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Iron Man

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Iron Man album cover
01
Iron Man
9:14 $0.99
02
Mandrake
4:51 $0.99
03
Come Sunday
6:31 $0.99
04
Burning Spear
12:00
05
Ode to C.P.
8:13 $0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 5   Total Length: 40:49

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eMusic Features

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Professor Jaki Byard’s Pre-Postmodern Piano

By Kevin Whitehead, eMusic Contributor

When Jaki Byard was with Charles Mingus in the 1960s, audiences would laugh when, mid-solo, Byard would burst into 1920s-style stride piano — the revved-up ragtime offshoot where the left hand bounds back and forth over the lower half of the keyboard. Its archaic quality struck listeners as comic — in that avant-garde age, stride was for antiquarians. Nowadays every hip outside or inside pianist will drop a little stride science once in awhile — like… more »

They Say All Music Guide

The companion piece to Conversations (recorded at the same mid-1963 sessions with producer Alan Douglas), Iron Man is every bit as essential and strikes a more consistent ambience than its widely varied twin. It also more clearly anticipates the detailed, abstract sound paintings of Dolphy’s masterwork Out to Lunch, in large part because this time around the program is weighted toward Dolphy originals. “Iron Man,” “Burning Spear,” and the shorter “Mandrake” all have pretty outside themes, full of Dolphy’s trademark wide interval leaps and playful sense of dissonance. Yet there’s enough structure and swing to make their roots in hard bop perfectly clear, and once the front-line horns blast out the themes, the ensemble shifts into a more cerebral, exploratory mode. In the absence of a piano, Bobby Hutcherson’s vibes are a crucial anchor, outlining dissonant harmonies that hang in the air almost spectrally behind the rest of the group. Most of the same musicians from Conversations appear here, including trumpeter Woody Shaw, flutist Prince Lasha, altoist Sonny Simmons, and soprano sax player Clifford Jordan. And once again, Dolphy duets with bassist Richard Davis, twice this time — on bass clarinet for Ellington’s “Come Sunday” and on flute for Jaki Byard’s “Ode to C.P.” Both are lovely, meditative pieces filled with conversational exchanges between the two players, illustrating what similar wavelengths they were on. Between Conversations and Iron Man, split up the way they are, one has to give a slight edge to the latter for its more cohesive presentation, yet these are classic sessions in any form and constitute some of the most brilliant work of the early-’60s avant-garde. – Steve Huey

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