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Bennie Green: Bennie Green: Soul Stirrin’ - 1958
ByA bluesy, almost pre-bop record... This is soul before it became funky.
Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Bennie Green
trombone1923 - 1977
This is a bluesy, almost pre-bop record. Green plays trombone, but not in a

J.J. Johnson
trombone1924 - 2001
It is an absolute pleasure.
Soul Stirrin' starts with the title song, a slow blues grind. This is soul before it became funky. Green plays fat, emotional blues notes. Pianist

Sonny Clark
piano1931 - 1963

Gene Ammons
saxophone, tenor1925 - 1974
Five more songs follow, each different from the last. "We Wanna Cook" strikes a bebop tonethe only song on the album that doeswith Ammons (or is it Root?) playing hard and fast in a way that reminds me of

Paul Gonsalves
saxophone, tenor1920 - 1974

Duke Ellington
piano1899 - 1974
"That's All" is a sweet, beautiful ballad. Green is wonderfulsoft and gentle and dreamy. "Lullabye of the Doomed" is, as the title implies, a mournful dirge. Green's trombone weeps, and the saxophones are full of swirling smoke. It reminds me of

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
The only downer, and it's a small one, is "B.G. Mambo." The theme is sort of cheesy, though it does give way to seven minutes of very pleasant solos, before returning to the goofy theme.
All in all, Soul Stirrin' is an unexpected pleasure from a jazz man who is largely forgotten. Now that I've discovered Bennie Green, I want to hear more.
Rating: 5 stars (out of 5)
Availability: Not rare, but not common either
Cost: Just $5.34 on MP3, but $17 new and $11 or $12 used
Tags
Bennie Green
My Blue Note Obsession
Marc Davis
Art Blakey
J.J. Johnson
Sonny Clark
Gene Ammons
Paul Gonsalves
duke ellington
Miles Davis
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