Red Holloway is joined by a set of veteran jazz performers for a no-nonsense, down-to-earth blowing session recalling those magnificent Prestige and Blue Note recordings of the 1950s and '60s by
Johnny Griffin,
Dexter Gordon,
Gene Ammons,
Sonny Stitt, and others. The first cut, "The Chase," was the vehicle for the seminal
Dexter Gordon/
Wardell Gray tenor sax battle recorded in 1947, which set the ground rules for all such battles to come. On this cut,
Holloway shows he has lost little, if any, of the fingering dexterity that characterized his playing in earlier days with such notables as
"Brother" Jack McDuff,
Bill Doggett, and
Lloyd Price.
Holloway continues to be equally adroit on alto as he is on tenor, bringing out the smaller sax on "The Gypsy" and "A Tear in My Heart" (the latter a composition by piano player
Norman Simmons). A highlight of the album is the very poignant rendition of
Duke Ellington's "In My Solitude," played in soulful, long musical lines. HighNote Records, the successor to the old Muse label, became a home for several veteran saxophonists. In addition to
Holloway, the stable includes
Houston Person and
Teddy Edwards. HighNote deserves considerable kudos for providing a forum for this hard driving saxophone playing, done with soul, which otherwise might be lost. ~ Dave Nathan