eMusic Review 0
fter spending more than a decade as a rather obscure eccentric genius, Thelonious Monk was by the early ’60s a relatively popular eccentric genius, and Monk’s Dream, his 1963 debut for Columbia, was his biggest hit. As is the rule with the pianist-composer’s later work, the repertoire is largely reprised from his earlier albums, but with the edges somewhat blunted and the path-breaking intensity softened. And yet if the album feels like something of a postscript (the first of several) to Monk’s best sides for Blue Note, Prestige and Riverside, it’s a very charming, well-turned postscript. Recorded with Monk’s much-traveled quartet — the first group he’d managed to keep together for any significant duration — the album is full of relaxed, confident band interplay of the sort often absent from Monk’s earlier recordings, even his classics. Charlie Rouse’s full-bodied tenor sax is a constant joy; if you don’t want his solo on “Bolivar Blues” to last all night, you probably don’t much care for tenor saxophones. Bassist John Ore and drummer Frankie Dunlop indeed gloss over some of the rhythmic weirdness that marks earlier Monk, but they do so in dogged pursuit of heady… read more »