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Love Dance

Woody Shaw

Label: Time Travelers
Released: 2026
Views: 1,015

Tracks

Love Dance; Obsequious; Sunbath; Zoltan; Soulfully I Love You (Black Spiritual Of Love).

Personnel

Album Description

With Time Travelers, Zev Feldman injects new life into Muse Records, the label founded by Joe Fields in 1972. Muse offered a platform to artists who were often in danger of being overlooked or forgotten by major record companies. Feldman, renowned for his lavishly produced archival releases, has brought the same care and vision to this new series.

The Time Travelers series launched in October 2025 with three releases: drummer {{Roy Brooks}}’s 1972 live album <em>The Free Slave</em>; pianist {{Kenny Barron}}’s 1973 set <em>Sunset to Dawn</em>; and <em>Cosmos Nucleus</em>, a 1976 session by Panamanian tenor saxophonist {{Carlos Garnett}} featuring a 20‑year‑old {{Kenny Kirkland}} on keyboards. Upcoming releases will feature {{João Donato}}, {{Clifford Jordan}}, and {{Joe Chambers}}. The {{Woody Shaw}} entry in the series includes Dan Morgenstern’s original liner notes alongside new reflections by {{Bob Blumenthal}}.

{{Woody Shaw}} has long inspired a devoted following. Admirers are drawn to his outsider status, his technical brilliance, and his refusal to compromise when major labels sought a more commercial sound. They cite his seeming lack of luck and the persistent neglect of his artistry. His champions often quote praise from {{Miles Davis}}, {{Dizzy Gillespie}}, and producer {{Michael Cuscuna}}. {{Wynton Marsalis}} noted that Shaw expanded the trumpet’s vocabulary, while {{Wallace Roney}} called him both “the keeper of the flame” and a true innovator. Saxophonist {{Dave Liebman}} went further, describing Shaw as “one of the greatest jazz musicians of all time.”

Why <em>Love Dance</em> has drifted in and out of print for decades remains puzzling. It is music with clear orchestral weight that reveals Shaw’s vision as both composer and player. His relative neglect may be explained by timing: his creative peak coincided with the dominance of fusion. Shaw, a brilliant improviser, lacked the self‑promotional drive of some peers, yet technically he equaled any of them.

Shaw’s Muse recordings document a crucial period when jazz was contending with fusion, rock, and disco. Despite commercial pressures, he remained devoted to a forward‑looking, acoustic hard‑bop vocabulary—pushing the trumpet’s expressive possibilities with harmonic daring and architectural logic. His command of tone, phrasing, and line earned him the description “the last of the statement trumpeters.”

The septet heard on <em>Love Dance </em>(1976) is formidable, and none more so than trombonist {{Steve Turre}}, whose bass trombone anchored the ensemble with depth and invention. Tenor saxophonist {{Billy Harper}}, nearly as under‑recognized as Shaw himself, brought his commanding Texas tone—familiar from {{Gil Evans}}’s orchestras—to the front line. Altoist and flutist {{René McLean}}, inheriting his father’s spirit, adds a fiery, assertive edge that cuts through the group textures.

On the opening track, pianist {{Joe Bonner}} reveals a touch that is both lyrical and percussive, perfectly suiting the open texture Shaw envisioned. Drummer {{Victor Lewis}} drives the group with polyrhythmic precision and imagination, locked in telepathic rapport with bassist {{Cecil McBee}}, whose deep, resonant sound provides a firm and ever‑inventive foundation.

Released in 1976, <em>Love Dance</em>captures Shaw at a pivotal moment.  Long undervalued, it remains one of his most harmonically adventurous sessions. While Shaw is rightly praised for his technical mastery and his “in‑and‑out” harmonic approach, <em>Love Dance</em> stands apart in its modal architecture. It is not a blowing session but a tightly conceived suite that carries post‑bop forward without sacrificing acoustic integrity.

The album blends modal jazz, post‑bop intensity, and Afro‑Latin rhythmic color. Compared to Shaw’s smaller‑ensemble works, the four‑horn, percussion‑rich instrumentation allows his trumpet voice to resonate within a broader, more orchestral soundworld—yet still firmly grounded in 1970s acoustic jazz.

Two structural decisions define <em>Love Dance</em>: Shaw’s choice to balance four horns against a reinforced rhythm section, and his decision to build the program largely from works by associates—Joe Bonner, {{Larry Young}}, {{Peggy Stern}}, and Billy Harper. The result is a collaborative repertoire album in which Shaw emerges as designer‑conductor, absorbing his peers’ compositional vocabularies into his own distinctive trumpet syntax.

The title track,”Love Dance”, opens with a rhythmic motif over which Shaw enters declamatorily, leaping across intervals emblematic of his style. The interaction between percussionists {{Guilherme Franco}} and {{Tony Waters}} and drummer Victor Lewis creates a dense rhythmic fabric beneath the soloists. Larry Young’s “Obsequious” reflects his chromatic, organ‑inspired harmony—ideal for Shaw’s taste for polytonal superimposition and wide‑interval logic. Peggy Stern’s “Sunbath”, by contrast, offers a moment of repose: its gentler swing and open voicings allow Turre’s bass trombone and Harper’s tenor to frame Shaw’s more lyrical improvising.

Shaw revisits his best‑known composition, “Zoltan”—first recorded with Larry Young on <em>Unity</em> (Blue Note 1976). It opens with the familiar march‑like motif derived from Kodály’s Háry János Suite before bursting into swift swing. Shaw’s solo unfolds with lucid, linear logic, contrasting vividly with Harper’s emotionally charged intensity.

The closing piece, Harper’s “Soulfully I Love You (Black Spiritual of Love”), moves the album into spiritual territory. Harper fuses African‑American church cadences with post‑Coltrane harmony, setting the stage for Shaw’s long, declamatory trumpet lines, echoed by bass trombone and tenor. Beneath them, McBee and Lewis maintain a rhythmic pulse that hovers gracefully between a march and a sermon.

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