Ming

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (74 ratings)
Ming album cover
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 39:28

eMusic Review 0

Avatar Image
Britt Robson

eMusic Contributor

Britt Robson has written about jazz for Jazz Times, downbeat, the Washington Post and many other publications over the past 30 years. He currently writes regula...more »

04.22.11
The rightful heir to Eric Dolphy's crown of thorns.
2007 | Label: Black Saint / Finetunes

Bop, free, funk and world music hybrids are all under the command of tenor saxophonist/bass clarinetist David Murray, the rightful heir to Eric Dolphy's crown of thorns. Murray's first masterpiece gets off to a blazing start with “The Fast Life,” which glides and collides with a bravura, glissando panache, noisy and frenetic but with joyful purpose, like a game of Red Rover on roller skates. “The Hill” is cleaved in two: Wilbur Morris's bowed bass personifies the blues lament of the climb; then the five-horn gaggle let loose for a celebratory pile-on during the joyful spree down the back side. “Ming,” an homage to Murray's wife, is a gorgeous, sonorous ballad that faithfully sounds like an incredibly smart and complicated 25-year old guy using elements of Ellington's “Melancholia” to announce ecstatic surrender to the love of his life. “Jasvan” is a cantering waltz stacked with brisk but substantial solos from George Lewis (trombone), Murray (on bass clarinet here), Butch Morris (cornet), Henry Threadgill (alto sax), Olu Dara (trumpet), Anthony Davis (piano) and Wilbur Morris (bass), yet somehow it is the late, great drummer Steve McCall who steals the show. “Dewey's Circle” concludes the set with infectious mirth,… read more »

Write a Review 6 Member Reviews

Please register before you review a release. Register

user avatar

okay, cool...but fyi...

TommyV

just a warning...since no one posted this yet: the alto sax and trombone are consistently out of tune, so that just might drive you crazy.

user avatar

Allways great

KH123

As I said, another killing recording.

user avatar

Great One

Bees

This was my first David Murray record, and it is fantastic. I've loved it for 20 years now, and I am always hearing new things. Everybody in the band is a great player in his own right, and most of these songs are Murray standards that he has played in many other settings besides the octet. I think that the best solo on the record is actually the trombone solo by George Lewis on the title track...props to David Murray for including such an achingly transcendent solo by another man in a song about Murray's wife. I would have killed the guy. I think David Murray kind of lost his way in the late nineties. It is very nice to see much of his best work on emusic.

user avatar

Say yes to Black Saint

thatway57

This is a great, great record perhaps the best 80's jazz set to my way of thinking. I couldn't believe my eyes when I saw it on emusic. Can we have some more Black Saint/Soul Note? Please, please, please.

user avatar

I hear That!

morical

Echo that 'round the world. Great work by Murray on Black Saint--this one and Home in particular. No ensemble sounded like this octet. It has the propulsion and the invention. . .I'm waiting for Emusic to get the Air recordings. Bravo!

user avatar

Black Saint Albums!

milesman

Wow! The David Murray Black Saint mother lode! Is this a preview of other Black Saint artists on emusic, like Muhal Richard Abrams, Steve Lacy, WSQ? I hope so, and we'll have to get booster packs if that happens. Anyway, a lot to choose from here. Ming and Home are just great albums, as are both the Live at Sweet Basil albums. Morning Song is a particularly good quartet date. What a fantastic development for emusic to have Black Saint albums! We want more!

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

0

Muhal Richard Abrams Updates the Big Band

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

Muhal Richard Abrams is likely best known as a driving force behind the hugely influential Chicago co-op the Association for the Advancement of Creative Musicians (AACM), but he's also an underappreciated composer. Not unknown by any means — he won Denmark's first Jazzpar Prize in 1990, before the international jury got around to David Murray, Lee Konitz, Tommy Flanagan and Roy Haynes. But Abrams 'orchestra rarely got the attention it deserved in its '80s and… more »

They Say All Music Guide

His octet was always the perfect setting for tenor saxophonist David Murray, large enough to generate power but not as out of control as many of his big-band performances. Murray contributed all five originals (including “Ming” and “Dewey’s Circle”) and arrangements, and is in superior form on both tenor and bass clarinet. The “backup crew” is also quite notable: altoist Henry Threadgill, trumpeter Olu Dara, cornetist Butch Morris, trombonist George Lewis, pianist Anthony Davis, bassist Wilbur Morris, and drummer Steve McCall. These avant-garde performances (reissued on CD) are often rhythmic enough to reach a slightly larger audience than usual, and the individuality shown by each of these major players is quite impressive. Recommended. – Scott Yanow

more »