Of all the Blue Note artists of the 1960s, tenor saxophonist
Hank Mobley may very well be the most underrated. A consistent player whose style evolved throughout the decade,
Mobley wrote a series of inventive and challenging compositions that inspired the all-stars he used on his recordings while remaining in the genre of hard bop. For this lesser-known outing,
Mobley teams up with trumpeter
Donald Byrd, pianist
Cedar Walton, bassist
Ron Carter, and drummer
Billy Higgins for four of his songs (given such colorful titles as "A Dab of This and That," "No Argument," "The Hippity Hop," and "Bossa for Baby"), along with a song apiece from
Byrd and
Jimmy Heath. An excellent outing, fairly late in the productive career of
Hank Mobley. ~ Scott Yanow