Quantcast
NEWS: MY AAJ Member Benefits - Sign up Today! SHOP:   CDs/DVDs/Vinyl/Sleeves | Downloads | Poster Art
jazz
HOME NEWS REVIEWS ARTICLES MUSICIANS PHOTOS FORUMS
  Login   |   MY AAJ Signup  
Intro Site Map Shows Free Daily MP3s Videos Upcoming Releases Guides Editorial Calendar Contests Help Wanted  
Advanced
Contact Us   |   Advertise   |   For Contributors   |   For Musicians





Jazz In Bel Air
Alphonse Mouzon
Time Away
The Bob Brough Quartet
Tuesday's Blues
Idit Shner
Dreams Are Meant For Two
PJ Parker
Fire Down Below
The Steve Elmer Trio
New Christmas
Pamela Hines Trio
Advertise Here




Jazz Excursion Radio



"Island Palace"
Geoff Keezer
Turn Up the Quiet

Listen Now






Push AAJ Content
AAJ Live | RSS | Widsets

Nature Boy
Jackie McLean | Blue Note Records


By Jim Santella Discuss        

At 67, Jackie McLean sounds better than ever. Highly recommended, his latest album surrounds that distinctive alto saxophone tone with a seasoned trio, presenting classic songs – the kinds of songs that got us interested in jazz in the first place. "Nature Boy" swings lightly with a loose bebop flavor after McLean first offers the melody straight and with serene melodic shades. The dramatic changes in mood and tempo take the listener on a trip from dreamy ballad land to a place where bop is king and improvisation reigns. Bassist and pianist stretch out throughout the session with spontaneous interludes to complement McLean’s fluid bop-charged lines. The unpredictable manner in which his alto saxophone portrays each chorus differently brings pleasant surprises along the way. There’s none of that harsh, biting, jangling of the nerves that up-tempo bebop and hard bop can sometimes bring. Instead, McLean starts with a roster of pretty songs, surrounds himself with artists who match his mastery, and then portrays the music with a lively bounce that flows seamlessly from start to finish.

Jackie McLean at All About Jazz.
Visit Jackie McLean on the web.


Track listing: You Don’t Know What Love Is; Nature Boy; I Can’t Get Started; What Is This Thing Called Love; I Fall In Love Too Easily; Smoke Gets In Your Eyes; Star Eyes; A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square.

Personnel: Jackie McLean- alto saxophone; Cedar Walton- piano; David Williams- bass; Billy Higgins- drums.

Style: Mainstream/Bop/Hard Bop/Cool
Published: January 01, 2000


Read more reviews of Nature Boy.


Discuss         Add to Google  




Articles by Jim Santella
Monk Competition 2008: Saxophones
Jazz & Blues: A Tribute to B.B. King
Persistence
Energy Fields
Cleome: Live Takes
Soliloque
Conversations With My Family
Jim Santella has been contributing CD reviews, concert reviews and DVD reviews to AAJ since 1997. His work has also appeared in Southland Blues, The L.A. Jazz Scene, and Cadence Magazine. More about Jim...



Recent CD Reviews | More CD Reviews
Uros Markovic/Gospel Jazz Trio - Jesus Saves Uros Markovic/Gospel Jazz Trio
Jesus Saves
Zen Zadravec - Coming of Age Zen Zadravec
Coming of Age
Tim Turvey - Autodidactic Tim Turvey
Autodidactic
Mostly Other People Do The Killing - This Is Our Moosic Mostly Other People Do The Killing
This Is Our Moosic
Trevor Dunn - Four Films Trevor Dunn
Four Films
Ramiro Musotto - Sudaka Ramiro Musotto
Sudaka



CD Review Search
Artist Name  
Album Title  
Record Label  
Author  
 

Most Read Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Most Read Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time
Recommended Reviews
Last 30 Days | All Time
Recommended Articles
Last 30 Days | All Time


 



Jeff Laibson, Mark Egan and Danny Gottlieb Trio
Saul Cuban
From Thelonius Bach's Lunch
02:25

More | Recent | Top




Pamela Hines
New CD: New Christmas











Make a donation and support All About Jazz
Contribute to the continued operation of
jazz's most important online resource.
  Privacy Policy | Dedicated Servers All material copyright © 2008 All About Jazz and/or contributing writers/visual artists. All rights reserved.