Remembrance (Remastered) Elvin Jones Jazz Machine
Album info
Album-Release:
1978
HRA-Release:
20.11.2014
Album including Album cover
- 1 Giraffe 07:53
- 2 Section 8 04:26
- 3 Little Lady 06:27
- 4 Familiar Ground 03:32
- 5 Kalima 08:30
- 6 Beatrice 06:42
- 7 Rememberance 07:05
Info for Remembrance (Remastered)
“Elvin is the beat of life itself…When I hear Elvin’s music I hear the future.” So said guitarist Carlos Santana in 2004 when he heard that drummer Elvin Jones had died. The rock star’s comments signal Jones’ importance. Born in Pontiac, Michigan in 1927, Jones’ playing lifted the drum set out of the rhythm section and into the frontline. He could control the pulse of a band while at the same time pepper the music with melodic accents, creating solos that were both strong and sensitive.
For his MPS recording in February, 1978, he brought along his “Elvin Jones Jazz Machine” a quintet with the somewhat unusual lineup of two saxophones, guitar, bass, and drums. The band continued to be one of the most popular in jazz on into and through the 1990’s. The youngest of the three Jones brothers, trumpeter Thad and pianist Hank being the other two, Elvin rose to fame as the drummer for the seminal John Coltrane Quartet. For five years Jones played with the saxophone giant, creating music that revolutionized jazz. He left the band after Coltrane added a second drummer and the music took a new direction.
For a time Elvin worked with a number of jazz greats, and then formed his own “Jazz Machine”. The German record producer and writer Joachim-Ernst Berendt commented that “There are many drummers today whose hands are faster than their heads. With Elvin, head and hand, body and soul are a single entity.”
Roland Prince, guitar
Michael Stuart, tenor and soprano saxophone
Pat LaBarbera, tenor and soprano saxophone
Andy McCloud III, bass
Elvin Jones, drums
Recorded February 3, 4 and 5, 1978 at Tonstudio Zuckerfabrik, Stuttgart, Germany
Engineered by Gibbs Platen
Produced by Joachim-Ernst Berendt
Digitally remastered
No biography found.
This album contains no booklet.