eMusic Review 0
This is one of trumpeter Freddie Hubbard's finest discs; along with Herbie Hancock's Maiden Voyage and Sonny Rollins 'East Broadway Rundown later in the '60s, it proves Hubbard was particularly inspired by the company he kept. But on this bristling, energetic Blakey collection, tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter throws the most powerful, albeit relatively infrequent, lightning bolts. His solo on the first take of "Thermo" is a smorgasbord of high points, from the daredevil clambering-scramble of sixteenth notes to the swift plummets down to tuba-like bass honks. On his own "Sweet and Sour," the notes seem to pour forth equally from Shorter's brain and soul for a kinetic geometry that would steadily become more circumspect in his later stints with Miles, Weather Report and his currently marvelous but intensely cerebral ensemble. Shorter's time with Blakey was his salad days, and nobody could ever accuse him of squandering his youth.