The final album
Rahsaan Roland Kirk ever recorded remains one of his finest. Post-stroke,
Kirk struggled with his conception of the music he was trying to make.
Boogie-Woogie String Along for Real is the payoff. The title track features strings playing distended harmonics over his blowing and the backing of a guttersnipe rhythm section and a full-blown horn section -- including a very young trombonist named
Steve Turre -- behind him. From here,
Kirk works veritable magic with the material of the age, swimming deeply in the blues that
Gershwin didn't know he had in "I Loves You Porgy," getting an aging
Tiny Grimes to wail his guitar-playing ass off on "Make Me a Pallet on Your Floor," and then flowing elegantly on
Ellington's "In a Mellow Tone" and
Gershwin's "Summertime." It's almost too much to bear as the emotions come falling from the horn and the rhythm section tries to keep them balanced, but the heartbreak and joy are everywhere. When
Kirk closes the disc with his own stomping hard-swing R&B of "Dorthaan's Walk" (dedicated to his wife) and takes it out with
Percy Heath's "Watergate Blues," he closes the circle. With
Hilton Ruiz playing a deep-grooved Latin funk against
Kirk's harmonica and alto,
Heath playing cello, and
Turre opening up a huge space of feeling behind the front line as
Sonny Brown and Phil Bowler keep it all in check on drums and bass respectively,
Kirk sums it all up in his alto solo. There is so much sadness, betrayal, pain, and resolve in his lines that the rules of Western music no longer apply. The all-inclusive vision
Kirk has of a music embraces all emotions and attitudes and leaves no one outside the door. This is
Kirk's Black Classical Music, and it is fully realized on this final track and album. ~ Thom Jurek