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Freddie Hubbard: Pinnacle
ByFreddie Hubbard
trumpet1938 - 2008

Miles Davis
trumpet1926 - 1991
With the rich loam of jazz experience, past and present, it has been easy to overlook Hubbard. Sure he is acknowledged as a member of the upper echelon of trumpeters, but there he seems to stay, beyond discussion while Miles Davis continues to make good copy. Maybe "overlook" is not the right word. Maybe "neglect" is better, or, better yet "taken-for-granted."
It seems too easy to forget that Hubbard played on a host of the most important jazz recordings of the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s. The firebrand trumpeter was on hand for composer/saxophonist

Oliver Nelson
saxophone1932 - 1975

Eric Dolphy
woodwinds1928 - 1964

Herbie Hancock
pianob.1940

Wayne Shorter
saxophone1933 - 2023

Ornette Coleman
saxophone, alto1930 - 2015

John Coltrane
saxophone1926 - 1967
Hubbard's own output is equally impressive. His Blue Note recordings of the 1950s and 1960s were well received and characterized by his keen hard bop cum post bop sensibility. His greatest contribution to jazz as a leader might be Red Clay (CTI, 1970) or Straight Life (CTI, 1971). They are both studies in the trajectory established by Miles Davis with his second great quintet. Where Davis moved on to fusion, Hubbard continued to refine post bop with his patently hard bop- informed approach, steeped in the blues but as immediate as the notes shooting from his bell. Hubbard's inclusion in the famous V.S.O.P quintet, with the members of Davis' second quintet, was a natural evolution.
Pinnacle captures Hubbard live in San Francisco on two occasions in 1981. These songs are in a sense period pieces. Hubbard opens with "The Intrepid Fox" from Red Clay. It is played both loose and intense, Hubbard's machine gun solo searing the air, revealing no technical losses in the ten years since its composition. Keybordist

Billy Childs
pianob.1957
Hubbard's treatment of the theme from the film Summer of '42 (Warner Brothers, 1971), "The Summer Knows" is lyrical and sturdy, Hubbard's playing both tender and assertive at the same time. Of great interest is the trumpeter's cover of Coltrane's "Giant Steps." Hubbard is fully in command of the harmonically demanding material, turning the piece into a raging juggernaut closing the disc. This is exciting jazz captured at an otherwise ill-defined time in the music's history. Hubbard proves he never takes his eye off the ball. ">
Track Listing
The Intrepid Fox; First Light; One Of Another Kind; Happiness Is Now; The Summer Knows; Blues For Duane; Giant Steps.
Personnel
Freddie Hubbard
trumpetFreddie Hubbard: trumpet, flugelhorn; Billy Childs: piano, Rhodes; Larry Klein: bass; Phil Ranelin: trombone (1-4, 6, 7); Hadley Caliman: tenor saxophone (3, 6, 7); David Schnitter: tenor saxophone (1, 2, 4); Eddie Marshall: drums (3, 5-7); Sinclair Lott: drums (1, 2, 4).
Album information
Title: Pinnacle | Year Released: 2011 | Record Label: Resonance Records
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