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The Inflated Tear

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01
The Black and Crazy Blues
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
6:08
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02
A Laugh for Rory
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2:54
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03
Many Blessings
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4:46
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04
Fingers in the Wind
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4:18
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05
The Inflated Tear
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4:59
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06
The Creole Love Call
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
3:54
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07
A Handful of Fives
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2:43
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08
Fly By Night
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4:19
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09
Lovellevelliloqui
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
4:17
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10
I'm Glad There Is You
Artist: Rahsaan Roland Kirk
2:13
$0.99
Album Information
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 10   Total Length: 40:31

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eMusic Review 0

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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 »

01.11.10
Roland Kirk, The Inflated Tear
1998 | Label: Rhino Atlantic

One of the great injustices in jazz is how Rahsaan Roland Kirk’s critics focus on his undeniable gimmickry and showmanship at the expense of his protean talent, innovation and respect for tradition. The Inflated Tear exposes that substance with just a few dollops of sizzle, unfurling a few classic songs along the way. “The Black and Crazy Blues,” is certainly black — and blues — but the converse of crazy, as Kirk overlays his funeral march with some of his most tender and restrained horn work. “Many Blessings” gives listeners a taste of the sonorous depth and chromatic splendor that can result from an impassioned sensibility and bottomless lung capacity. And of course “The Inflated Tear” —a true-life chronicle of woe, foreboding and forgiveness stemming from a negligent nurse turning Kirk from partially to fully blind through too much medication — presages the little instruments and percussion of the Art Ensemble of Chicago, before providing a cleansing blast of locomotive power via Kirk’s playing of multiple horns at once.

As if that weren’t enough, Kirk throws in a cover of Duke Ellington’s “Creole Love Call” that mixes Duke’s savoir faire (with Kirk on clarinet) with a feisty blues reminiscent of Charles… read more »

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They Say All Music Guide

The debut recording by Roland Kirk (this was still pre-Rahsaan) on Atlantic Records, the same label that gave us Blacknuss and Volunteered Slavery, is not the blowing fest one might expect upon hearing it for the first time. In fact, producer Joel Dorn and label boss Neshui Ertegun weren’t prepared for it either. Kirk had come to Atlantic from Emarcy after recording his swan song for them, the gorgeous Now Please Don’t You Cry, Beautiful Edith, in April. In November Kirk decided to take his quartet of pianist Ron Burton, bassist Steve Novosel, and drummer Jimmy Hopps and lead them through a deeply introspective, slightly melancholy program based in the blues and in the groove traditions of the mid-’60s. Kirk himself used the flutes, the strich, the Manzello, whistle, clarinet, saxophones, and more — the very instruments that had created his individual sound, especially when some of them were played together, and the very things that jazz critics (some of whom later grew to love him) castigated him for. Well, after hearing the restrained and elegantly layered “Black and Crazy Blues,” the stunning rendered “Creole Love Call,” the knife-deep soul in “The Inflated Tear,” and the twisting in the wind lyricism of “Fly by Night,” they were convinced — and rightfully so. Roland Kirk won over the masses with this one too, selling over 10,000 copies in the first year. This is Roland Kirk at his most poised and visionary; his reading of jazz harmony and fickle sonances are nearly without peer. And only Mingus understood Ellington in the way Kirk did. That evidence is here also. If you are looking for a place to start with Kirk, this is it. – Thom Jurek

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