Not really a part of the Aaron Challenge, but he did turn me onto this album.
HERBIE HANCOCK – Quartet (1982 Columbia Records)
I find it really hard to:
1) review albums outside my comfort zone, and
2) verbalize thoughts about instrumental music.
I will say this. Â One glance at the back cover photos tells me all I need to know about Quartet. Â The back cover of this CD screamed to me, “Open me now, because I will thoroughly blow your mind.” Â Which is exactly what happened. Â The Quartet are Herbie Hancock (piano), Ron Carter (bass), Wynton Marsalis (trumpet), and Tony Williams (drums).
I fell in love with “Well You Needn’t” at exactly the 5:12 mark. Â It’s an incredible performance to start with, bass and drums dueling with trumpet and piano, but in harmony. Â At 5:12 though, it’s just momentarily otherworldly. Â It’s synchronicity, and Carl Jung would have pooped his pantaloons if he’d lived long enough to hear it.
“‘Round Midnight” is a Thelonious Monk standard, as is “Well You Needn’t”. Â It’s a nice laid back smoky barroom jazz, piano occasionally stealing the spotlight from the muted trumpet. Â This song has me seeing black & white, like an old movie. Â It picks up halfway through, with trumpet un-muted, and drums throwing cool beats out left right and center.
Ron Carter plays some wicked bass on “Clear Ways”. Â “A Quick Sketch” is anything but quick, clocking in over 16 minutes long. Â It sets a scene, again like a movie. Â There’s some intrigue going on. Â It’s lyrical, the instruments are telling a story. Â “The Eye of the Hurricane” is frantic. Â Its swift pace seems to inspire flurries of instrumental genius.
“Parade”, then, is the opposite; it’s quiet and deliberate. Â Herbie’s piano is sublime. Â It picks up a bit after a couple minutes, and it does contain some pretty manic solos. Â This leads into “The Sorcerer”, a 7 minute workout with some blistering Wynton Marsalis trumpet work.
“Pee Wee” is another smokey barroom number, piano fluttering while the trumpet takes center stage. Â Then it’s the piano’s turn, and it’s another lyrical moment. The final song is the ballad “I Fall In Love Too Easily”. Â It’s now closing time at that smokey bar. Â A few patrons remain but tables are being wiped down and chairs put away. Â Last call.
At almost 70 minutes, Quartet was a double album. Â Now on CD it’s a single disc, and if you can find the time to play the whole thing in one sitting I would strongly recommend that experience.
5/5 stars

