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Evolution
Evolution

Evolution in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $22.99
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Size: CD

Get it at Barnes and Noble
One of the New Thing's extremely few trombonists and a greatly underappreciated composer of tremendous evocative power,
Grachan Moncur III
got his first major exposure on
Jackie McLean
's groundbreaking 1963 masterpiece,
One Step Beyond
. Toward the end of the year, most of the same musicians reconvened for
Moncur
's debut as a leader,
Evolution
;
McLean
, vibist
Bobby Hutcherson
, and drummer
Tony Williams
are all back, with
Bob Cranshaw
on bass and an extra voice in trumpeter
Lee Morgan
, moonlighting from his usual groovy
hard bop
style. While
takes a little more solo space here, the main emphasis is on his talent as a composer. The four originals are all extended, multi-sectioned works (the shortest is around eight minutes), all quite ambitious, and all terrifically moody; much of the album sounds sinister and foreboding, and even the brighter material has a twisted, surreal fun-house undercurrent. Part of that is due to the accuracy with which the musicians interpret
's vision.
Hutcherson
provides his trademark floating chordal accompaniment, which is crucial to the overall texture; what's more, the album features some of
's weirdest playing ever, and some of
Morgan
's most impressively advanced, as he makes the most of a situation he longed to be in more often. Of the pieces,
"Monk in Wonderland"
is the most memorable; its whimsical, angular theme is offset by
's mysterious vibes, which create a trippy effect in keeping with the title.
"Air Raid"
is alternately ominous and terrifyingly frantic, and the funereal title track keeps time only in the pulse of the horns and the backing, which is based entirely on whole notes. With such an inventive debut, it's a shame
didn't record more as a leader, which makes
an even more important item for fans of
Blue Note
's
avant-garde
to track down. ~ Steve Huey
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