackie McLean

Das Album enthält Albumcover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1 Sentimental Journey 10:00
  • 2 Why Was I Born? 05:17
  • 3 Contour 05:02
  • 4 Confirmation 11:26
  • 5 When I Fall In Love 05:35
  • 6 Abstraction 08:02
  • Total Runtime 45:22

Info zu 4, 5 And 6 (Remastered)

In 1956 Jackie McLean was only beginning to assert himself as a true individualist on the alto saxophone, exploring the lime-flavored microtones of his instrument that purists or the misinformed perceived as being off-key or out of tune. 4, 5 and 6 presents McLean's quartet on half the date, and tunes with an expanded quintet, and one sextet track -- thus the title. Mal Waldron, himself an unconventional pianist willing to explore different sizings and shadings of progressive jazz, is a wonderful complement for McLean's notions, with bassist Doug Watkins and drummer Art Taylor the impervious team everyone wanted for his rhythm section at the time. The quartet versions of 'Sentimental Journey,' 'Why Was I Born?,' and 'When I Fall in Love' range from totally bluesy, to hard bop ribald, to pensive and hopeful, respectively. These are three great examples of McLean attempting to make the tunes his own, adding a flattened, self-effaced, almost grainy-faced texture to the music without concern for the perfectness of the melody. Donald Byrd joins the fray on his easygoing bopper 'Contour,' where complex is made simple and enjoyable, while Hank Mobley puts his tenor sax to the test on the lone and lengthy sextet track, a rousing version of Charlie Parker's risk-laden 'Confirmation.' It's Waldron's haunting ballad 'Abstraction,' with Byrd and McLean's quick replies, faint and dour, that somewhat illuminates the darker side. As a stand-alone recording, 4, 5 and 6 does not break barriers, but does foreshadow the future of McLean as an innovative musician in an all-too-purist mainstream jazz world.“ (Michael G. Nastos)

Jackie McLean, alto saxophone
Hank Mobley, tenor saxophone
Donald Byrd, trumpet
Mal Waldron, piano
Doug Watkins, bass
Arthur Taylor, drums

Recorded at the Van Gelder Studio, Hackensack, New Jersey on July 13 & 20, 1956

Digitally remastered


Jackie McLean
has long had his own sound, played slightly sharp and with great intensity; he is recognizable within two notes. McLean was one of the few bop-oriented players of the early '50s who explored free jazz in the '60s, widening his emotional range and drawing from the new music qualities that fit his musical personality.

The son of guitarist John McLean (who played guitar with Tiny Bradshaw), Jackie started on alto when he was 15. As a teenager he was friends with such neighbors as Bud Powell, Thelonious Monk, and Sonny Rollins. He made his recording debut with Miles Davis in 1951 and the rest of the decade could be considered his apprenticeship. McLean worked with George Wallington, Charles Mingus, and Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers (1956-1958). He also participated on a string of jam session-flavored records for Prestige and New Jazz which, due to the abysmal pay and his developing style, he later disowned. Actually they are not bad but pale in comparison to McLean's classic series of 21 Blue Note albums (1959-1967). On sessions such as One Step Beyond and Destination Out, McLean really stretches and challenges himself; this music is quite original and intense yet logical. McLean also appeared as a sideman on some sessions for Blue Note (most notably with Tina Brooks, acted in the stage play The Connection (1959-1961), and led his own groups on a regular basis. By 1968, however, he was moving into the jazz education field and other than some SteepleChase records from 1972-1974 (including two meetings with his early idol Dexter Gordon) and an outing for RCA (1978-1979), McLean was less active as a player during the '70s. However in the '80s Jackie McLean returned to a more active playing schedule (sometimes with his son René McLean on tenor), recording for Triloka, Antilles, and most recently (with a renewed relationship) with Blue Note -- without losing the intensity and passion of his earlier days. (Scott Yanow)

Booklet für 4, 5 And 6 (Remastered)

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