Once again, Legacy has taken one of
Thelonious Monk's seminal Columbia albums -- this one named for its timing with the appearance of his face upon a Time magazine cover about the same time the album was released and featuring three brand-new compositions -- and given it the expert care and concern treatment, making of it, as in the case of
Underground,
Solo Monk, and
Criss-Cross, a startlingly new document. Here are nine cuts instead of six, all of which are restored to their original lengths -- space restrictions for a single LP necessitated editing on some of the tracks. In addition, there are two unreleased items in alternate take form: "Shuffle Boil" (along with "Stuffy Turkey" and "Brake's Shake," it is one the new tunes) and "Nice Work if You Can Get It." This is the
Monk Quartet that featured
Charlie Rouse and bassist
Butch Warren, and introduced
Ben Riley to the
Monk fold. The new rhythmic equations
Riley brought to the band are everywhere evident here, particularly in the long remake of "Epistrophy." This is an almost curious set in that it opens with two solo pieces, "Lulu's Back in Town" and "Memories of You." On the former,
Monk's beginnings are revealed in his fascination with stride piano phrasing and rhythm, and in the latter, his continuing admiration of
Duke Ellington and
Billy Strayhorn is on display. The way he structures his single-note runs just behind the beat so that rhythmic syntax is established before the melody comes right from the
Ellington book. When the band does enter, as it does on "Stuffy Turkey" with its loping groove and blues, entire worlds have been created, destroyed, and reincarnated in another harmonic image. In addition to the extra music and fine sound,
It's Monk's Time features a fine essay by piano great
Dick Katz and fine session photos. ~ Thom Jurek