Jimmy McGriff's B-3 sound was always rooted in blues and gospel, and his soloing could be very smooth and polished. But every once in a while, he had to break out of his own soul box and tear it up on a session.
The Worm, issued on Solid State Records in 1968, is the very first place he did. This is the first true, all-out funky burner from
McGriff, and it sounds very different from most of the other titles on his shelf. Having a band like this helps: trumpeter
Blue Mitchell, tenor saxophonist Fats Theus (with Bob Ashton on baritone and Danny Turner on alto), alternating drummers
Mel Lewis and
Grady Tate, bassist Bob Bushnell, and guitarist Thornel Schwartz were all in their prime in 1968. The title track, written by
McGriff, Theus, and producer
Sonny Lester, sets the tone for the whole platter. The saxophone section lays in the cut and is prodded on in a driving, funked-up, hard soul groove by the expanded rhythm section (a B-3 album with a bassist wasn't unheard of, but it wasn't standard procedure either). Solos by both
McGriff and
Mitchell are choppy and punchy in the extreme. The trumpeter is amazing here, offering a small taste of the sound he displayed on 1969's Collision in Black. But check out the next two tunes, both
McGriff originals that push the LP into the red zone and keep it there. "Keep Loose" takes the organist head-to-head against Schwartz's electric six-string, and forces a showdown.
McGriff is like an out-of-control soul singer (
James Brown in a concert setting comes to mind), incessantly forcing his band to play faster, greasier, and choppier on chorus after chorus. He ups the intensity level until there is nowhere to go but over the ledge. He takes them there on "Heavyweight," the very next number, a swinging boppish blues. The horns actually keep the track grounded as
McGriff gets terse, dense, and finally unhinged: he's more adventurous in this solo than he had been before, then he double- and even triple-times the entire band! He brings Bushnell's bass up the ever-narrowing stairs of the riff until they become a single player, all groove, grit, and grease.
McGriff's cover of
Aretha Franklin's "Think" keeps the exuberance level high. As the horns move right into the Memphis soul vamp,
McGriff again plays the part of a vocalist: charging up and down the melody on his keyboards, popping in slippery side chords and harmonic flourishes.
Tate's drums swing freely yet forcefully, and bass and guitar lines are simply nasty. The readings of
Kenny Burrell's "Lock It Up" and
Billy Strayhorn's "Take the 'A' Train" are the closest things to "straight" jazz here, though they're full of razored edges and hard angles. The reading of
Neal Hefti's "Girl Talk" features the horns strolling leisurely on the melody and vamp, but
McGriff goes into overdrive again and his solo hits the stratosphere.
The Worm is a monster album through and through. Not only is it a revelatory example of
McGriff on the wild, it marks one of the first places where the new funky urban soul met jazz and blues and evolved into jazz-funk. ~ Thom Jurek