Village Rhythm

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Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 56:38

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Britt Robson

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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 »

11.18.08
A harbinger of Lovano's creative and commercial future
1988 | Label: Soul Note / CAM

This 1988 date captures Lovano at a pivotal point in his career. After years of big-band dues-paying and ongoing small ensemble sideman stints, Village Rhythm marked just his third recording as a leader, and the first one defined by his compositions (the only non-original among the ten tunes is Mingus's "Duke Ellington's Sounds of Love"). His father, tenor player "Big T" Lovano, had recently passed (eulogized twice on "T Was To Me"), and the more innovative artistic themes that characterized his Blue Note discs of the '90s were on the horizon.

In this context, Village Rhythm is both a capstone of Lovano's proletarian past and a harbinger of his creatively and commercially regal future. As with his work on drummer Paul Motian's albums of the same period, it announces him as a thinking man's hard bopper. The most immediately attractive songs here — the title track, "Dewey Said," "Sleepy Giant" — would slide easily into the catalog of Art Blakey's Jazz Messengers. Except instead of the kinetic, linear drive of Blakey, Lovano has Motian, a more subtle shaman, parsing the beats. And for the trumpet contributions to what would usually be bright and brisk horn arrangements, Lovano deploys the… read more »

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Great stuff

Petronius

Track#4 "Chelsea Rendez-vous" is an absolute gem.

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Great Early Lovano

Traned

An excellent set by Joe Lovano featuring Tom Harrel on trumpet. Go see Joe live, he is even better in person!

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They Say All Music Guide

By 1988, it was becoming increasingly obvious that tenor saxophonist Joe Lovano was on his way to becoming a major name in the jazz world. For this advanced hard bop set, he contributed all of the selections other than Charles Mingus’ “Duke Ellington’s Sound of Love,” including a tribute to his father, tenorman Tony “Big T” Lovano. Teamed with trumpeter Tom Harrell, pianist Kenny Werner, bassist Marc Johnson and drummer Paul Motian, Lovano is heard throughout in his early prime, playing inventive and generally concise improvisations that were beginning to become distinctive. – Scott Yanow