This is the hottest album of live black music I’ve ever heard.
It was recorded in 1971 in Baltimore. Stitt was accompanied by Don Patterson, the most articulate jazz organist, and Billy James, an underrated drummer. They had been working together for a decade; the rapport is absolutely there.
Six weeks earlier, Sonny and Gene Ammons had been in Van Gelder’s. Jug told Sonny that he sounded terrible using an amplified sax and Stitt apparently never recorded with it afterwards. Well, he was still using the amplifier in Baltimore. I don’t like the sound either but, this time, I don’t give a damn. Anyway, you can hear why Sonny was using it; he needed it!
The sleevenotes of Don Patterson’s albums are full of references to how unlike most organists he is, in eschewing volume pedal and pounding organ. Well, those were studio recordings. This is the only live recording Don made. He is totally overpowering; fast, articulate, visceral, breathtakingly exultant – oh yes, and loud, too.
That night, the three men played music that is the ultimate in excitement. I’m sure the audience left the ballroom with blistered faces and scorched clothes.
A warning: Hyena is Joel Dorn’s fifth label, following Wolf, Night, 32Jazz and Label M. This album was released on Label M in 2000 but, a few weeks later, Label M followed its predecessors into bankruptcy. I was lucky to get one. Now it’s reissued, the message is: don’t delay too long - AM
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