Pepper Adams was one of the greatest jazz baritone saxophonists of all time. During a time when
Gerry Mulligan's cool-toned baritone was very influential,
Adams rose to prominence with a harder and bigger sound, much more hard bop than cool. This relatively obscure release, originally an LP for the World Pacific label, finds the baritonist in Los Angeles matching his hard-driving style with several players identified with West Coast cool jazz. Trumpeter
Lee Katzman, who is on every selection but "Blackout Blues" and "Four Funky People," has a tone closer to
Chet Baker than to
Donald Byrd, but fits in well with
Adams. The rhythm section is mostly laid-back and quiet but swinging. A joy of this CD reissue is the repertoire, which contains catchy originals by
Adams,
Barry Harris (the memorable "High Step"),
Tommy Flanagan, and
Thad Jones in addition to a lone standard in "Alone Together."
Adams was one of the most consistent of all jazzmen; he never seemed to make an unworthy record, so he is in typically fine form throughout this freewheeling hard bop set. "Four Funky People," not originally on the LP but from the same sessions, is included as a bonus cut. ~ Scott Yanow