Psychicemotus was released in 1965 and features
Yusef Lateef on various flutes and tenor saxophone,
Georges Arvanitas on piano, bassist
Reggie Workman, and drummer
James Black. And while the
Coltrane era of modal and free jazz was in full swing,
Lateef always followed his own muse, and continued looking forward while looking back to ancient musics. His use of bamboo and Chinese wood flutes on the title track and "Bamboo Flute Blues" added not only dimension and texture, but rhythmic invention to standard jazz forms. Yet his readings of
Jerome Kern's and
Oscar Hammerstein's "Why Do I Love You," on which he plays tenor, swings elegantly while incorporating both hard bop and angular outside playing in his solo.
Arvanitas is a near perfect foil for
Lateef in that while he's not as technically flashy as
Barry Harris, he is a deeply sympathetic player who uses accents and ostinati as grounding points, and prefigures rhythmic changes rather than just comping. The beautiful reading of
Erik Satie's "First Gymnopedie" on which
Lateef plays flute is an utterly beautiful, restrained, and adventurous reading, and is allowed to resonate rhythmically with hand-percussion fills by
Black. While not
Lateef's finest recording for Impulse (Live at Pep's takes the cake), it certainly is a worthy and memorable one. ~ Thom Jurek