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Blowin' The Blues Away

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Blowin' The Blues Away album cover
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Blowin' The Blues Away (1999 Digital Remaster) (Rudy Van Gelder Edition)
4:41
$1.29
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The St. Vitus Dance (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1999 Digital Remaster)
4:06
$1.29
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Break City (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1999 Digital Remaster)
4:55
$1.29
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Peace (Rudy Van Gelder Edition) [1999 - Remastered]
6:00
$1.29
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Sister Sadie (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1999 Digital Remaster)
6:16
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Baghdad Blues (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1999 Digital Remaster)
4:48
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Melancholy Mood (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1999 Digital Remaster)
7:04
$1.29
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How Did It Happen (Rudy Van Gelder 24Bit Mastering) (1999 Digital Remaster)
4:40
$1.29
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 8   Total Length: 42:30

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eMusic Review 0

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Kevin Whitehead

eMusic Contributor

Kevin Whitehead is the longtime jazz critic for NPR’s “Fresh Air” and author of Why Jazz? A Concise Guide (2011), New Dutch Swing (about improvised music in Ams...more »

05.18.11
An underrated titan of jazz piano
2006 | Label: BLUE NOTE

Pianist Horace Silver always had the knack for writing funky tunes that got soloists' juices flowing, and made rhythm sections snap to attention. In the late '50s, he assembled one of his greatest quintets, with Blue Mitchell on trumpet, Junior Cook on tenor sax, bassist Gene Taylor and drummer Louis Hayes. When jazz fans imagine the virtues of Blue Note records, this is the sound in their heads: upbeat, bluesy and tight like "Sister Sadie," plaintive like "Peace." Mitchell's phrasing is incisive and assured — he's a diehard swinger; Cook's fast tumbling figures in his "Break City" solo initiate a dialogue of rhythms with Silver's jabbing punctuations. Conspicuous bonus: on two tracks Silver returns to the trio setting that made him a Blue Note star. On the earthy, intensely bluesy "St. Vitus Dance," his left hand's grunting interjections and cluster bombs link early jazz expressionist Jelly Roll Morton to slam bam Cecil Taylor. Silver's an underrated titan of jazz piano.

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Favorite Silver

mailman

Horace Silver cut a lot of great sessions. This one smokes.

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A post-bop classic

pjamesbonobo

This album is one of the classics in the post-bop canon. Bluesy, soulful and incisive, it showcases Horace Silver's outstanding compositional talents. And Blue Mitchell's playing is at its absolute peak -- just exquisite.

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They Say All Music Guide

Blowin’ the Blues Away is one of Horace Silver’s all-time Blue Note classics, only upping the ante established on Finger Poppin’ for tightly constructed, joyfully infectious hard bop. This album marks the peak of Silver’s classic quintet with trumpeter Blue Mitchell, tenor saxophonist Junior Cook, bassist Gene Taylor, and drummer Louis Hayes; it’s also one of the pianist’s strongest sets of original compositions, eclipsed only by Song for My Father and Horace Silver and the Jazz Messengers. The pacing of the album is impeccable, offering up enough different feels and slight variations on Silver’s signature style to captivate the listener throughout. Two songs — the warm, luminous ballad “Peace” and the gospel-based call-and-response swinger “Sister Sadie” — became oft-covered standards of Silver’s repertoire, and the madly cooking title cut wasn’t far behind. And they embody what’s right with the album in a nutshell — the up-tempo tunes (“Break City”) are among the hardest-swinging Silver had ever cut, and the slower changes of pace (“Melancholy Mood”) are superbly lyrical, adding up to one of the best realizations of Silver’s aesthetic. Also, two cuts (“Melancholy Mood” and the easy-swinging “The St. Vitus Dance”) give Silver a chance to show off his trio chops, and “Baghdad Blues” introduces his taste for exotic, foreign-tinged themes. Through it all, Silver remains continually conscious of the groove, playing off the basic rhythms to create funky new time patterns. The typical high-impact economy of his and the rest of the band’s statements is at its uppermost level, and everyone swings with exuberant commitment. In short, Blowin’ the Blues Away is one of Silver’s finest albums, and it’s virtually impossible to dislike. – Steve Huey

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