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Eddie Henderson At Magy's Farm
ByMagy's Farm
Dromara, N. Ireland
December 2, 2023
Ireland is not short of venerable music venues, any one of which should have been proud to host trumpeter Eddie Henderson. Think Dublin's National Concert Hall or Vicar Street, Galway's Róisín Dubh, The Everyman in Cork, The MAC or The Black Box in Belfast. After all, it is not every day that one of

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Art Blakey
drums1919 - 1990

Benny Golson
saxophone, tenor1929 - 2024

Pharoah Sanders
saxophone, tenor1940 - 2022

McCoy Tyner
piano1938 - 2020

Gerald Wilson
composer / conductor1918 - 2014
But Ireland is a strange country. As it happened, the venue for Eddie Henderson's only Irish date was a former pigsty in the rolling hills of County Down.
To be fair, Magys Farm is a beautifully repurposed former pigsty, one with seating for around fortypeopleand excellent acoustics. And not a hint of straw. It is a labor of love for owners Maggie Doyle and

Linley Hamilton
trumpetb.1965
Henderson has recorded consistently over the course of a fifty-plus-year career. Bar a period in the 1970s and 1980s, when he practiced as a qualified psychiatrist, he has released an album every couple of years or so. His twenty-seventh as leader, the aptly named Witness To History (Smoke Session Records, 2023), found the octogenarian in terrific form, accompanied by heavy hitters

Lenny White
drumsb.1949

Donald Harrison
saxophone, altob.1960

George Cables
pianob.1944

Gerald Cannon
bassIt would have been reasonable to expect the album to feature prominently on this gig, but Henderson, who has always paddled his own canoe, had other ideas. Fronting a European quartet of drummer

Stephen Keogh
drumsArnie Somogyi
drums
Matyas Gayer
pianoHenderson's story is worth telling, but suffice it to say, his big break came in 1970 when a week-long gig with Herbie Hancock blossomed into a three-year chapter with the pianist's iconic Mwandishi sextet. 'That changed my life,' Henderson told All About Jazz in 2003.
Knowing what side his bread was buttered on, Henderson led off with a gently swinging rendition of Hancock's "Toys," from Speak Like a Child (Blue Note, 1968). There were elegant solos from Matyas on upright piano and Somogy, but these were eclipsed by a beautifully weighted offering by the leader that exuded warmth and lyricism. The head-solo-solo-solo-head format of this opener established the unwavering template for the rest of the set.
The first of just two songs aired from Witness to History was a pop song of the old school"Sweet and Lovely," a number one hit in 1931, and played here as a waltz. Henderson once again impressed, sounding as good as he ever has, but the pick of the solos this time came from Somogy. Job done, the bassist then locked onto an Ahmad Jamal-esque ostinato while Irish-born Keogh worked up some steam on his kit.
As a young man, Henderson studied with both

Freddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Lee Morgan
trumpet1938 - 1972
With trumpet muted on a sprightly version of the Rodgers & Hammerstein showtune "The Surrey with the Fringe on Top" it was a different story, Henderson instead channeling the wistful spirit of

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
The quartet's faithful, hard-bop approach to Lee Morgan's "Totem Pole" saw Keogh switch between sticks and brushes as Henderson and Gayer's burn gave way to Somogy's cooler impressionism. The ever-green "Cantaloupe Island" saw fellow trumpeter Linley Hamilton harmonize the iconic melody with Henderson, the two then trading searching solos ahead of turns by piano and bass.

Woody Shaw
trumpet1944 - 1989
The quartet bowed out with

Kenny Barron
pianob.1943
Compared to some of his peers, Henderson has flown a little under the radar all these years. However, he may be enjoying a late-career renaissance and overdue recognition as 2024 sees the PBS premiere of the documentary Dr. Eddie Henderson: Uncommon Genius.
Viewers can expect insights into the Cotton ClubHenderson's mother was one of the original dancers thereand the family connection to

Louis Armstrong
trumpet and vocals1901 - 1971
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