Over four days in December of 1979, pianist
Bob James assembled three different bands to play (and record) at three legendary venues in New York City to showcase his own diversity as a composer, arranger, and bandleader. The Bottom Line, Town Hall, and Carnegie Hall, all offered different aspects of
James' approach to jazz and popular music. The Bottom Line band is a smooth and funky sextet that includes saxophonists
Wilbert Longmire and
Mark Colby,
James, drummer
Idris Muhammad, bassist
Gary King, and guitarist
Hiram Bullock. The Town Hall gigs featured a larger band that included three pianists:
James,
Joanne Brackeen, and
Richard Tee, as well as drummers
Billy Hart and
Steve Gadd and bassist
Eddie Gomez. Finally the Carnegie Hall show featured a yet larger orchestra that included
Tom Scott,
Earl Klugh, and
Bullock on guitars,
Muhammad,
King,
Tom Browne,
Jim Pugh, and
Dave Taylor, and more.
Musically, the original double LP (whose format had been retained for the CD presentation) ranges from the more popular contemporary jazz of the period such as "Angela (Theme from Taxi)," and "Touchdown," jazz and classical standards (including
Benny Goodman's "Stompin' at the Savoy," and Georges Bizet's "Farandole (L'Arlisienn Suite #2),") and even pop hits such as
Boz Scaggs "We're All Alone." The Bottom Line material only includes two performances --the aforementioned "Angela" and "Westchester Ladies." Separated by the two discs, and sequenced to reflect dynamic and aesthetic differences, they are righteously intimate and groovy and truly reflect their environment. The Carnegie Hall cuts are the most satisfying because of
James' killer charts. The nearly 12-minute
Scaggs' tune goes into a wild interlude that distills everything form pop balladry to jazz-funk to big-band wail. Elsewhere, the reading of
James' "Kari," that closes disc two reveals just how intimate a larger group can be with a lovely showcase for
Klugh and
Bullock's collective sense of counterpoint, even as the piece moves and shimmers with a lithe Caribbean-influenced rhythm. The highlight from the Town Hall gigs is
James' stellar "The Golden Apple," that clocks in at over ten minutes. The three pianists really get to interact here in the various modes at work in the core of the tune. While it's true that some of
James recordings sound dated because of production,
All Around the Town sounds as fresh in the 21st century as it did when it was issued. It serves as a great primer for the post-CTI/Columbia
James. [A Japanese version of the album was also released.] ~ Thom Jurek