During the 1960s,
Earl Fatha Hines enjoyed steady popularity as a living icon of mainstream and traditional jazz. In 2008, the Lone Hill Jazz reissue label brought out a 21-track
Hines retrospective focusing on the
Classic Trio Sessions from that period. The first half of this delightful compilation taps into a friendly date with bassist
Richard Davis and drummer
Elvin Jones which took place in January 1966. Originally released on the album
Here Comes Earl Fatha Hines and subtitled "Spontaneous Explorations," the recordings were overseen by the great experimenter, producer
Bob Thiele. The earlier sessions, which took place in 1964, involved bassist
Ahmed Abdul-Malik and drummer
Oliver Jackson, and yielded an LP's worth of tidily executed material which was issued on the Columbia label as
The New Earl Hines Trio. The logical sequel to
Classic Trio Sessions is
Hines' masterful Impulse album
Once Upon a Time, which is a serious contender for the best late period
Hines ensemble album of them all. If you find yourself hankering for more of the
Elvin Jones/
Richard Davis interaction of this vintage, go directly to their collaborative Impulse album
Heavy Sounds. Both of these, as well as the most inspired portions of
Classic Trio Sessions, stand as monuments to the insightful production sensibilities of
Bob Thiele.
–
arwulf arwulf, Rovi