Tuesday, July 20, 2010
Eric Dolphy “Out There” (1960)
At first Out There sounds like an Ornette Coleman album, but then you realize that Eric Dolphy has twisted Coleman's weird ideas around his even stranger finger. I mean...legendary bassist Ron Carter plays cello. Cello!!! George Duvivier plays bass. What a stroke of genius. There's less musicians on Out There than on Dolphy masterpiece Out To Lunch. In fact, Dolphy is the only horn period. He puts in mind blowing solos on alto sax, flute, b-flat clarinet and bass clarinet. If I had to choose the most talented reed and woodwind player of all time it would be a tie between Eric Dolphy and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. While Kirk absolutely mastered more than 50 instruments, Dolphy can make a clarinet sound drop-dead sexy one moment and convince you that the world is ending the next. The same goes for any instrument that he played. "Sketch of Melba" has some stunning flute playing. –Rob
Labels:
Album Reviews,
Jazz
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