Recorded off the soundboard during a four-night stand at the famed Oakland, CA, jazz spot Yoshi's in April of 2006, Hammond B-3 boss
Joey DeFrancesco laid it down with saxophonist
George Coleman sitting in with his trio (which also includes guitarist
Jake Langley and drummer
Byron Landham). Even though these cuts are pieced together from all four nights rather than taken from one continuous performance, their raw and genuine excitement is not diminished a bit by editing. The set opens with
DeFrancesco introducing
Coleman. He begins to play while strolling to the mike, playing all the way along. When he arrives, he elegantly wraps up his prelude and the band steams into a smoking rendition of "Cherokee."
Coleman's on fire yet fluid, wrapping the notes around the time signature and being on the dime throughout his solo.
DeFrancesco's own solo is one of those rather amazing things that, 50 years after
Jimmy Smith, you still can't wrap your head around: that this lightning-quick playing can be done on a Hammond! A long read of
Lee Morgan's gorgeous "Ceora" is next, with
DeFrancesco filling the pockets during
Coleman's fine and empathetic solo, which engages the melody while simultaneously reinventing it. With the exception of "Cherokee" and "I'm in the Mood for Love" (with a guest vocal appearance by
Colleen McNabb on the latter), which both come in at under seven minutes, the other cuts here all clock in at over ten, with "Ceora" being the longest at nearly 14. The other extended workouts include an exciting "On Green Dolphin Street," with
Coleman doing his best playing on record since he appeared in
Cedar Walton's
Eastern Rebellion outfit. His reach for a modal frame in the solo is breathtakingly unexpected. Another pair of standards close out the set in "Little Girl Blue" and "Autumn Leaves."
DeFrancesco is his typically dazzling, solidly rhythmic self, but
Coleman is the true star of the evening, and it is obvious that the bandleader wants it that way. He was the one who heard these fine renditions, and in particular
Coleman's stellar playing, and insisted the recording be released. This is one of first essential jazz purchases of 2007. ~ Thom Jurek