Vol. 3 is
Lee Morgan's final recording from a series done in the spring of 1957, an important year not only for the teenage trumpeter, but for the dominant hard bop sound that swept the landscape of modern jazz.
Morgan preferred the sextet format at this time, recruiting alto saxophonist
Gigi Gryce and retaining tenor player
Benny Golson, while grabbing bassist
Paul Chambers and pianist
Wynton Kelly from the
Miles Davis/
John Coltrane combo. The selection of lesser-known but very talented drummer
Charlie Persip for this date is a wise choice, as he is more homogeneous to the composed jazz of
Golson, which comprises this entire set. Because of the
Golson factor, the music is consistent, but not the hard bop blowing session some may have expected. "Tip-Toeing" is inspired by
Persip's fanciful, cat-and-mouse-type drumming in a delicate strut drenched in blues, with wonderful solos from
Chambers and the author/saxophonist. On other side of the coin, "Domingo" is not Latin-flavored, but instead a straight hard bop line, as the three horns are locked in with great invention and energy. The barren Minnesota flatlands that inspired "Mesabi Chant" are hardly represented by an arid feeling, but instead are enabled by the desolation to create a complicated construct via a 34-bar (not 32-bar) chorus, an aspect that identifies
Golson's emerging ideas as a unique jazz composer. The best and most unusual track of the bunch is "Hasaan's Dream," where the expressive flute playing of
Gryce and tacit piano give an open-ended Arabic or Asiatic feel to the piece, as underscored trumpet and tenor preclude the held tension of
Chambers, leading to a most lovely, easily rendered bop. There's an immortal version of "I Remember Clifford" as well, with
Morgan pouring his heart out, while the horns act as musical pallbearers for the late
Clifford Brown, who died less than a year prior. This is one of the earliest, and best, recorded versions of this
Golson-penned tribute to
Brownie. A composed (in more than one way) and relaxed session for this stellar small ensemble, it also brings forth the intelligence and street smarts of all the players, one of the best recordings in
Lee Morgan's early career and well worth a hearty recommendation to all. ~ Michael G. Nastos