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Charles Mingus: At Antibes 1960 Revisited
ByMingus leads a pianoless quintet completed by

Booker Ervin
saxophone, tenor1930 - 1970

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Ted Curson
trumpet1935 - 2012

Dannie Richmond
drums1935 - 1988

Bud Powell
piano1924 - 1966
The album's juxtapositionif that is what it isof roots and the avant-garde is played out in the main by the horns, and with particular piquancy by the two reed players. The opener, "Prayer For Passive Resistance," is essentially a showcase for Ervin, whose fiery wailing tenor is the most frequently heard individual voice on the album. Ervin never made concessions to avant-garde sensibilities, either with Mingus or when leading his own bands, remaining committed to unconstricted hard bop. (In the mid-1960s, he released a string of keep-the-faith albums on Prestige, starting with 1963's excellent Exultation, made with a quintet including fellow Mingus sideman, pianist

Horace Parlan
piano1931 - 2017
Mingus also dug Dolphy, who took care of the avant-garde end of the spectrum. Perhaps wise to the conservative tastes of much of the Antibes audience, Mingus does not bring Dolphy forward immediately and does not let him loose on the bass clarinet in full blazing effect until the penultimate piece, "What Love?" Here Mingus and Dolphy rehearse their extraordinarily eloquent non-verbal conversation on the same piece, recorded three months later on Charles Mingus Presents Charles Mingus (Candid, 1960).
Despite Mingus' caution about deploying Dolphy, he was still too much for some audience members, whose whistles of disapproval during "What Love?" are clearly audibleas are the cheers of others. (Five years later at Antibes, so many audience members walked out during the

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
The other thing that needs to be said about this album is the quality of ezz-thetics' sound restoration. All the instruments have enhanced presence and Mingus' bass, in particular, is up close, personal, and deliciously resonant. Sound engineer Michael Br?ndli is often praised on these pages, and deservedly so. The label's innovation of "no digital zero" between the tracks is also notable. It helps to keep you in the zone, not that Mingus fans should need any help.
Postscript: Though the YouTube below is not in performance order and the camera tricks during the first 20 minutes are infuriating and the sound throughout is barely adequate, the footage is to be treasured for providing us with rare moving images of the musicians involved. It includes some unaccompanied Powell (at 22:05) and other material not included on the album. There are also several minutes of empty black screenhang on in there, "Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting" and "Better Get Hit In Your Soul" are coming right up.
* The combination is binary only on a superficial level. At a deeper one, there is no duality in Mingus' music. Rarely has that been more apparent than on Ervin and Dolphy's exchanges towards the end of "MDM (Monk, Duke & Mingus)" on Mingus (Candid, 1961). The two hornsone the standard bearer of tradition, the other intent on stretching it near to breaking pointcome close to total morph. There is only a mutual outpouring of emotion. This fundamental unitarism is, perhaps, Mingus' greatest gift to jazz. ">
Track Listing
Prayer For Passive Resistance; Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting; Better Get Hit In Your Soul; Folk Forms 1; What Love?; I’ll Remember April.
Personnel
Charles Mingus
bass, acousticBooker Ervin
saxophone, tenorEric Dolphy
woodwindsTed Curson
trumpetDannie Richmond
drumsAdditional Instrumentation
Bud Powell: piano; Eric Dolphy: alto saxophone, bass clarinet; Charles Mingus: piano.
Album information
Title: At Antibes 1960 Revisited | Year Released: 2023 | Record Label: Ezz-thetics
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